Poison Plants, Ethnobotany and Lore
Pratt Museum 3779 Bartlett Street , Homer, AK, United StatesExplore of the history and lore of poison plants that are native to the Kenai Peninsula region.
established in 1968
Explore of the history and lore of poison plants that are native to the Kenai Peninsula 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.
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.
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.