Experiences

Farm experiences.

Each visit can be shaped around the age of the learners, the size of the group, and the farm activities that matter most to the learning goals.

Duckweed growing as part of a practical farm learning activity

What People Can Do

Learning by seeing and doing.

Animal Feeding

Introduce learners to goats, sheep, cows, poultry, rabbits, and how feeding connects to daily farm care.

Crop Learning

Walk through crop areas to explain how vegetables, maize, cassava, and fruit are planted, maintained, and harvested.

Farm Practicals

Show the routines behind planting, weeding, hygiene, watering, and other practical farm tasks.

Guided Questions

Give learners room to ask questions so the visit becomes interactive rather than just observational.

Duckweed growing as part of practical farm learning

Visit Formats

Flexible for schools, groups, and individuals.

School groups may benefit from a structured walkthrough with time for questions and activity-based learning. Smaller groups and individual visitors may prefer a more relaxed, guided exploration of animals, crops, and farm routines.

The right visit format depends on the age of the learners, the size of the group, and how much practical engagement is needed on the day.

Shape the Visit

Match the experience to your learners.

Tell us the age range, group size, and learning goals so the visit can be focused.