Adaptable Bunnies!
The Adaptable Knitted Rabbit Trail...
As a Military Museum, we are not normally associated with these cottontail creatures. Especially the knitted variety. But what we do pride ourselves in is engaging with our visitors. And at this time of year our woolly friends like to make an appearance for our younger audience.
Our original Easter holiday activity was a quiz and trail around the Museum but we soon found that our younger visitors over the holidays tended to be under ten years old, with many even younger. So our trail was not suitable. What the youngsters really wanted to do was something a little bit more basic. Welcome to our annual Easter trail.
The wee bunnies were created by my mum (thanks mum! x) after we decided that looking for things for a younger audience would be fun. We first trialled the idea, and it proved to be an immediate success. Plus the 12 little rabbits could easily slip into our display cases and the trail can be changed each year to offer some variety. Result all round.
So when we temporarily closed in March, we realised that the Easter trail was at risk. At our team meeting behind closed doors we decided that we would have to provide a virtual trail. Ideas? Yes, same rabbits, but we needed to provide something different. The staff team spent a few hours opening display cases, hiding rabbits and then photographing the little bunnies. The content for the trail was developed. The rest could be done from home.
On Monday, we launched our 'find the naughty bunnies' trail, uploading the photographs onto social media and our website. A little bit of promotion to highlight what we are doing during the lockdown and the rabbits are let loose on the virtual public. Nick is methodically posting the initial 'spot the bunny' photo every morning, and following it up with a 'here they are!' photo in the afternoon. It is day three and there has been some interaction as people have guessed how many rabbits in each photo. Spending a little bit of time creating this trail has paid off.
A little bit of woolly fun for the hols. What is not to like?
Comments
Post a Comment