This exhibit displays life-like indigenous plants in their natural growth form and how they look when they are ready to be harvested, how they were harvested, as well as the nutritional and medicinal properties of each plant. More...
The beautifully displayed traditional steaming pit offers a look into how the Secwepemc "steam cooked/‘qelst’em” in the earth using steam pits. More...
Displayed in the Museum are the two most commonly used canoes the cotton wood dug-out canoe and the birch bark canoe. These canoes were used for transportation, hunting, fishing and gathering berries along the lakes. More...
This exhibit displays traditional clothing of men, women and children including buckskin dresses, shirts, leggings and gloves as well as moose hide moccasins, beautifully designed and decorated jackets and headdress. More...
In this exhibit there are many different kinds of baskets on display, the birch bark, coiled cedar root and pine needle baskets.
Also on display are traditional bulrush mats that were used for summer lodge covers as well as light weight and easy to pack mattresses to sustain the Secwepmec semi-nomadic lifestyle. More...