Plan your Missouri Vacation now…
and visit Laura Ingalls Wilder Home & Museum in Mansfield, Missouri. Travel back in time in this American pioneer experience. See what it was like through the eyes of Laura Ingalls Wilder.
Then stay in a real TreeHouse Cabin and enjoy the beautiful Ozarks scenery!
In a log cabin near Pepin, Wisconsin, on February 7, 1867 Laura Elizabeth Ingalls was born. Her parents were Charles Phillip Ingalls and Caroline Quiner Ingalls. They possessed a pioneering spirit that urged them ever westward, to lands of promise and hope.
The Museum exhibits include artifacts spanning over a century of the lives of the pioneering history described in the “Little House” books.
The life, writings and career of Rose Wilder Lane are also featured in a section of the museum. Recreations of rooms from Rose’s homes, her desks, her manuscripts, and souvenirs from her world travels are also displayed.
So enjoy your day at Laura Ingalls Wilder Home & Museum, and then plan your lodging at River of Life Farm. It’s a vacation you won’t forget!
Approx 1 hour 26 minutes.
Website | Map it
Explore many other Missouri Vacation Attractions close to River of Life Farm
Click on the attractions below for more detailed information.
Mark Twain National Forest
Just a short drive from Treehouse Cabins you’ll find great hiking in the Mark Twain National Forest. There are two popular hiking trails. The Devils Backbone Wilderness offers 13 miles of marked trails featuring awesome panoramic cliff views of the North Fork River. As you hike the trail, you’ll pass Blue Spring, one of the major springs that feeds the North Fork River.
The Ridge Runner hiking trail is 22 miles long and extends from Noblett Lake in the north to the North Fork Recreation Area to the south. Two hiking loops will lead you by some of Missouri’s best topography. 334 species of mammals, reptiles, amphibians, and birds can be found in the area.
For a great short hike, Ball Pond Hollow is close by. This is an off-trail trek, but offers some great sites along the way.
Caney Mountain
This area was one of the last strongholds for the wild turkey in Missouri and was part of a wildlife refuge established by the Conservation Department in 1940 during the early years of the wild turkey restoration program. The area lies near the center of what is known geologically as the Gainesville monadnock group, a series of high conical peaks that rise above the surrounding landscape.
The knobs, steep ridges and deep valleys of this natural area offer visitors a chance to walk through a landscape similar to what the early explorer H.R. Schoolcraft might have seen in 1818. On south and west facing slopes you will see large open dolomite glades, known locally as “balds”. On these glades are stunning wildflower displays including cobea beard tongue, yellow coneflower, narrow-leaf gayfeather, and palafoxia. (Approx. 37 miles from Treehouse Cabins) Website | Map it
Grand Gulf National Park
Some people call Grand Gulf State Park the “Little Grand Canyon.” Some just call it “breathtaking.” The park is one of the natural wonders of the Ozarks, presenting the most spectacular collapsed cave system in the Ozarks. The “Grand Gulf” stretches for more than a mile between 130 foot high walls. Visitors can view the gulf from trails on top or from the floor where they can walk under the natural bridge, which spans 250 feet with a 75-foot high opening.
Mammoth Spring, Arkansas
Mammoth Spring is Arkansas’s largest spring and the second largest spring in the Ozark Mountains. A National Natural Landmark, the spring flows nine million gallons of water hourly. Forming a scenic 10-acre lake, it then flows south as the Spring River, a popular Ozark trout and float stream. Located near the spring, the park’s 1886 Frisco depot will take you back in time to an early 1900s train station. Parked just outside the train station is a Frisco caboose to explore, too.
Here at the picturesque park, remnants of a mill and hydroelectric plant also reflect Mammoth Spring’s history.
Park facilities include an information center that also serves as an Arkansas Welcome Center. Exhibits here share the story of the area’s history and natural resources. Nearby are picnic sites, a trail, ball field, and children’s playground. Approx 1 hour 30 minutes.
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Missouri Antique Shops
For a nostalgic journey to earlier times, shoppers can visit the many antique and specialty shops in West Plains and surrounding areas. There are several antique stores for your shopping pleasure. You’re sure to find that perfect item to take home with you.
Gather your family and friends and plan on spending an entire weekend browsing through charming stores brimming with treasures just waiting to be discovered! Approx 30 miles.
West Plains Civic Center & Attractions
The West Plains Civic Center is a popular facility for everything from concerts to circuses, stage shows to athletic events and conferences to conventions. Because of its ideal location, the West Plains Civic Center serves the cultural and entertainment needs of south central Missouri and north central Arkansas. Easily accessible by major highways, the center draws audiences from a survey area of 120,000 people in a 60-mile radius of West Plains.
When booking your events in the Ozarks, we encourage you to set your sights on the West Plains Civic Center.
Approx 30 miles.
Website | Map West Plains
Missouri Treehouse Lodging
River of Life Farm offers many lodging selections to choose from. We can accommodate from 1 to 14 guests. Plan your next vacation, honeymoon, anniversary or romantic weekend in our luxurious treehouse cabins nestled in the scenic Ozarks.