Options for Your Field Trip

Before you choose a program, read field trip information.

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Air Around Us

  • 1st–3rd Grade
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1.25 hours

From a gentle breeze to a gale, air is always around us, constantly on the move and impacting our lives. In this program, students will use tools to measure wind and record their observations of the air around us.

  • Spring
  • Fall

Animal Tracks and Signs

  • K–Adults
  • 80 Student Max
  • 1–1.25 hours

There are stories in the clues left behind by the animals that live here at Dodge. Learn to find tracks, patterns, signs, homes, and scat. Then unravel the story of an animal’s adventures from your careful observations.

  • Spring
  • Fall
  • Winter

Aquatic Life

  • K–6th Grade
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1–1.5 hours

The ponds and wetlands of Dodge are home to a multitude of different plants and animals. Students will collect, observe, study and then return aquatic animals to various aquatic habitats in this hands-on exploration.

  • Spring
  • Summer

Bee Ecology

  • K–Adults
  • 35 Student Max
  • 1.25–1.5 hours

From their role in pollinating crops to the sweet honey they make, bees are an important part of our world. Learn more about their life cycles as you watch a beekeeper open a working hive. Then learn about honey extraction and taste the sweet results.

*August and September Only

  • Fall

Birds of a Feather

  • 1st Grade–Adult
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

They fly, they swim, they walk on land—what group of animals are we talking about? Birds! Students will learn about adaptations that help birds survive in a variety of habitats through exploration with bird artifacts, a visit with a live bird, and a short hike to look for wild birds.

  • Spring
  • Fall

Bones, Bones, Bones

  • 3rd Grade–Adult
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

Skeletons provide structure, protection and movement. Students will analyze bones from different animals to compare their forms and functions, including dissecting sterilized owl pellets. This program has an additional fee for materials.

  • Spring
  • Fall
  • Winter

Farm Tour

  • PreK–Adults
  • 80 Student Max
  • 1 hour

Tour our barn, chicken coop and pastures at the Main Property in West St. Paul. You’ll enjoy the sights and sounds (and smells) of a small, sustainable farm as you see and learn about farm life, farm animals and the roles they play in peoples’ lives. *Children must be at least three years old.

  • Spring
  • Summer
  • Fall
  • Winter

Hens and Roosters

  • PreK–Adults
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1–1.25 hours

The most common farm animal in the world is also one of the most interesting. Get a very close look at the life cycle of chickens on our farm. Tour the coop, hold a chicken, check for eggs and see the free range flock as the roosters crow all the while.

  • Spring
  • Summer
  • Fall
  • Winter

Honey Bees and Apple Trees

  • K–2nd Grade
  • 30 Student Max
  • 1–1.25 hours

The interaction between honey bees and apple trees in the spring allows us to enjoy the harvest of honey and apples in the fall. Learn how bees act as pollinators and how various life cycles are connected. Taste the apples and honey that are the products of pollination while watching bees work.

  • Fall

Insects

  • K–5th Grade
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1.25–1.5 hours

Grab a net and a jar and we’ll be off to see what 6-legged creatures live here at Dodge. We’ll look for eggs and larvae while learning about insects’ life cycles, find predators and prey, and catch and release a bug or two. No log shall be left unturned in this insect adventure.

*Ends first week of October

  • Summer
  • Fall

Intro to Nature

  • K–2nd Grade
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1 hour

Look up, look down, look all around—nature surrounds us at Dodge Nature Center! Practice your observation and recording skills on a naturalist-led hike where you’ll use your senses to discover the sights, sounds, smells, and textures of the natural world.

  • Spring
  • Fall
  • Winter

Life in the Cold

  • 3rd Grade–Adults
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

Winter presents life-and-death struggles for Minnesota animals who face limited sunlight, cold, snow, and ice. Learn how animals use migration, hibernation, and adaptation to deal with winter conditions as we hike the woods, prairie, and frozen ponds of Dodge to observe some of these strategies in action.

  • Winter

Mammals

  • 3rd Grade–Adult
  • 30 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

Investigate the lives of Minnesota’s mammals and uncover what foods they prefer to eat. Learn to classify mammals as herbivores, carnivores or omnivores by examining clues from their skulls and diets.

