We are open!
Pratt Museum 3779 Bartlett Street , Homer, AK, United StatesTuesday - Saturday from 11am - 4pm. See you soon!
established in 1968
Tuesday - Saturday from 11am - 4pm. See you soon!
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
Learn field sketching and recording techniques that will strengthen your observation and appreciation of the natural world.
Learn field sketching and recording techniques that will strengthen your observation and appreciation of the natural world.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.
Basket artist and story weaver Mavis Mulller will guide students in creating a unique woven vessel using locally gathered plant materials.
You're invited to meander throughout the museum's gardens and 10-acre forested campus with a guide from our garden crew for opportunities to view wildlife, listening to songbirds, and discuss the ethnobotanical and historical uses of plants that live in the Kachemak Bay region.