Spreading outdoor education throughout the Four Corners
By Rachael Taylor
As we zoom into February, San Juan Mountains Association’s education team has donned winter gear and snowshoes to continue our programs among the snowy landscape. Some highlights for our educators include school programs; the Wellness in Nature programs in collaboration with Compañeros, La Plata Open Space Conservancy, Mountain Studies Institute and Southwest Conservation Corps; and our Outdoor Education Program, SJMA’s new homeschool program.
Last week we provided a program to Ignacio 4th graders where students learned how different animals survive, and even thrive, in the winter. Students conducted experiments that demonstrated the four different types of thermal energy transfer: conduction, convection, radiation and evaporation. Those same 4th graders joined us a few days later at Haviland Lake, where they strapped on snowshoes and headed out to continue the lesson on how animals like tassel-eared squirrels and Clark’s Nutcrackers survive the coldest months.
Last week, also at Haviland Lake, Go Fish Durango generously donated an ice fishing trip to our Outdoor Education Program. Students had the unique opportunity to expand their repertoire of outdoor skills as they learned to safely navigate the ice and all hook at least a fish or two! Amid the practical skills, these kiddos also grasped the importance of patience and perseverance in waiting for their catch.
Finally, we rounded off the week with a WIN field trip with the Bayfield Boys and Girls Club. As we tromped through the snow and conducted our science experiments, their leaders asked if we could help build camaraderie among their older students. After navigating some initial ambivalence among the adolescents, they came together and built something really fun for the younger kids – and had a great time doing it.
All of us at SJMA are looking ahead to our annual Spring Break Camp where we spend the week adventuring throughout the mountains and desert with elementary-aged kiddos. Campers always have a great time learning about the ecosystems, waterways and ancestral ways of life in the Southwest and make some new friends too. For the first time, we, along with our WIN partners, are offering a Spring Break Camp for youth in Ignacio and Bayfield! Registration is now open.
Finally, our Junior Naturalist Field Camps and Adventure Camps will return this summer. These weeklong camps are filled with mornings learning at SJMA’s Nature Center, afternoons tromping in the river and adventures out on our public lands. Our registration process for our most popular summer program – the La Plata County Junior Naturalist Field Camps – has been changed to a lottery system in the hopes of making registration more equitable for families. Also, we are excited to expand our camp capacity by 30% with the addition of a 15-passenger van and expand our reach by working with our WIN partner MSI to offer two weeks of Summer Camp to Bayfield and Ignacio youth.
To learn more about SJMA’s education programs visit: https://sjma.org/learn/
Rachael Taylor, SJMA’s community education manager, is passionate about getting kids outside and seeking water-related adventures.
- Published in Education
Ramping Up: SJMA’s education programs continue to grow
All of the snow we got in January sure has been a sight! Perhaps you’ve watched your dog happily run out into the white wonderland, only to promptly drop from sight in fresh heaps of powder. Have you ever wondered how even smaller animals, like rodents, survive in all of this snow?
Believe it or not, there’s a whole little world scurrying beneath many of the snowy fields blanketing our winter landscapes. Subnivean, a fancy-sounding word derived from the Latin sub (under) and nives (snow), is the name of this life zone. This zone lies in the space that can form above the earth and below the snowpack. It is made up of tunnels, rooms, and air vents that various rodents make. Regardless of outside air temperature, the subnivean zone stays around 32 degrees all winter, making it an ideal habitat for mice, voles, and other small rodents to avoid predation, find food, and stay warm.
Rodents in the subnivean zone aren’t the only things staying busy this winter! SJMA’s education team is back, carrying on the tradition of school snowshoeing lessons. Groups of up to 50 students don their winter gear, excitedly load their school buses, and head into the mountains where they meet SJMA’s educators and volunteers for lessons on winter watersheds, surviving and thriving in winter, and subnivean zones. For some of these students, it’s the first time they have ever been snowshoeing, and their excitement is contagious!
In addition to winter lessons, our education team is preparing for our fast approaching spring and summer seasons. Next up we have our Spring Break Camp where we will spend the week adventuring throughout the snowy mountains and warming desert. Students will learn about the ecosystems, waterways and ancestral ways of life in the Southwest.
In April and May, our San Juan Science Ramblers after school program will pick back up. This is a perfect opportunity for kids to stretch their restless legs as we hit the local trails and explore the emerging flora and fauna of spring.
Finally, our increasingly popular six weeks of elementary-aged Junior Naturalist Field Camps will return this summer, along with our two weeks of middle school Adventure Camps. These weeklong summer camps are a warm welcome after the winter months, and a great opportunity to learn in a very hands-on way about our local ecosystems and natural environment. For a few delightful months, when the long hours of sunlight lead to a plethora of life popping among our local mountains and waterways, we are presented with an ideal outdoor learning laboratory. SJMA’s science-based summer camps bring students outdoors where they can observe first hand the intricacies of the spectacular natural environment that surrounds us.
Until then, our education team will be busy with snow programs, some of which you can join! Come on up to Andrews Lake for our free Snow Science and Social events on various Saturdays to learn about the snow pack while traversing the landscape on skis or snowshoes.
For more information about all of these programs, visit: www.sjma.org/Learn.
Rachael Taylor, a Community Education manager at SJMA, is passionate about getting kids outside and seeking water-related adventures.
- Published in Education
Nature Center reopens to public this month
The Spring wind rushes across a plateau of rabbitbrush and gamble oak as the gently flowing Florida River chatters over shallow rocks below. To the north, the monumental snowy 14,090’ peak of Mount Eolus pierces the blue expanse of sky. In the river bottom, towering cottonwoods prepare to welcome in Spring with their tangy and sweet smelling crowns of leaf buds. Gazing across this valley reveals a rich riparian ecosystem that abruptly rises and gives way to nearby arid cliffy outcroppings of sandstone and shale.
