Spring 2023 Adventure Episode 6: Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Company

I wasn’t sure what we’d find at the Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Company, but when Laura mentioned a Tulip Festival, I was in.

Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Company

Jon, Laura, the grandkids, and I drove out to the farm after reserving our parking online for $15.00. Cars had already packed into the spots marked with chalk. While walking along the path through the lot, a collection of canopies and tents came into view. While we rushed to meet the greenhouse tour time, we peeked into some of the displays with the thought of coming back and looking over the products in depth.

The Magical Mother’s Wild Crafted Potions & Healing Stones. Boy, that’s a mouthful of a name.

Our guide gave us a brief history of the company and how it had grown from five greenhouses to around 30 in the past five years. Saving, growing, and sharing rare seeds began as a hobby for Jere Gettle, the founder and owner.

Our greenhouse guide
Only a few of the many greenhouses
Little seedlings

His Montana farming parents had selected the Rippee family homestead near Mansfield, Missouri, for its longer growing season. The move afforded twelve-year-old Jerre plenty of room to continue his passion for collecting, saving, and growing heritage seeds. And expand he did.

Succulents and petunias
Not sure what this flower is
Brazilian bellflower reminds me of a hot air balloon or Japanese lanterns

Jere started his business in 1998 at the age of seventeen. That was the year he sent out his first twelve-page catalog offering seventy-five varieties of seeds grown on his family’s 176-acre farm known as Baker Creek. The 2023 online catalog contains 89 pages and the 2024 print catalog (available for preorder) will contain 500 colorful informative pages displaying the products for sale. On the website, it mentions 1,500 products from which to search.

Marigold or zinnia?
A lot of real estate in those greenhouses
Ladybug, ladybug, bring me some luck

Plant and seed production, plant breeding, variety trials, and research occur in the 30 greenhouses. They conducted trials of nearly 2,500 “new and favorite varieties” in 2022. Our guide invited us to self-tour the greenhouses while he stood outside answering questions. We went from one greenhouse filled with seedlings to another with mature plants and annuals, and others with citrus trees or succulents.

The fruit looked like tangelos
My grandpa had a stepside truck like this
Not sure what purpose the little outbuildings serve. I should have asked our guide.
Raised beds for seasonal outdoor growing

I always wondered about businesses that started during Y2K. The notable year turned out to be a stimulus for Jere’s business. The panic instilled by Y2K and a push against genetically modified seeds brought customers to his door and increased sales from $1,000 in 1998 to $40,000 in 1999. And the rest, as they say, is history as the business has continued its trajectory north.

Tulips here, tulips there, tulips all over the place
Didn’t know there were frilly leafed tulips
Frilly tulips

After the tour, we moseyed up the path toward Bakersville, the replica village. We passed by outbuildings, rows of raised beds, and green fields. The ponies came running when kids came to the fence to feed them.

Let’s go to the village
Ponies getting some love

Finally, we reached Bakersville where crowds of tulips filled the planters in the square. And crowds of people filled the walkways and stood in line for food or goods at the Ozark Hotel and Nellie’s Restaurant and Mercantile. There’s also a bakery there, which had one of the longest lines.

To the seed store

Food and drink vendors supplemented the offerings in the village during the festival. Long lines snaked in front of most of them. The Jamaican Patty Co. food truck had the shortest line. (They also have brick and mortar stores in Springfield, Missouri) The patties were like empanadas but with a flakier crust. They were delicious and paired well with the huckleberry-flavored lemonade from another stand.

I think Nellie’s was more mercantile than restaurant
The Ozark Hotel houses the vegan restaurant

The village got its start in 2007 when Amish and Mennonite builders helped the seed company crew build the old-time mercantile store. The addition of the hotel, restaurant, and other buildings gave life to Bakersville.

Wheel and Wagon Repair Co. & Sheriff office

There’s plenty to see and opportunities to purchase a variety of goods and of course the seeds. Don’t forget the seeds. Included in the village and on the farm are the Baker Creek Seed Store, a farm-to-table vegan restaurant, a speaker barn, an old-time mercantile, an herbal apothecary, a natural bakery, a blacksmith shop, two music barns, western jail, native rock ovens, a windmill, seed warehouses, and many breeds of historic poultry and livestock.

No tour at the Rippe Homestead house. It’s a private residence.

Check their website for current days and times open and for information on the three festivals during the year. There’s no charge to visit, but a $15 parking ticket is needed when attending the festivals. Not near Missouri and still want to buy seeds? Check out the Petaluma Seed Bank in Petaluma, California.

