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Get Hands-On this Fall in KC

This fall travel to Kansas City and don't be afraid to get your hands a little dirty. There are numerous fall activities planned across the metro area that allow you to get hands-on.


American Royal Barbeque1. Judge barbecue at the American Royal Barbecue

• Visitors can experience KC barbecue at its best and most diverse this fall by judging, competing or just eating at the 30th Annual American Royal Barbecue. Nicknamed the “World Series of Barbecue,” the event attracts more than 70,000 visitors and 500 culinary teams.


Powell Gardens2. Make a scarecrow at Powell Gardens

• With guidance from the Gardens staff, participants in a special Oct. 4 workshop will create their own miniature scarecrow masterpieces to take home and display. Part of the Gardens’ annual Harvest Celebration, the workshop celebrates the unveiling of a special garden display featuring dozens of scarecrow designs ranging from the traditional to the wonderfully weird.

 

 


Deanna Rose Farmstead3. Mine for treasure at Deanna Rose Children's Farmstead

• The 12-acre park provides several free opportunities for children and their families to explore the Great Outdoors in Overland Park. Visitors can try their knack at mining for arrowheads and gemstones, feed the farmstead’s pygmy goats or fish for bluegill with old-fashioned cane poles.


Mattie Rhodes Center4. Create cultural art at Mattie Rhodes Art Center

• A Kansas City Latino arts and culture institute, the Mattie Rhodes Art Center offers fall craft workshops to celebrate Día de Los Muertos, or Day of the Dead. Children and adult participants will create maracas, candelabras, altar offerings and skeletons.


Moon Marble5. Build your own marbles at Moon Marble Company

• The company’s one-day fall workshops encourage participants to express themselves with glass. The Moon Marble Company’s School of Glass artisans will introduce the craft to visitors and guide them through various art projects—including soft glass creations, jewelry beads and of course marbles.
 


Sibley Orchard6. Pick your own fruit at Sibley Orchards & Cider Mill

• Orchard visitors can reap the benefits of a bountiful harvest by picking their own produce—including peaches, berries and sweet corn—or learn to make their own cider using an old-fashioned press and apples they’ve picked themselves.
 


Hands-On Activities Available Year-Round

There are also numerous opportunities throughout the year to experience Kansas City first hand. Here are a few experiences you'll find in KC.


Science City1. Train for space missions and more at Science City

• With more than 50 interactive learning stations, education and play go hand-in-hand at Union Station’s Science City. Families can train for space missions, use food chemistry to design a custom beverage, investigate forensic evidence and use physics to enhance their golf game.


Kaleidoscope2. Create masterpieces at Kaleidoscope

• In a free 55-minute exhibit presented by Hallmark, the Kaleidoscope art studio frees children’s imaginations to explore new worlds and create one-of-a-kind art from the wide variety of Hallmark scrap material.
 


Kansas City Zoo3. Feed lorikeets at the Kansas City Zoo

• A free, year-round activity lets Kansas City Zoo visitors feed and interact with small lorikeet birds. These brightly-colored Australian parrots fly right onto a visitor’s hands, arms or head to get a sample of fruit nectar.

 

 

 

 


Puppetry Arts Institute4. Make a puppet at the Puppetry Arts Institute

• Youngsters can create their own marionettes and puppets from scratch with help from the artists and designers at Independence’s Puppetry Arts Institute. Once complete, children love showing off their “Punch and Judies” with a pint-sized puppet show in the PAI theatre.

 

 

 


Kansas Speedway5. Ride in a race car at Kansas Speedway

• Driver’s education meets new heights this fall at the Kansas Speedway. NASCAR fanatics and general thrill seekers can experience professional racing at speeds exceeding 150 mph, either behind the wheel or inside the passenger seat of a two-seat stock car.

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Kansas City

“Visit Kansas City again and again if you want to keep up-to-date with this greater-than-ever metropolis.”

AAA Midwest Traveler


Did you know?

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The Negro Leagues Baseball Museum chronicles the history of the professional African-American baseball leagues, first founded in Kansas City in 1920.
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