Within a few minutes of downtown St. Louis, you can leave behind the fast-paced city streets for endless miles of rolling farmland. In place of silver skyscrapers, red barns dot the horizon, and instead of buses and taxis, combines and tractors provide the soundtrack to summer days.
Even though we’re surrounded by the country’s top producers of corn, soybeans and horseradish, many of our kids don’t fully appreciate the impact our local farmers have on our dinner tables – and on dinner tables around the globe.
With its new exhibit, GROW, opening June 18, Saint Louis Science Center has lifted the farm from the fields and planted it in the heart of the city, to give thousands of families the opportunity to get up close and personal with the world’s food suppliers.
“We hope this will provide an opportunity for people of all ages to learn about how food is grown and where their food comes from,” explained Bert Vescolani, president and CEO of the Saint Louis Science Center.
“Our mission is to ignite and sustain lifelong science and technology learning, and I cannot think of a better way to inspire our next generation of farmers, scientists, inventors, and problems solvers than through food. Because of the hands-on, interactive activities, we know our guests will learn while having a lot of fun.”
The pinnacle of agricultural exploration
According to Vescolani, GROW is the first agricultural exhibit of its size in the United States and is the Science Center’s first major addition since 1991, replacing the EXPLORADOME which was decommissioned in 2013.
With more than 40 exhibits and demonstrations gracing a one-acre display area, GROW introduces visitors to a state-of-the-art experience that blends farming traditions with the latest technologies that allow growers in the Midwest to feed hungry families a healthy array of meat, fruits and vegetables.
Said Vescolani, “Guests will have the chance to meet our flock of chickens, milk a life-sized cow, browse the Seed Library, visit the Hive, and learn how food goes from farm to table.”
What’s especially cool about GROW is that just like an actual farm, the activities within the exhibit change four times a year to reflect each season. Therefore, regular guests to the Science Center can have a new experience at almost every visit.
Just some of the exhibits include:
GROW is an exciting way to give everyone the opportunity to experience an industry we too often take for granted, but one none of us can live without. But even more important, it teaches kids – and tomorrow’s leaders – how to be good stewards of the land.
“Everyone likes to see how things are grown,” said Vescolani. “But when it is the food you eat, it makes the subject even more interesting to learn.”
Admission to GROW is free, but there will be some paid programming and activities. The exhibit opens Saturday, June 18 at 9:30 a.m. with a variety of festivities and special events. To learn more about this new exhibit, visit www.slsc.org
See photos and follow along as finishing touches are added to the GROW exhibit on SLSC's Facebook, Instagram and Twitter accounts!
Metro East mom Nicole Plegge has written for STL Parent for more than 12 years. Besides working as a freelance writer & public relations specialist, and raising two daughters and a husband, Nicole's greatest achievements are finding her misplaced car keys each day and managing to leave the house in a stain-free shirt. Her biggest regret is never being accepted to the Eastland School for Girls. Follow Nicole on Twitter @STLWriterinIL
Little Red Hen Play Dates are a wonderful way for children ages 0-6 and their caregivers to experience the magic of Waldorf Early Childhood Education. You and your child will bake bread — a weekly occurrence in the Waldorf School's Early Childhood Program — listen to stories; join in a circle time filled with songs, rhymes, and movement; and explore the outdoors in the mini meadow.
Bring your babies and toddlers to this free story time at the Missouri History Museum.
Storytelling in the Museum is an in-person storytelling event happening at 10:30 a.m. at the Missouri History Museum. This event, perfect for the preschool set, features engaging stories with themes like Women's History Month, I Love St. Louis, Spring, and more.
Storytelling in the Museum is free.
Visit The Magic House for Toddler Time, a special early-morning program for toddlers. Children age 1-4 can take part in exhibits and exclusive interactive activities designed just for little ones. There are new themes every week!
Join in on First Art, a free art program for toddlers where the focus is on the process of making art rather than the finished product. Dress to get messy!