Troy, MO Outdoor Activities
Outdoor Activity Deals
Wacky Warriors
- Multiple Locations
Warriors fire 100 paintballs and dodge their opponents during 15-minute open-play bouts on 18 fields spread across two locations
Harlem Globetrotters
- Multiple Locations
Harlem Globetrotters players coach kids of all skill levels on basketball fundamentals, drills, and off-the-court character development
Splash at Wabash
- Ferguson
Water park with two slides, zero-entry pool, toddler area, and lazy river entertains patrons and refuels them with tasty concessions.
The Falls Golf Club
- O'Fallon
PGA professional works on developing reliable swings during private lessons and junior clinics
Demolition Ball - Adrenaline Zone
- Saint Charles
Bumper-car polo, three-team industrial laser tag, and an art-heist-themed laser maze, fueled by pizzas and snacks
Rusty Wallace Racing Experience
- East Saint Louis
Professional drivers sate passengers' need for speed in stock cars during exciting ride-alongs and racing experiences
Upper Limits Rock Climbing Gym St. Louis
- Multiple Locations
Learn the basics of climbing in a two-hour class before putting skills to use; families and members scurry up 35-ft. indoor rock arches
Morse Mill Hotel
- Big River
Paranormal experts lead brave souls on nighttime investigations of the hotel's haunted past
Sugar Creek Golf Course
- High Ridge
Manicured fairways and greens stretch more than 6,500 yd. for challenging and fun play suitable for all levels
Air Balloon Sports
- Fenton
Burners loft passengers into the sky above St. Louis before settling down for a postflight champagne reception
The Woodlands Golf Club
- Alton
Frequent changes in elevation make for undulating rides over zoysia grass & winding creek threatens to swallow errant golf balls.
Kirkwood Ice Skating Rink
- Saint Louis
Groups of two, four, or six skaters lace up in rental skates and take to the ice during public-skate sessions
Katy Bike Rental
- Defiance
Riders pedal a sturdy hybrid mountain bike through lush, mountainside forests of Katy Trail, one of the longest in the country
Hardee's Iceplex
- Chesterfield
Olympic- and pro-size rinks host skaters in complimentary rental skates during two-hour public sessions at a 115,000-square-foot facility
Recommended Outdoor Activities by Groupon Customers
An authentic trolley with brass rails and bells and outfitted with modern padded seats and air conditioning glides through St. Louis’s historic neighborhoods as knowledgeable tour guides wax poetic about the city’s past and present. Guests gaze out of the trolley’s charming arched windows during the 23-mile ride, catching sight of a much larger arch standing sentry over downtown sites such as St. Louis Union Station and the Mississippi River. Tour guides fling droplets of wisdom like handfuls of rice at famished newlyweds, sharing anecdotes about historic Laclede’s Landing and Forest Park, the site of the 1904 World’s Fair, the first summer Olympic games held in the U.S., and the first forest.
The fully narrated tour departs and returns from Lumiere Place Casino on the riverfront. Tuesday and Thursday evenings, fearless tour goers can follow along a haunted walking tour that highlights some of the city's macabre past, including the St. Louis fire and the Bloody Island.
Artisans fashion their handcrafted wares before visitors' eyes, strolling minstrels entertain passersby with song, and knights suit up for their next jousting match. Such sights are commonplace in the wooded 16th-century village of Petit Lyon, where the award-winning Renaissance St. Louis hosts its annual St. Louis Renaissance Faire. Renaissance St. Louis opts not to set its festivities in England or atop a napping dragon like so many fairs before, but rather in 16th-century France as homage to the city's French-exploration roots. At Petit Lyon, volunteers costumed as villagers, noble courtiers, and peasants chat with guests, while nearby swordfighters and jugglers entertain visitors with their standup routines. Meanwhile, the town's king and queen host special audiences with youngsters, who can greet critters in the petting zoo or explore the Viking camp's longboat display. Along with the St. Louis Renaissance Faire, Renaissance St. Louis continues educating the public with its St. Louis Pirate Festival, regional events, and travelling exhibits.
A longtime tennis player, Mark Platt began teaching the sport as soon as he graduated from high school. However, after a brief period of instructing at local country clubs, he realized that his heart wasn’t in the work. The country clubs catered to intermediate and advanced players, and Mark wanted to teach beginners. In the absence of a satisfactory beginning tennis program in the area, he founded Mark Platt’s Beginner’s World Tennis in 1984.
As a tennis instructor, Mark has won numerous awards from such prestigious publications as Tennis Pro and Tennis Industry, according to the St. Louis Business Journal. Specifically geared toward beginners, his program combines lessons with special events including camps, leagues, and parties designed to encourage socializing—so far, his program has spawned 53 marriages. He and his small staff have big plans for the beginning tennis world; this year alone, they expect to introduce 10,000 adults, children, and marionettes to the sport.
The pedal pioneers at Boschertown Grand Prix Racing have been facilitating high-speed adventures on one of the largest tracks in the Midwest for more than half a century. In the early days of racing, the course served as a venue for the homemade karts of avid individuals, but now houses a herd of go-karts, sprint-karts, and super-karts that eliminate the possibility of unfair home upgrades such as engines outfitted with nitrous or the flux-capacitor of a 1981 DeLorean. Drivers as young as 10 reach speeds of up to 17 mph in a standard kart; racers 16 or older helm 24 mph sprint-karts; and drivers 18 or older take control of 28 mph super-karts. Wheels roll over hairpin turns, banked corners, straightaways, and opponents' rights to call themselves "Greased Lightning" as drivers dominate laps around the 5/8-mile track.
In 2009, while refereeing women’s flat-track derby bouts, the founding fathers of the St. Louis GateKeepers realized they wanted a taste of the speed, adrenaline, and action found in competitive roller derby. The pair gathered a crew of like-minded skaters and, in November of that year, the GateKeepers held its first league practice. By the end of their 2012 season, the league had expanded to feature three teams, plus a travel team that defends St. Louis from out-of-town opponents hoping to claim the Arch as a trophy. Despite its expansion, the GateKeepers stands by its original mission to provide a league for the players, by the players, and welcomes men from all walks of life to try on the sport's sweat-soaked jerseys and multicolored bruises.
Chris and Pam Schmick had spent six months cleaning out the scrap metal from their abandoned silos and just finished drilling thousands of holes in its walls. With little time to spare, they prepared for their climbing gym's grand opening on September 2, 1995—a date on which they had already agreed to hold a regional JCCA competition. The effort they've expended in the nearly 20 intervening years shows: today, climbers scramble on top ropes, lead ropes, and more than 20,000 square feet of lava-free climbing surface.
Instructors prepare visitors to surmount the gym's features in a range of classes, such as Rock Gym 101, which is an introduction to top-rope climbing that covers climbing safety, basic technique, and equipment. Once climbers are equipped with gear from the pro-shop, staff shows them around a multi-level bouldering cave, a main climbing area with 30-foot walls shaped by arêtes, cracks, and waves, and the building's five original silos. Elsewhere inside the gym, six auto-belays safely cradle visitors who wish to climb without taking a class.
