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<br /> <br /> <br />rl~~'~?J(~~~~~~ <br /> <br />1 [] <br />f'l <br />l j <br /> <br />during Revolutionary City, a daily roaming <br />outdoor theater piece that launches with <br />fife and drums. Events of 177 4-17~n are <br />enacted several times a day on the same <br />streets where they actually occurred. <br />The crowds follow the interpreters as they <br />read the Declaration ofIndependence or <br />protest the Stamp Act of1765. <br />Evening reenactments take place at sqme <br />of the colonial taverns, which serve beer <br />in pewter mugs, surprisingly tasty peanut <br />soup and syllabub, a frothy citrus dessert. <br />Even the dinnerware is authentic, with <br />many pieces modeled after 18th-century <br />squirrel patterns excavated nearby,While <br />you're eating, fiddle players meander <br />through the large colonial rooms. <br /> <br />[ <br /> <br />lJ <br /> <br />u <br /> <br />L <br /> <br />L <br /> <br />L <br /> <br />L: <br /> <br />L <br /> <br />All over the grounds you'll nnd animals <br />that are tare today, like Ossabaw Island <br />pigs and Red Devon Cllttle. Spring is <br />lambing time, when you might witness <br />the birth of a Leicester Longv/Ool, <br />one of the oldest breeds of sheep and <br />nearly unknown in the U.S,(1he adults <br />are comically cute, with lustrous coats <br />that [,111 in loops.) And the 90 acres of <br />gardens showcase native plants like purple <br />broccoli, as well as stunning flowers. <br />In spring, red buckeye, azaleas, lavender, <br />daylilics and dogwood trees arc aU in <br />bloom, and workers at the Colonial <br />Nur~ery are starting to plant using <br />18th-'ceotury tools and techniqu~, like <br />hotbeds, cold frames and bill jars. <br /> <br />r') <br />0~\J <br /> <br />ENDLESS VACATION i1 49 <br />