If you’ve ever ridden the Katy Trail east past St. Charles County and wondered how far the trail-town-general-store tradition goes, the answer is: a good long way. Peers Store sits about 90 miles down the trail from us, in Warren County near Marthasville — closer to St. Louis than to Rocheport, and a good half-day’s drive or a serious multi-day ride from here. It’s not our neighborhood. But it’s the same trail, the same river-bluff country, and the same idea we know well: an old general store that refused to disappear.
Peers Store is a National Register-listed building restored by Magnificent Missouri, the conservation nonprofit that’s also been busy on our end of the corridor (readers may remember the mural unveiled at the Treloar grain elevator — same organization, same stretch of trail). This summer and fall, the store’s porch is hosting live music every weekend, according to Magnificent Missouri’s 2026 lineup announcement.
What to expect: Performances run Saturdays and Sundays, noon to 3 p.m., through every weekend in May, June, and then August through October — a two-month August gap this July aside, it’s a near-continuous season. Magnificent Missouri lists more than 40 acts across the schedule, running from solo pickers to full string bands, with genres spanning old-time, bluegrass, folk, acoustic, jazz, and Americana. Names on the bill include the Rowdy Wranglers String Band, the Goldenrods, Keith Dudding, John Bolduan, and Spike & Janis Huff — a mix of regulars on the mid-Missouri old-time circuit.
The store itself keeps its own hours separate from the music schedule: Monday, Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., Saturday 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and Sunday noon to 4 p.m. It’s closed Wednesdays. Magnificent Missouri’s announcement didn’t list a cover charge for the porch sessions, so budget for cold drinks and a tip jar rather than a ticket price — worth confirming directly with Magnificent Missouri if you’re planning a special trip.
Why bother making the drive? If you’re already out that direction — visiting family near St. Charles, riding a longer stretch of the Katy, or curious what the trail looks like closer to its eastern end — it’s a genuine, free-to-cheap way to spend a porch afternoon with a cold drink and a string band, the same low-key pleasure our own river towns trade in. It’s also a reminder that the “old store on the trail” tradition Rocheport’s own Meriwether and General Store carry on has cousins the whole 225 miles down the line.
This is a day-trip item, not a this-weekend-in-Rocheport one — plan around a full tank of gas and, if you want specifics on a given weekend’s performer, check Magnificent Missouri’s site before you go, since porch schedules at small nonprofits can shift with weather.
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