Tree Canopy Walkway

The Tree Canopy Walkway is closed for the season and will reopen next summer.

Imagine being 40 feet high in the trees, harnessed and clipped to a series of swinging bridges spanning 150 feet. What could you see and hear? How would it feel to be walking through the trees or speeding toward the forest floor?

Want to find out? Take the family on a Sky-High Safari. The Tree Canopy Walkway at the EcoTarium is the only place in New England where kids and adults can experience what it's like to walk at the tops of the trees-- or be a treetop scientist! Explore firsthand what's living up there and the different kinds of trees that make up EcoTarium's forest. End your adventure by zipping down to the forest floor in our comfy (and secure) chair harness.

Tickets

$10/person (plus museum admission), $8/person for EcoTarium members.

Tickets are sold at the Information Desk on a first-come, first-served basis. SPACE IS LIMITED and we do not accept reservations so please check availability as soon as you arrive at the EcoTarium. Timed tickets are available for each half-hour between 11:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday and between 12:30 p.m. and 4:00 p.m. on Sunday.

We do not accept reservations for the Tree Canopy Walkway.

Preparing for your canopy adventure

Please read before your visit!

SAVE TIME! Print the Informed Consent-Liability Release Form, complete it, and bring it with you to the EcoTarium. Please present it at the Information Desk when purchasing Tree Canopy Walkway tickets. Completion of this form does not guarantee you a space on the Tree Canopy Walkway; tickets are sold at the Information Desk on a first-come, first-served basis.

What's a Tree Canopy Walkway?

EcoTarium's Tree Canopy Walkway is a series of platforms and rope bridges suspended more than 40 feet above ground among a grove of oak and hickory trees. Opened at EcoTarium in July 1999, it was the first in the country available for public use. The walkway is modeled after those built for scientific research in tropical and temperate forests around the world.

Only in the last 20 years have scientists begun to document the tremendous diversity of life high in the tree canopy. Researchers have estimated that millions of undiscovered species-- many of which are insects - are hidden high above our heads in the leaf line of the trees. Scientists have developed ingenuous techniques for accessing the canopy layer of the forest, including climbing ropes or ladders, inflatable "rafts" and "sleds" dropped from hot-air balloons, and tree canopy walkways.

EcoTarium's Tree Canopy Walkway was designed and constructed by Canopy Construction Associates, based in Amherst, Mass. The associates, all experienced canopy researchers and builders, have also installed walkways in Belize, Ecuador, Borneo and the Peruvian Amazon.