Bulk herb store and coffee roaster

On our way back to the car, I stopped at one of the vendors selling aprons. It was time to retire the 40-year-old apron I use in the fifth wheel, so I splurged on a new one.

Safe Travels

Next up: We head to Branson, Missouri, for a few days.

Resources for historical events and other information are from the guided tour, a March 2023 issue of Missouri Life about Baker Creek Heirloom Seed Co., and the farm’s website.

Spring 2023 Adventure Episode 2: Will Rogers Archway and Fantastic Caverns

We had three more days of travel before arriving in Springfield, Missouri, on March 25, 2023. Beside the landscape beyond the windshield, the most interesting thing we stopped to look at was the Will Rogers Archway in Vinita, Oklahoma.

Will Rogers Archway

The Will Rogers Archway came along just as we needed a break and a bite to eat. “The Glass House” was its original name when built in 1957.

Big blue coming through

After a renovation in 2014, it was renamed the Will Rogers Archway. Inside, travelers can enjoy a McDonald’s meal or a Subway sandwich. Or, they can select snacks from the Kum & Go convenience store.

We didn’t dally too long, though. With only 1-1/2 hours of drive time left before we arrived at our campground in Springfield, getting back on the road was our goal.

Come on. Time to go.

The vehicles and big rigs driving below and maneuvering in and out of the parking lots entertained us while we ate lunch.

The super short acceleration lane made it difficult to merge onto the turnpike and avoid the big rigs zooming toward us.

Fantastic Caverns

The Missouri Department of Natural Resources claims there are “approximately 7,500 recorded caves in the state,” which is probably the reason Missouri is considered the Cave State. The department’s website has a list of caves open for tours.

One such tour is Fantastic Caverns. Billboards advertising the Ride-Thru cave tours were a common sight along the freeways and roads throughout Missouri. Was this a hokey tourist trap or the real deal? We met up with our daughter and the grandkids to find out.

Jon, Maya, Laura, and Jackson pose with a cave explorer

Inside the visitor center, we found a gift shop and various displays to keep us busy while we waited for our tour to start. Once aboard, our driver/guide regaled us with the history and geology of the cave.

Display outside

Credit for the cave’s discovery goes to a dog who went missing in 1862. The dog had slipped through a hole in the ground and its owner followed it, stumbling into the cave. The dog’s owner, John Knox, kept the cave a secret to protect it from the Union and Confederate sides of the Civil War. The armies had seized several other caves to mine the limestone for the production of ammunition.

Tribute to the dog that started it all.

After the war, the Knox posted a newspaper advertisement requesting someone to explore the cave. The Springfield Women’s Athletic Club obliged and documented their presence on the cave wall on February 27, 1867.

Names of the first explorers (sorry about the fuzzy heads)

Since then, the cave has had many owners and has served as a meeting place, a speakeasy during prohibition, a concert hall, and a broadcast studio in the 1970s. The Ku Klux Klan is recorded as having been owners from 1924 to 1930.

My favorite type of cave formation are these columns that remind me of cauliflower or a fantasy forest.

At one point, our guide stopped the tram in one room. I should have taken better notes, because I don’t recall what she was showing here, but it had something to do with saltpeter or gunpowder.

The orange and black gives an eerie abstract look to this wall.

One hundred years after the cave’s discovery came the first Ride-Thru tour. The Campbell family arrived in 1966 to manage the tours and in 1992, they purchased the property that included the cave. In 2017, LED lighting replaced the early 1970s lighting system.

View of one of the side rooms

An ancient underground river created the usual formations common to caves: stalactites, stalagmites, columns, soda straws, flowstones, cave pearls, and draperies. Water still drips from above, a sign the formation of limestone process continues.

Baby drapery formations hang from the ceiling
This drapery formation has had a long life.
Can you find us hiding in the tram?

So what was the hokey verdict? Not hokey. The visitor center includes a gift shop with cave and geological themed items to purchase. And we had fun riding the tram with an informative and entertaining tour guide. We recommend Fantastic Caverns for anyone, young or old or anywhere in between, to hop aboard the tram and take a ride among the formations.

Bring a sweater or light jacket to ward off the chilly 60-degree temperature. And tall people should sit on the right side because the tram comes close to low-hanging formations on the left side.

Up Next: Top of the Rock Heritage Preserve in Branson, Missouri.