
This year, the 2025 KAEE Excellence in Environmental Education Awards proudly recognize the Salato Wildlife Education Center as the recipient of the Outstanding Community Partner Award. As the Center celebrates its 30th anniversary, this award honors not only a legacy of environmental education but also Salato’s continued innovation in connecting people with nature. Among its many achievements, the Center’s newest exhibit, Healthy Hunting Grounds, stands out as a powerful example of community engagement, educational excellence, and conservation impact.
Since 1995, the Salato Wildlife Education Center has welcomed over 200 school groups annually, offering immersive, hands-on learning experiences through wildlife encounters, outdoor education classes, and interpretive programming. Located in Frankfort, Kentucky, Salato has long served as an important resource for environmental education, engaging tens of thousands of visitors each year in learning about native species and ecosystems. Its latest initiative, the Healthy Hunting Grounds exhibit, expands this mission by addressing an important and often misunderstood aspect of wildlife conservation: the role of regulated hunting.

Healthy Hunting Grounds is designed to reach 40,000 to 50,000 visitors annually, with a projected audience of over half a million people over the next ten years. Built around three central themes, the exhibit educates the public on hunting’s critical contributions to conservation efforts, its connections to physical health and well-being, and the importance of ethics and safety in outdoor recreation. Visitors learn how hunting funds habitat protection and wildlife management through license sales and excise taxes, and how these practices support public lands and benefit all wildlife, not just game species.
The exhibit also highlights the many health benefits of outdoor activity, local food sourcing, and mental wellness that hunting can provide. By framing hunting in this broader context, Salato reaches a diverse audience and helps bridge cultural and knowledge gaps. A strong emphasis is placed on responsible and ethical practices, reinforcing the legal and safety standards that ensure hunting remains a sustainable and respectful tradition.

The exhibit invites visitors to crawl through a fox’s den tunnel, explore a duck blind and tree stand, identify bird calls, touch animal pelts and tracks, and interact with a dynamically lit oak tree. A rotating wildlife art display, lift-and-drop stations, sliders, and a personal stories kiosk all contribute to a highly engaging and memorable experience. These elements are thoughtfully designed to appeal to different learning styles and age groups, while reinforcing key messages about the North American Model of Wildlife Conservation.
Healthy Hunting Grounds reflects Salato’s commitment to inclusive, science-based education and its ability to adapt programming to address current environmental and societal challenges, including habitat loss and public health issues.
As it enters its fourth decade of service, the Salato Wildlife Education Center continues to lead the way in environmental education across Kentucky. The Healthy Hunting Grounds exhibit is a powerful tool for building understanding, sparking curiosity, and strengthening public support for conservation. For its innovative approach and continued dedication to community partnership,
Salato is a truly deserving recipient of the 2025 Outstanding Community Partner Award.
We’re excited to celebrate the Salato Wildlife Education Center along with our other award winners at this year’s KAEE Conference. Awards will be presented during our Annual Awards Luncheon on Friday, November 14, from 12:00 to 1:30 PM CT at the Owensboro Convention Center.

















































