When Mother Nature calls over Massachusetts way, it's the Berkshires, a rugged mountain range stretching across the western edge of the state, that pick up, a place popular with outdoorsy types for the abundance of trails on offer and the arts-oriented for the local selection of cultural attractions.
One's imagination can only go so far when it comes to creating an image of life for America's first pilgrims, but there to help paint a vivid picture is Plimoth Plantation, a living history museum that along with MAYFLOWER II, a replica of the original MAYFLOWER moored along Plymouth's waterfront, provides a glimpse of early village existence as well as the grueling trip across the Atlantic. Period-costumed staff recreate scenes from a 1627 English Village and a Wampanoag Homesite at the Plimoth Plantation location, and visitors can get hands on with traditional craft-making at the associated Crafts Center or visit animal imports in the Nye Barn. Historic documents and other artifacts at the MAYFLOWER II help make the voyage from England to the New World - it in fact made the trip from England in 1957. Most Landlubbers will give thanks that modern travel has made these small ships otherwise obsolete!
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