• New Events
  • Feed
  • Subject
    • Eat
    • Sleep
    • Visit
    • Read
    • Listen
    • Watch
    • Life
    • Moonridge
  • Trending
  • Karen
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe

Always Packed for Adventure!

It's the destination and the journey.

  • New Events
  • Feed
  • Subject
    • Eat
    • Sleep
    • Visit
    • Read
    • Listen
    • Watch
    • Life
    • Moonridge
  • Trending
  • Karen
  • Privacy Policy
  • Subscribe

Summer 2020: Ghost Town Wild West Museum

When you see a beat-up roadside billboard for a “Ghost Town” museum, only to discover that it’s located in a strip mall parking lot…you park and head on inside! My expectations were low, yet my curiosity was piqued.

View fullsize IMG_1445.jpg
View fullsize IMG_0451.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1448.jpg

This recognition is awfully specific. I also love the quotes around “Ghost Town.”

IMG_1446.jpg

I appreciated that their deer was following Governor Polis’ mask mandate!

D9CC6B1C-DAF0-4D71-AF60-4E6DE19AA5E3.jpg

Admission was only 7.50 each, which in hindsight was a bargain for the experience. The Ghost Town Wild West Museum is an indoor experience, comprised of genuine artifacts and preserved buildings from Colorado’s gold rush era in the 1850’s.

The museum was very strict on Covid safety, providing plenty of hand sanitizer, limiting the capacity, and adding directional arrows on the floor to control the flow of traffic. For a majority of our visit ( it takes about 45-60 minutes to tour), we were alone with the exhibits.

We were immediately “wowed” as we entered the museum, surprised to find ourselves in the middle of a town. It was like being on the backlot of a movie studio.

IMG_0455.jpg
View fullsize IMG_0457.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1454.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1464.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1456.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1457.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1481.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1494.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1473.jpg

We were able to enter most of the buildings, which were filled with antiques representing the nature of the business. The first stop was the general store. I love all of the old logos and packaging, some from companies that are still in business.

IMG_0458.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1449.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1459.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1460.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1461.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1462.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1465.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1466.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1467.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1468.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1469.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1470.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1471.jpg

There are many interactive exhibits requiring quarters. If we had realized this we would have brought about ten dollars worth of quarters to check it all out. I scrounged around in the bottom of my purse and we had enough for the player piano.

View fullsize IMG_1458.jpg
View fullsize IMG_0456.MOV.jpg

The livery had some creepy mannequins and I love creepy mannequins!

View fullsize IMG_0459.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1472.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1474.jpg

The most fascinating shop was the apothecary. Medicine has come a long way and this is one of the biggest reasons that i’m grateful to be living in modern times!

View fullsize IMG_0461.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1483.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1484.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1485.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1487.jpg

Every town, especially a gold rush town, needs a bank.

View fullsize IMG_1479.jpg
View fullsize IMG_0464.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1480.jpg

and a barbers/dentist.

IMG_0460.jpg

A boarding house, aka the precursor to AirBnB.

View fullsize IMG_1488.jpg
View fullsize IMG_0463.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1489.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1490.jpg

If we were living in the old west, Dan and I would likely have spent a lot of time at the town saloon!

View fullsize IMG_1498.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1497.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1500.jpg
View fullsize IMG_0468.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1510.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1501.jpg

In the saloon we found another player piano, a fortune teller, and several Mutoscope machines, some with scandalous movies. We ran out of quarters, otherwise we definitely would have been checking out “Gorgeous Girls Galore-Banned in Chicago.” What a tease!

View fullsize IMG_1504.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1505.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1506.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1508.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1513.jpg

The museum had several modes of transportation, including stage coaches and a turn-of-the-century Cadillac.

View fullsize IMG_1491.jpg
View fullsize IMG_0473.jpg
View fullsize IMG_0474.jpg

There was a nod to Colorado’s ranching history. We just moved to Colorado last year, and I had no idea that Colorado has such a deep history with cattle. As proud residents of our new state, we attending the Great Western Stock Show in January, taking in this apparent local tradition. We also have cows that occasionally graze in the field at the end of our street. It’s delightful.

View fullsize IMG_0466.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1496.jpg

One of my favorite exhibits was the old circus posters. I know that circus’ are mostly a thing of a bygone era and for good reason, but I have fond memories of childhood circus trips in the 80’s, when Ringling Brothers would come to Los Angeles every August. In particular, I remember being very excited to see the “Unicorn” that they heavily advertised, only to get to the show and find a sheep with a horn stuck on its head. My childhood ended that day.

View fullsize IMG_1515.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1495.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1478.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1518.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1514.jpg

The museum takes a dark twist with a separate section called the “Old Home.” We were on a mini-vacation to celebrate Dan’s birthday, so he took exception to the idea that I was taking him to an “Old Home.”

IMG_1517.jpg

Kidding aside, the “Old Home” was a bit unsettling. It’s a glimpse into a home of the 1800’s, complete with very, very eerie mannequins and old photographs. Even being there during the daytime was an unsettling experience. Seriously, take a close look at these pictures for the stuff of horror films.

