This time of year, many family farms boast
corn mazes. Paul and Sherry Staley have two — their 12-acre
“Jungle Maze” and a three-acre “Mystery
Maze.” But that’s not all. The Staleys have been in the
entertainment-farming business long enough to go completely
maze-crazy. They have constructed five straw mazes, ranging from an
easy toddler course to a completely dark, labyrinthine, 10-story
mon-straw-sity, “not recommended for those who are
claustrophobic or asthmatic” according to their encyclopedic
Web site.
Of course, the Staleys don’t want their
claustrophobic and asthmatic visitors to feel left out. The
couple’s carpeted indoor “Dark Zone” maze is
“almost allergy-free,” they say, and their outdoor, open-air
“Spider Web” maze, made of two miles’ worth of
PVC pipe, accommodates just about everyone.
Did we mention that five of these mazes are
also wheelchair-accessible?
See, the Staleys specialize in taking casual
suggestions and turning them into grand realities. In fact, their
entire operation was inspired a dozen years ago by a bit of
unsolicited advice delivered by a Sears repairman making idle
conversation while he worked on their water softener, Paul Staley
says.
“He’d been out East,”
Staley recalls, “and he said, ‘Ya know, I went to a
farm that was having hayrides and mazes and tours, and people were
just flocking to it. You guys could do that.’ ”
At the time, the Staleys had 1,500 acres
devoted to 6,000 hogs, and the 1980s had been disastrous for the
pork market. What did they have to lose? They called their new
business Pumpkin Works.
That first year, the couple had one simple
straw maze, a haunted house, and pumpkins. Within three years, they
had phased out the hogs completely (except for a few cuties kept in
the petting zoo), and everyone was happier — the Staleys,
their banker, and their neighbors.
Now Pumpkin Works has not only the mazes and
the pick-it-yourself pumpkin patch but also an Indian-corn field
(complete with red-wagon rentals), hayrides, bonfires, a general
store, a pumpkin slingshot, and whatever else the Staleys think up
between now and the day you arrive at their little patch of heaven.
This year’s major maze features a
stagecoach, which takes its cue from the Staleys’ biggest
barn, built in the 1850s to stable horses for the local stage. Like
most Pumpkin works attractions, it is designed by Sherry, a former
art teacher, and created by Paul. Many operations use fancy GPS
technology to plot their mazes; Sherry still uses graph paper, and
Paul still uses flags, a riding lawnmower and old-fashioned math to
get the maze built.
Mazes are still the Staleys’ main draw,
but Paul says that the hayrides through the family’s 100-acre
woods are almost as popular. The hour-long daylight rides are
accompanied by a naturalist, who identifies the trees and
wildflowers. Ghosts and other haunting personalities join the
after-dark “spooky” rides.
Prices, hours of operation, and many other
details are available on the farm’s Web site
(pumpkinworks.com), or call 217-275-3327.
Pumpkin Works is in Paris, a good three-hour
drive from Springfield.
A closer corn maze — the Great Godfrey Maze — is in Alton. This year’s
seven-acre crop is cut into a Wizard of Oz design. The Sept. 2 opening-night party will
feature Dorothy and her friends as special guests, and the movie will
be presented on a giant outdoor screen beginning at 7:30 p.m.
Starting Sept. 3 and continuing through
Halloween, the maze will be open 5-9 p.m. Friday, 10 a.m.-9 p.m.
Saturday, and 1 p.m.-dusk on Sunday. Along with the maze,
you’ll find a kiddie train, a tricycle corral, and a corn
cannon (three shots for a buck).
On Oct. 1, the maze will be the site of the
Annual Fall Corn Festival, featuring live music and food vendors.
During the last two weeks of October, the maze will become haunted.
Admission prices for the maze are $6 for
adults and $4 for children ages 6 through 11. For more information,
consult greatgodfreymaze.com or call 800-258-6645.
This article appears in Sep 1-7, 2005.
