by Julie Stone.
Hello friends of Mountain School! If you haven’t yet heard, we’ve started a new Mountain School Stewardship program in Bellingham. After a class has come to Mountain School, we meet them at a city park within walking distance of their school to do a service project. The students revisit what they learned at the Environmental Learning Center, explore the nature in their backyard, and learn about their role as stewards of the forest. So far, we’ve had trips with Whatcom Hills Waldorf and Lowell, both with great fall weather, a lot of hard work and lots of fun. Here is an update from our latest trip with Lowell.
Hello friends of Mountain School! If you haven’t yet heard, we’ve started a new Mountain School Stewardship program in Bellingham. After a class has come to Mountain School, we meet them at a city park within walking distance of their school to do a service project. The students revisit what they learned at the Environmental Learning Center, explore the nature in their backyard, and learn about their role as stewards of the forest. So far, we’ve had trips with Whatcom Hills Waldorf and Lowell, both with great fall weather, a lot of hard work and lots of fun. Here is an update from our latest trip with Lowell.
First and foremost, I
want to thank our grads, Kiira, Susan, Matt and Ashley for coming. They did an
amazing job organizing the kids, keeping track of their groups, doling out
little educational tidbits, and keeping the kids motivated while pulling
blackberries and mulching. I think they deserve the “making blackberry removal
fun” merit badge. Its a skill. Plus, they’re just plain cool. Thanks again you guys!
We’ve also been working with Rae, the Volunteer Coordinator with Bellingham
Parks and Recreation. She has invaluable tips of the trade, like how to
doggy-dig mulch into a bucket and how to drive a pickup filled with blackberry
vines with the equipment for 35 volunteers stacked on top. She’s amazing. Join
us next time for when she saves the world!
Matt works with students to figure out which blackberries to tackle next.
Rae's truck loaded up after our workday.
Our first class arrived on a
frosty morning at Lowell Park after a cold walk from their school. I start out
by getting the kids talking about Mountain School and reminding them what a
plant needs to survive. We played an invasive plant game that I aptly named
“Invasive Invasion.” Its nearly impossible to say, I spent the whole day
trying. The game emphasized the lessons the kids learned about what plants need
(air, sun, water and soil), while letting them run around like crazy people. I
introduced the idea of stewardship and our role in the fight to keep our native
plants alive, which they accepted with the gusto only children can muster for
clipping blackberries. Ah, the magic of youth…
Rae split the kids up into work
groups and we tackled the huge patch of blackberries in front of us. The groups
worked together to clear around native plants that had been planted in previous
years. Each graduate student had their own work group and area to work in. We
had two overlapping classes, with about 60 kids throughout the day. All those
hands made for light work while we cleared over 200 square feet of blackberry.
Both classes had a great time, happy to be outside and see their Mountain
School instructors. At the end of the day, we were all proud of the amount of
progress we had made. Way to go Lowell!
Lowell park before all of our work.
The park after all of our work!
Thanks again for supporting
Mountain School and all of our programs at the North Cascades Institute. Look
for us in a park near you!
This article is cross-posted on the Chattermarks Blog.
This article is cross-posted on the Chattermarks Blog.
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