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Agritourism Creates A Unique Experience With
A Nostalgic Feel
By Jane Eckert - Eckert AgriMarketing
If you look beyond the typical tourist attractions,
beyond skyscrapers and super highways, you'll find an unusual
destination that creates unique experiences for group travelers.
You'll find it at the intersection of a beautiful
country road and a white picket fence, by the wagons and piles
of pumpkins and horses grazing in the field.
You'll find yourself at a working farm, ranch
or winery that's been transformed into a tourist destination
as part of one of the travel industry's fastest-growing trends
called agritourism.
What agritourism offers - entertainment, adventure,
shopping, country dining and education - is exactly what visitors
want as an escape from their stressed urban lives of traffic
jams, office cubicles and ringing cell phones.
I know from first-hand experience why visitors
love coming to a farm because I grew up on Eckert's Orchards,
just outside of St. Louis, as the sixth generation on that
land. As a farmer's daughter, I played amidst acres of fruit
trees and farm animals. I remember taking my red wagon up
the hill to my grandmother's house every Saturday to help
her bake cobblers and coffeecakes. I know the thrill of watching
a baby goat taking its first steps.
Each year Eckert's Orchards hosts 400,000 guests
who want a slice of what I experienced as a child. Especially
since 9/11, visitors want a taste of nostalgia in a place
that makes them feel good and reminds them of how our grandparents
lived: growing crops, raising animals and living a simple
life.
So what does agritourism offer? Whether it's
a tour for seniors or a grandparent/grandchild group, there's
something special to experience: country-themed stores, platters
of homemade fried chicken served family style, bakery goodies
made with strawberries or apples picked that morning, tours
through the dairy barn or maple sap house, wagon rides through
beautiful orchards, a corn maze to get lost in, trips to the
orchards for picking succulent fruit, calf roping and trail
rides, gardening and craft classes, hot air balloons lifting
off, fishing for trout, racing pigs that make children squeal,
antique shows, festivals for every season and so much more.
Best of all, you can plan an agritourism visit
as a stop between cities, as a day trip during a multiple-day
city tour, or as the only destination.
I have greeted hundreds of motor coaches as
they drove onto our farm. With pride I would give them the
Eckert history. But the highlight was when the guests returned
to the bus, chatting enthusiastically, delighted with what
they had done and seen, arms filled with packages from the
store and baskets of luscious peaches! Then I felt the real
pride of growing up on a farm and being a farmer's daughter.
Now, as the principle of Eckert AgriMarketing,
I work with the agricultural community and the travel industry
to promote agritourism. I help tour operators choose the best
agri-destinations for their groups, and I help Convention
and Visitors Bureaus develop special agritourism products
and packages.
What I know for certain is that agritourism
will continue to grow. And, I can promise that taking your
group to an agri-destination will create a nostalgic, exciting
and enjoyable trip that could only come from this unique American
experience.
Jane Eckert is owner of Eckert AgriMarketing,
a full-service marketing firm that works with the travel industry
and the agricultural community to promote agritourism. She
can be reached at 314-862-6288 or by visiting www.eckertagrimarketing.com
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