The guided tour was great, as was the dancing. We ate at the restaurant on site, and the food was different and tasty. A must see attraction while in Quebec.
Its not a real village. 2 or 3 indian tipis and nothing more. Dont waste time going there. The guides were so rude that you seem like bothering them being there. Its ridicolous...
Did not expect much once we arrived at its location in an industrial park, and my expectations were met. For $12 you get a guided tour (about 30 minutes) of the small park which has exhibits that illustrate aspects of native life. Our guide was a native fellow dressed in traditional garb. He was personable and reasonably entertaining. Overall the exhibits were not that informative and a mostly run down. The most memorable was the partial recreation of a long house. (We did not visit the long house at the nearby First Nations hotel/museum, so cannot compare them.) We stayed for the lunch special at the restaurant. This was a mistake. $20 for what was essentially meat loaf style kabobs with brown sauce and some wild rice, and over cooked vegetables, likely from a can. Desert was white cake with maple sauce on it. Very disappointing.Essentially a tourist trap, leave it to the bus tour crowd....
Interesting cultural site. They rebuilt the building the Huron Wendat were living in or using. The guide gives a lot of interesting information of the way of living if that first nation more than 400 years ago. A must if you come to Quebec City but not easy to get there if you don't have a car.
To meet with American Native people or Indian is my child dream, yes thats because of Karl May with his Winnetou. The site is very nice and historic and walking trough the site is remind me a lot of my child time in Dayak Village in Borneo Indonesia :p . Here in this site we can learn many wisdom and we learn how the Native people are the real earth keeper, how they respect nature and how they trying understand the mother earth. Well in this site also we can experience their living and how they preserve food, how they make medication etc. the one bit sad is that the people there is more mixed and seem like ordinary western :p any way this maybe for tourist so they make a dance and singing to welcome you. the ticket is affordable and we can experience native cuisine also, many are meat and some herbs. They have also souvenirs store and guide in many difference languages.
This was very interesting geting to learn about the history and lifestyle of the wandates. We really enjoy the visit of the long House. Our guide Charles was very knowledgeable
I was able to have a solo tour with the lovely English-speaking guide. The village is a small recreation of a traditional village. It is not al all slick or high tech but rather as it should be rustic and handmade.I was very interested in the display of canoe construction, the sweat "lodge", and the long house. I had difficulty finding the site. I suggest you get detailed directions before you go. I enjoyed a traditional lunch at the on-site restaurant.After I went a mile or so away to the hotel/museum. This seems like a very nice place to stay. I enjoyed the museum and the gallery.
We wanted to visit the Huron Wendat Museum and I put the postcode into my sat nav. This brought me only to some houses. Eventually I found what I believed was the museum only to find out back at home that this was not the museum I wanted to visit (I wanted to visit the modern museum with the attached hotel.) There are hardly any signposts! Something that could definitely be improved! Also nobody told us that there was another site. Anyway, this smaller and more traditional site is very informative. We took the guided tour and learnt a lot about the way of life of the Wendat people. We also visited the dance show and I even smoked the pipe of peace! There is also a shop on site. Altogether well worth the visit but I just wish I knew about the other part of the museum, too.
We visited the Musee Huron-Wendat and this time around did not have time to continue on to the Site Traditionnel Huron, which the museum does not particularly advertise. While I would definitely consider the museum an excellent introduction to the Huron-Wendat culture I would skip the (one-hour) guided tour and continue on to the Site Traditionnel Huron. It's a few kilometers away, and the approach is anything but exciting (industrial area)--but the guided tour (our guide was a native Wendat woman) was much more informative than what we saw and heard during the museum tour. We somehow felt that this young woman had much more of a personal experience than the museum guide--that's how she came across.
Our tour guide was very nice and informative and it was nice to hear his stories. Sad to hear how most of the culture was destroyed obviously. Food at the restaurant was okay but this is one part that could be improved as the quality was not amazing although the service and decor inside were nice.