By Beth Sullivan
By the time you are
reading this, some of us will already have broken our resolutions: to
always eat heathy, exercise every day, lose weight…..you know.
But I will share one of my resolutions: to walk all of Avalonia’s
trailed properties over the next year so that I can be familiar with
them, observe wildlife and plant life, take photographs, and do blog
entries to share.
Identify an evergreen plant. |
Really my goal is
more for others than for myself. I am truly dedicated to getting
people, especially kids, outside!
Walk, Photograph, Question
As we in Avalonia
are stretching to find new ways to educate people, nourish the next
generation of conservationists, and train those who will come after
us, we have to get those young people out there on the trails,
getting curious, observing, and interacting with nature. Most
people do not need real formal lessons, some would like some hand
holding the first time they roll a log or follow a trail. But really
what you need is a sense of adventure and curiosity. That is what
got me hooked. I want to know what is beyond the next hill, up that
tree, in the brook, under the log and in the rocky cave. I want to
know what bird I have spotted or what a particular plant is.
Sometimes I wish for a pack animal to haul my books, cameras,
binoculars, hand lenses,…
A Woodpecker's hole. |
Explore a small stream. |
But here’s my
secret and one that I challenge you to try: Get those cell phone and
smart phone cameras and put them to use! No texting or emailing or
facebooking and tweeting while on a trail. Take pictures of what
you, or your kids, spot. It could be a really cool glacial rock
formation, a funny looking plant, a hole in a tree, the husk of a
nut found where a squirrel has left it, or a cave in the rocks.
These are all things that can be observed now, during winter. Look
for footprints in the snow and ice patterns on the water. Make a
photo journal, make digital files of the preserves and places you
visit. Come spring you can get kids to document the new beginnings,
plants, first flowers, birds’ nests, fast running streams.
While you can get them excited to use technology outside, you can get
those photos home and look up what you don’t know: what kind of
salamander was that? What was that pretty flower? Look on a GIS map
and locate the preserve you were on.
Look at patterns in the ice. |
What might live in this little cave? |
Visit our web site
As our website is getting updated, we have added a property list you
can download. It has GPS co-ordinates for locations, links to trail
maps are on the preserves page, more are coming. In the up coming
months, I am hoping to work on a scavenger hunt theme for our
preserves, that will do just what I described: get kids out, families
together, getting them to look closely and observe and document.
Right now the concept is only in my head. I will need help to
formulate it and adapt it to an internet/web based activity. But in
the meantime, I need to get out and do my own scavenger hunt. I will
keep you all posted with my observations and hope that you will join
me in a resolution to get out and get curious! Avalonia trails have
a lot of treasures yet to be found. Happy New Year.
Photographs by Beth
Sullivan.
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