Leaving Rhode Island (to the sound of Elijah's "When is room time?" and Josiah's helpful response, "No room time. Connecticut!"), we spent our afternoon along the Mystic River at Mystic Seaport, a living history museum depicting coastal life in 19th century New England.
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Mystic River |
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A view of one of the streets |
There were lots of ships to look at and climb board and lots of little buildings to explore; way more to see than we possibly could see in half a day.
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In the bottom of the Charles W. Morgan, an 1841 whaling ship being restored at their shipyard |
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Lobster traps! |
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In front of Joseph Conrad, a training ship, built in 1882 |
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So many hands-on, real life things for the boys to enjoy |
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The children's play room was full of many hand-carved toys and puzzles |
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Ship building materials |
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Beautiful playground |
The boys loved it! Mystic Seaport did a really good job at being educational and engaging for all ages.
And then my camera battery died, so no pictures of the delicious sea food from the tiny family-owned seaside restaurant, boasting of the best lobster rolls in New England (it was delicious!). The boys were fascinated by Dustin's whole lobster, but very content to eat their mac and cheese and apples.
Now onto Vermont!
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