• A group opportunity. Invite your friends.
  • 7 people are interested
 

Jurassic Garden! Volunteer Opportunities with Dinosaurs!

Save to Favorites

ORGANIZATION: Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden

  • A group opportunity. Invite your friends.
  • 7 people are interested

Dinosaurs are coming to the Garden and we need your help!

Different opportunities available, including:

  • Garden Ambassadors: Monitoring exhibit & plant safety, ensuring COVID-19 safety, and proving excellent customer representation!
  • Expedition Discovery: Guests can complete exploratory missions and collect their pins, and volunteers are wonderful facilitators!
  • Dinosaur Education Carts: Education is one of they keys to success for our Garden's mission! Biofacts and information to educate to guests about prehistoric plants and animals!
  • Tour Guides: Complete the guest experience with a true Walk Through Time!

Volunteers must be 14 or older.
Student volunteers welcome for a special teen program from Thursdays-Sundays during the Jurassic Garden's exhibit.
Volunteer shifts run from 10Am-1PM and 1-4PM. Tour shifts will run independently depending on tour times.

Volunteers of the Garden have special perks, including but not limited to:
  • Discounted memberships
  • Free admission
  • Discount at Cafe
  • Discount on guess passes

For more information or to sign up for training and volunteer openings, please use the contact email!

More opportunities with Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden

2 Reviews

No additional volunteer opportunities at this time.

About Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden

Location:

10901 Old Cutler Road, Miami, FL 33156, US

Mission Statement

Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden's mission is to save tropical plant diversity by exploring, explaining and conserving the world of tropical plants; fundamental to this task is inspiring a greater knowledge and love for plants and gardening so that all can enjoy the beauty and bounty of the tropical world.

Description

Founded in 1938 on an 83 acre site south of Miami, Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden gets it name from one of the most famous plant explorers in history, David Fairchild (1869-1954). Fairchild was known for traveling the world in search of useful plants, but he was also an educator and a renowned scientist. At the age of 22, he created the Section of Foreign Seed and Plant Introduction of the United States Department of Agriculture, and for the next 37 years he traveled the world in search of plants of potential use to the American people. Fairchild visited every continent in the world (except Antarctica) and brought back hundreds of important plants, including mangos, alfalfa, nectarines, dates, cotton, bamboos, and the flowering cherry trees that grace Washington D.C.

Dr. Fairchild retired to Miami in 1935 and joined a group of passionate plant collectors and horticulturists, including retired accountant Col. Robert H. Montgomery, environmentalist Marjory Stoneman Douglas, County Commisioner Charles Crandon, and landscape architect William Lyman Phillips who were all interested in bringing a one of a kind botanic garden to South Florida. In 1938, Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden opened its 83 acres to the public for the first time.

Today, Fairchild is one of the premier conservation and education-based gardens in the world and recognized leader in both Florida and international conservation. Fairchild Tropical Botanic Garden emphasizes the expansion of plant knowledge through publications, education programs, and research in taxonomy, floristics, conservation biology and ethno-botany. Fairchild plays many roles, including museum, laboratory, learning center and conservation research facility, but it's greatest role is protecting biodiversity, which the garden's scientists, staff, and volunteers all contribute to on a daily basis. In 2012, Fairchild became the home of the American Orchid Society, and opened the state-of-the-art DiMare Science Village, covering more than 25,000 square feet and featuring five buildings including The Clinton Family Conservatory's Wings of the Tropics Exhibit, Glass House Cafe, Windows to the Tropics Conservatory, The Whitman Tropical Fruit Pavilion and the Kushlan Tropical Plant Science Institute.

CAUSE AREAS

Education & Literacy
Environment
Education & Literacy, Environment

WHEN

Sat May 15, 2021 - Sun Jul 18, 2021

WHERE

10901 Old Cutler RoadMiami, FL 33156

(25.678255,-80.274284)
 

SKILLS

GOOD FOR

  • Teens
  • People 55+
  • Group

REQUIREMENTS

  • Must be at least 14
  • Orientation or Training
  • Depending on the opportunity, volunteers can sign up for one shift or recurring shifts!

Report this opportunity

We're sorry, this opportunity is no longer active.

Please find other opportunities.

Find Opportunities