Arts & Entertainment
Gardenland Express Chugs Into the Missouri Botanical Garden for Trainloads of Holiday Fun
Saturday features an appearance by Santa along with carolers, a brass concert and even chestnuts roasted over an open fire.
With model trains chugging through 5,000 square feet of blooming plants, Christmas trees, Nutcracker soldiers, wooden rocking horses and other old-fashioned toys, the Missouri Botanical Gardenβs βGardenland Expressβ holiday display is a throwback to an era people cherish and miss.
βWeβre kind of becoming a traditional spot for a lot of people,β said Karen Hill, a public information officer with the garden. βThe old department store windows downtown used to have trains and things like that in them. A lot of people have commented over the years that our display kind of reminds them of that and has sort of replaced that as their holiday tradition.β
has been part of the gardenβs holiday offerings since 2003. Preparation typically starts in August, when the model trains are inventoried.
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βItβs built from the ground up each year,β Hill said. βItβs a completely new display each year. The floral display hall is really transformed. This yearβs display is very bold and colorful and very whimsical. It definitely gets you in the mood for the holidays.β
Plants are a prominent part of the festive look.
βWe have over 500 blooming poinsettias and other plants,β she said. βOur horticulturists definitely see whatβs on the market and always try to get some new cultivarsβdifferent varieties of poinsettiasβin there. We have a hot pink cultivar, so itβs not just going to be a ton of red poinsettias. We have a lot of different varieties, color and such. So people like to see that in our show. And we have other pretty blooming plants as wellβbegonias and cyclamen and other things to see.β
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One element that sets this yearβs Gardenland Express apart from other years, Hill said, is the focus on trees.
βThis year, the garden has been celebrating trees all year long,β Hill said. βThe United Nations actually designated 2011 as the International Year of Forests. So thatβs kind of where we got the idea for that.β
The display includes large and small trees, with information accompanying them.
βYouβll see lots of gift tagsβdifferent signs that we have on the treesβsaying βHereβs a special gift that this tree gives to people.β Whether itβs shelter or oxygen or shade,β she said. βOr maybe it can be used for a musical instrument, or itβs a common building material. So we like to insert some fun ways for people to get some learning, to get some factoids, in there as well. Itβs very cute how they did it this year. I was impressed by our interpretation team. I thought it was very clever with the gift tags.β
The G-scale trains, with each individual car about a foot long, wind their way in and around the plants, trees and toys.
βItβs not the teeny tiny trains you might have at your home,β Hill said. βThese are going to be bigger, garden-scale trains. They run throughout the day. They wander in and out of the display. One fun thing I like to point out to people, because itβs a common question we getβevery now and then theyβll see a train thatβs stopped, and someone will come up to me and say, βThereβs something wrongβone of your trains has stopped.β We run these trains from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, so they are programmed to stop and take breaks so they donβt overheat.β
The display also includes several large gifting trees.
βYouβll see these very large towers of stacked, wrapped presents, in really bold color wrapping paper,β Hill said.
The Gardenland Express, which runs through Jan. 2, is packed with holiday events. Santa Claus, for instance, will be on hand to meet and greet 1-4 p.m. Saturday.
βBring your own hand-held camera, and youβre welcome to take a photo with Santa,β she said.
There is no charge to take pictures with Santa, and this isnβt just any garden-variety Kriss Kringle either.
βWe have the real Santa,β Hill said, laughing. βIβm not even kidding. Iβve been here for years, and we get calls and we get comments all the time that this is the place to go because we have such a good Santa.β
This is also the Saturday for caroling groups. The St. Margaretβs Youth Choir will perform at 1 p.m., followed by the Caroling Partyβcarolers in costumeβat 2 p.m. and the Rosati-Kain Voices at 3 p.m. Adding to the holiday spirit, a vendor outside the main entrance will be selling chestnuts roasted over an open fire.
The St. Louis Low Brass Collective will offer a holiday play-along concert 11 a.m. to noon Saturday. The collective, headed by Saint Louis Symphony Orchestra members Gerry Pagano and Terry Myers, provides educational and performance opportunities for student and amateur low-brassβtrombone, euphonium, baritone horn and tubaβmusicians.
A large display of holiday wreaths festoon the area, and people can bid through silent auction to take one of the wreaths home at the end of the season. Another popular attraction is a large holiday tree in the Kemper Center decorated with βgourdamentsββornaments made from gourdsβand other natural materials.
Victorian Christmas at Tower Grove House, the former home of garden founder Henry Shaw, is a perennial crowd favorite.
βThey decorate it with Victorian holiday dΓ©cor,β Hill said. βItβs very pretty.β
The Tower Grove House is open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesday through Sunday.
AβChanukah: Festival of Lights observance will be held noon-4 p.m. Sunday. It will include a menorah lighting ceremony, music, dance and vendors. Kwanzaa: Festival of the First Fruits will be observed noon-4 p.m. Dec. 28. It will include storytelling, authentic African drumming and musical performances and craft and jewelry displays.
Whatever the attraction, people are headed in throngs to the Garden.
βAttendance has been great,β Hill said. βItβs always the week between Christmas and New Yearβs that is the most bustling for the show.β
Admission to the garden is $4 for St. Louis city and county residents, $8 for all others, children 12 and younger are free. There is a separate $5 admission fee for Gardenland Express. Hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. daily, with early 4 p.m. closing Christmas Eve and New Yearβs Eve.
Getting There
The Missouri Botanical Garden is located at 4344 Shaw Blvd., St. Louis, 63110. Take Highway 40east to exit 36A for Kingshighway Boulevard, turn right (south) on Kingshighway, then left on Manchester Road, right on Tower Grove Avenue and right on Shaw Boulevard.
