The six pyramids preserved in Guimara were discovered by the famous Norwegian Thor Heyerdahl to the scientific and tourist world. It was he who founded the Guimar Pyramids Park in 1998. We visited the park twice, visited all the expositions, including the expositions of the Chacona House Museum, the Expedition Hall, the expositions "Pyramids in the World", "Colonization of Polynesia", "Rapa Nui: Extreme survival" and, of course, the pyramids themselves. Both visits were interesting and informative! No less interesting and informative was the visit to the Poison Garden, because we managed to find out (from the audio guide, of course) that plants and trees that were considered absolutely harmless are actually poisonous, and some of them are poisonous to a very high degree. Live and learn forever...
An absolutely useless waste of time and money
Do not take a full vest.
The greenhouse is a building the size of a country greenhouse, there is nothing exotic inside
On-site museums for visitors with a subtle sense of humor
It seemed that the pyramids were fake and they were filled with rows to attract tourists
A very amazing structure preserved to this day, I think from the time of the Maya tribes on the other side of the world.
A very well-maintained area, with tables for a snack if you take something with you, as you can walk here for a long time looking at amazing artifacts.
You can take an electronic guide.
And if you pay extra with an electronic key for some closed exhibitions, not for all excursions.