  • Spring
  • Fall
  • Winter

Maple Syruping

  • PreK–Adult
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1–1.5 hours

Celebrate the return of spring by observing the age-old process of turning tree sap into syrup. Students will help tap a tree, collect sap, visit the evaporator and sample some delicious maple syrup. Dress for the snowy, muddy trails.

*March Only

  • Spring

Minnesota Wildlife

  • PreK–Adult
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1–1.25 hours

Which wild animals live where we are? This program will introduce students to some of Minnesota’s wildlife through investigating various habitats and visiting with live animals.

  • Spring
  • Summer
  • Fall
  • Winter

Orienteering

  • 4th Grade–Adult
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

Finding your way is a skill. Practice with a compass to find direction and pacing to measure distance. Then use teamwork as small groups to navigate our orienteering courses. Compasses are provided.

  • Spring
  • Fall

Papermaking

  • K–2nd Grade
  • 50 Student Max
  • 1 hour

Make your own paper from recycled and natural materials. Students will compare different types of paper and paper products and learn the process of making paper by doing it themselves.

*January Only

  • Winter

Physics on the Farm

  • 5th Grade–Adult
  • 35 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

From pulleys to levers, ramps to wheels, the farm is filled with simple machines that illustrate principles of physics. At the Main Property in West St. Paul, students will discover the physics used in farm machinery, tools and building design, and work together to complete farm tasks using simple tools and physics.

  • Spring
  • Fall

Raptors: Hunters from Above

  • 3rd Grade–Adult
  • 45 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

Meet one of nature’s most amazing groups of animals – raptors. See a live raptor and participate in hands-on activities to better understand the critical role these birds play in the environment.

  • Spring
  • Fall
  • Winter

Renewable Energy

  • 5th Grade–Adult
  • 30 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

The sun is a source of energy that humans use in direct and secondary ways. Through hands-on activities, students will be introduced to how sunlight and wind are used to generate electricity.

  • Fall
  • Winter

Reptiles and Amphibians

  • K–Adult
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1–1.25 hours

Discover the world of the cold-blooded creatures as students compare and contrast the reptiles and amphibians in our live animal collection. Students will be able to observe and interact with many native species in this hands-on adventure.

  • Spring
  • Summer
  • Fall
  • Winter

Seasons Hike

  • PreK–Adult
  • 100 Student Max
  • 1 hour

Each season is unique and brings many changes to the land as well as the plants and animals living there. In this program students explore the prairies, ponds, and forests of Dodge using your five senses to find the best of what each season has to offer.

  • Spring
  • Summer
  • Fall
  • Winter

Sky-Watching

  • 2nd Grade–Adult
  • 30 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

The night sky and its many celestial objects have fascinated humans throughout time. Learn about the moon and why it seems to change shape. Play a game to learn about stars, planets, and other objects in space. Then explore constellation stories inside a portable star lab. This class is designed for either day or night programs, regardless of the weather.

*December Only

  • Winter

Sounds of Nature

  • 1st Grade–Adult
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

Sound surrounds us every day and is an important way for people and animals to gather information about their world. Through activities and a hike, learn how sounds are made and how animals use sound to communicate.

  • Spring

Trees

  • K–4th Grade
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1 - 1.25 hours

Trees are a vital element in the lives of many animals. Learn about the life cycle of trees, discover how they are alike and different, and explore how they are used by people and animals as you use your senses to explore the forests of Dodge.

  • Spring
  • Fall

Waterworks

  • 4th Grade–Adult
  • 50 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

Water is the basis of all life on earth. We find it in many locations as it moves in the water cycle. Students will participate in hands-on activities to learn how water travels and how humans impact water quality through our actions and choices.

*Ends first week of October

  • Spring
  • Fall

Wilderness Skills

  • 3rd Grade–Adult
  • 80 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

Practice teamwork and problem-solving to learn about surviving in the wilderness. In small groups, students will build survival shelters and learn about fire-building in the outdoors.

  • Spring
  • Summer
  • Fall
  • Winter

Winter Technologies

  • 3rd Grade–Adult
  • 60 Student Max
  • 1.5 hours

Being outdoors in a Minnesota winter can be cold, snowy and challenging for plants, animals, and people. Inventions, both old and new, allow us to explore the winter landscape. We’ll predict and record temperatures in the air, under the snow, and under the ice as well as cut through the ice and snow

*January and February Only

  • Winter

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