Packages & Pricing



STANDARD PACKAGE


  • We come to your venue with 6 track Mouse Racing unit including Mice & PA system. 
  • Full commentary by our professional presenters and one coordinator.
  • Travel up to 25 miles from St Louis area
  • Provision of all Tote tickets

 

  • Prior to the event we advise on running the Tote, make suggestions & offer ideas on how to promote your event to maximize your fundraising total.


TOTAL COST:  $500

 

 

 

DELUXE PACKAGE
 
  • This package is as above and in addition we supply table race cards, rosettes for mouse owners, race winners, and can include an auctioneer if required.


  • There is also the option of a 9th race run for a charity of your choice or you can run it as an Auction Race.


  • The idea of this race is to sell the chance to be a ‘Trainer’ for each runner to the highest bidders. The winning trainer of the winning mouse in this race receives 50% of the monies raised during this auction.  Your Charity/Club/Organization keeps the rest.  This is a great way to raise extra money on the last race. 

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  • For further details & to fine tune to your individual requirements and prices relevant to your event, please email us with your contact details and we will respond within 24 hours. Please supply a phone number and the best time for us to contact you.

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TOTAL COST:  $700

Make a Reservation Today!



Additional Options



Popcorn Machine            $50 + Supplies

Sno-cone Machine           $50 + Supplies


CO2 Assist Twin Tapper   $50


More Details



1. Tracks can be attractive, as well as functional. Find a local artist to add lane coloration, stick-on numbers and finishing lines. That means your track has more than form, it also has class.

2. If people are picking out racers (and we note: this does not in any, way, shape, or form imply any type of wagering or gaming), make sure that you’ve got extra hands to deal with your book. Everybody loves impish kids, so find a couple of them after you’ve found your track decorator. The more impish, the better.

3. Mice can be gotten at any variety of pet shops, but if you go to one that specializes in reptiles, you know that the mice will be cheap, since they’re essentially sold as snake food. 

4. Treat your mice right prior to raceday. Get a nice big packing tub, then distribute chip shavings around the base. Add some water receptacles. Throw in some sheltering cardboard, like toilet paper rings or cracker boxes. Give ‘em some bread and produce scraps. Then watch ‘em create their own wacky little pad.

5. Be prepared to answer this question at the race, more than 15-20 times: “What’s going to happen to the mice?” Mind you, the person asking this question may have just eaten a hamburger, but they’re very, very, very concerned that you’re treating the mice humanely and aren’t giving them a post-race bonus of a one-way trip to the River Des Peres. Patiently explain that your mice came from a small holding rack, filled with dozens of other mice, all headed for snake bellies. And that the mice will, in all likelihood, be “donated” back to said shop, where they’ll be reunited with their mates, awaiting their ultimate fate. So your mice will have actually had a vacation, but be prepared to argue that point. (Affiliated note: No matter if a child at the race says they have permission to take home a mouse, do not agree to this, as you’ll immediately be met with a parent vigorously shaking their head “no,” just behind said child. Tell that kid you’re taking them to the country, or anything else you can think of, but avoid their inevitable, crushing disappointment at all costs.)

6. Don’t get attached to your mice, yourself, if you plan to return them. Understand that when all 16 mice are piled atop each other in a corner, snoozing away the entire afternoon, you’ll suddenly be grabbed by something like... affection. The strange desire to just keep a couple. Then the idea of how you can build a multi-modal sanctuary for them out of additional packing boxes and household odds’n’ends. Do not succumb to cheap emotion.

7. On race day, pick your mice at random, don’t accept bribes, let your racers have some extended rest breaks. Tip your wranglers well. Apologize to the band for screaming, “Time for mouse races!” every five minutes. In other words, run a clean and honorable set of competitions.