View fullsize IMG_1520.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1521.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1523.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1524.jpg
View fullsize IMG_0475.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1525.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1526.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1527.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1528.jpg
View fullsize IMG_1529.jpg

The Ghost Town Wild West Museum is both an educational and entertaining experience. I highly recommend adding it to your Colorado Springs itinerary and don’t forget to bring quarters!

tags: Ghost Town Wild West Museum Colorado Springs, Things to do in Colorado Springs, Pictures Wild West Ghost Town Colorado Springs, Ghost Town Colorado Springs, Colorado Ghost Town, Best Colorado Family Activities, Best Museums in Colorado, Life in the 1800's, Old Home Ghost Town Wild West Museum, Victorian Era Colorado, Admission Price Ghost Town Wild West Museum, Pictures Ghost Town Wild West Museum Colorado, Colorado Activities During Covid, Traveling During Covid, An Authentic Ghost Town, Governor Polis Mask Mandate, Like a Movie Studio Backlot, Colorado Gold Rush Museum, Pearline Best by Test, Wild West Stage Coach, Tools from the 1800's, 1800's General Store, Old Product Labels, Cream Separators, Interactive Exhibits Ghost Town Wild West Museum, Express Coin Piano, Player Pianos, Entertainment During the Gold Rush, Products During the gold Rush, 1800's Livery, 1800's Apothecary, Pink Pills for Pale People, 1800's Cosmetics, Victorian Era Medicine, Victorian Era Cosmetics, Victoria Dentistry, Miner's Bank & Trust 1891, Victoria Era Boarding House, Bear Fur Rug, Original Victrola, Pikes Peak Saloon, Gold Rush Era Saloon, Wild West Saloon, Taxidermy Deer, Wiedemann's Fine Beer, Mutoscope Machines, Bedroom Frolic Mutoscope, Gypsy Queen Fortune Teller Machine, Babe Ruth's Home Run Secrets Mutoscope, Gorgeous Girls Galore Mutoscope, Gorgeous Girls Galore Banned in Chicago, 1909 Cadillac, Turn of the Century Vehicles, Great Western Stock Show Colorado, Colorado Ranching Tradition, Cattle and Colorado, Dan Rice Ring Circus, Haag Brothers Circus, Seils and Sterling Circus, The Sterling Circus, Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus, Ringling Brothers Circus Unicorn, Old Home Ghost Town Wild West Museum Pictures, Creepy Mannequins, Like a Horror Film, Interactive Museum, Weekend Trip to Colorado Springs
categories: Visit
Thursday 09.10.20
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Movie Review- Despicable Me 3

 

PLOT- After failing to capture villain Balthazar Bratt (Trey Parker), Gru (Steve Carell) and Lucy  (Kristen Wiig) are fired from their jobs at the anti-villain league. Gru is devastated and just as he is trying to figure out a new career, he finds out that he has a twin brother, Dru ( Steve Carell).

Their parents divorced when they were babies and each parent took a child. Dru lived with their father on the private island of Fredonia, where he had a successful pig farm as a disguise for the real family profession of villainy. Just as Gru was a disappointment to his mother, Dru was inept at villainy, disappointing their father. Now their father has died and Dru is eager to reconnect with his brother, hoping to get Gru's help to carry on the family business. Gru isn't interested in returning to a life of villainy, but he sees this as an opportunity to work with his brother and take down Bratt. Will Gru redeem himself with the anti-villain league or will he return to a life of villainy?

LIKE- Despicable Me is a fun franchise: Loads of creativity, heartfelt story lines, lovable characters, solid humor, et... I'm happy to report that the third installment was just as enjoyable as the previous films.

I really liked how the film opened with Balthazar Bratt's diamond heist, which used the story device of a television news report to reveal Bratt's backstory. Bratt was a child-actor who played a child villain mastermind/inventor until his successful series was abruptly cancelled due to puberty. Bratt couldn't handle the end to his fame and suffered a mental break where he thought that he was actually the character that he played. Now, as an adult, he is living the life of the character he played, still stuck in the trappings of the 80's. Basically Bratt is akin to a has-been actor like Corey Feldman. As a child of the 80's, I loved all of the references and the music. Excellent soundtrack!

Lucy's struggle as a stepmom and trying to bond, yet not overly spoil the girls, really spoke to me. We saw this film with my step-kids who are visiting for the summer and my husband kept telling me to be like Lucy. There is a great scene at a local fair, where all hell breaks lose as she's watching the girls and they wander into a sketchy pub looking for a unicorn horn. Speaking of kids, my step-kids are nearly eight and ten; they both loved Despicable Me 3. 

Anyone remember the "unicorn" at the Ringling Brother's circus in the 80's? You'll get a kick out of the unicorn-goat. 

DISLIKE- Nothing. Despicable Me 3 is a top-notch family friendly film.

RECOMMEND- Yes! There is nothing like having kids to realize that there are so few films that are truly appropriate and enjoyable for the entire family, but Despicable Me 3 hits every mark. I would have seen this without the kids, but I'm happy we could watch it as a family. 

 

 

tags: Despicable Me 3, Despicable Me 3 Film Review, Balthazar Bratt Trey Parker, Balthazar Bratt Despicable Me 3, Steve Carell Gru, Steve Carell Dru, Steve Carell Despicable Me 3, Kristen Wiig as Lucy Despicable Me 3, Plot of Despicable Me 3, 80's References Despicable Me 3, Balthazar Bratt Like Corey Feldman, Unicorns Despicable Me 3, Stepmom Despicable Me 3, Best Family Films 2017 Despicable Me 3, Despicable Me 3 for Adults, Universal Studios Despicable Me 3, Despicable Me 3 Fredonia, Ringling Brothers Circus Unicorn
categories: Watch
Sunday 07.23.17
Posted by Karen Lea Germain
 

Powered by Squarespace 6