Can you guess where this desert oasis is? This varied landscape is the San Juan Mountains Association (SJMA)’s 140-acre Nature Center, located 20 miles south of Durango just upstream of the confluence of the Animas and Florida Rivers. From conservation and ecological perspectives, the Nature Center has long filled a vital niche for wildlife, plants, and humans alike. The Ute people are the oldest inhabitants and stewards of this land. They relied on many of the resources that we find at the Nature Center today, such as the three leaf sumac, sagebrush, and yucca plants.
Today, with 105 of its acres along the Florida River, the Nature Center provides an important riparian corridor for wildlife year-round. If you were to meander down the trail from the parking lot and pause on the bridge, in the soft sand of the river’s banks you could likely spot the prints of deer, raccoons, great blue herons, and perhaps bears and mountain lions. Crossing the bridge, you would find yourself waist high in an ecotone of sagebrush, rabbitbrush, and depending on the season, a plethora of vibrant indian paintbrush and flowering milkweed–but watch out for the prickly pear cacti!
Journeying on you will pass the Lion’s picnic Pavilion and be greeted by the woody pine smells of the next ecozone: piñon-juniper. Piñon Jays may dart through these ever-greens as you step into their shady corridors. Yet quicker than you may expect, your path will begin to rise and you will soon find yourself surrounded by large red rocks of sandstone as you hike along Rattlesnake Ramble. The trail is aptly named, so keep your eyes keen and your ears alert as you watch Collared Lizards and Horny Toads scamper across the rocks. Rattlesnake Ramble will bring you up the other side of the valley where a panoramic view of the Florida River valley and La Plata mountains will beckon you to pause and take it in.
The multitude of flora and fauna within the diverse ecozones of the Nature Center makes it an ideal outdoor learning laboratory. Since 1998 the Nature Center has inspired a love of learning in thousands of students through Durango Nature Studies. SJMA has continued these education programs since the merger between these two organizations in 2020. After two years of limited operations, restricted to summer camps and educational programs, SJMA is thrilled to once again open this beautiful place to the public on April 24th.
We invite you and your family to join us on Earth Day weekend at the Nature Center for self-guided and naturalist-led hikes, educational activities, picnicking, kid-friendly scavenger hunts, and more! Pack a picnic and water and stop by the Nature Center (63 County Road 310, Durango, CO 81301) on April 24th between 9am-2pm. We hope to see you there! More information at: www.sjma.org/nature-center.
Rachael Woodie is the Community Education Specialist at SJMA and oversees the Nature Center, in her spare time you can find her seeking some water-related adventure.
Students help with conservation work at Chicken Creek
Located in the foothills north of Mancos and set against the backdrop of the prominent La Plata Mountains, you can find a web of trails meandering through ponderosa pines as far as the eye can see. This peaceful place offers opportunities for solitude, hiking, mountain biking, horseback riding, and cross country skiing. Perhaps you have visited the Chicken Creek trail system to walk your dog in the warming Spring months as the Oregon grape and spring beauty flowers begin to emerge. Or maybe you have traversed this landscape on your cross country skis, soaking in the still winter landscape muffled in snow. While Chicken Creek offers plentiful recreational opportunities, its potential for stewardship work also abounds.
In 2020 San Juan Mountains Association (SJMA) entered into a partnership with the Forest Service and the National Forest Foundation to embark on stewardship projects at Chicken Creek. These projects include installing new trail signs, mitigating social trails, and helping to engage the public in how to be good stewards of this beautifully forested land.
SJMA has not been alone in conducting conservation work at Chicken Creek. A collaborative partnership has formed around this area to include Mancos Trails Group, the Forest Service, and the help of youth from SJMA’s various education programs. Included in this has been the youth from Deer Hill who helped SJMA install new trail signs at Chicken Creek this summer. The hands-on experiences that these teenagers gained is what helps form the foundation of our next generation of land stewards. In physically investing in this conservation work, these youth were able to see the tangible results of their hard work and the benefit that they could bring to both the landscape and the surrounding community. They learned that by installing trail signs, they could not only show recreationists the way to go, but also help them stay on the trail and prevent unnecessary damage to the surrounding flora.
In addition to the amazing work of the Deer Hill youth, SJMA’s Forest Fridays program also brought local middle school youth to Chicken Creek to invest in stewardship work while learning about the natural environment. Finally, SJMA’s Forest Ambassadors have given many of their summer hours to continuing the work of trail signage and engaging trail users in conversations about the conservation work that they are doing.
The work to responsibly steward Chicken Creek has been a communal effort and SJMA is grateful to our various community partners for all of their help!
National Public Lands Day (NPLD)
We are just around the corner from NPLD, the nation’s largest volunteer day for public lands! NPLD was established in 1994 to celebrate and steward our nation’s beautiful public lands. This year NPLD is on September 25th and SJMA has several projects planned. For our main project this year we are collaborating with Canyon of the Ancients National Monument to restore the Bradfield Bridge Campground and Dolores River put-in. We encourage you to get involved with your local public lands, whether that’s joining an organized project, picking up trash with a friend, or enjoying the “Fee-Free Day” at National Parks. To learn more or if you are interested in joining SJMA’s activities on this day, please reach out to Erica Tucker at etucker@sjma.org.
Rachael Woodie is the Community Education Specialist for SJMA. In her spare time you can find her seeking some water-related adventure; on Durango’s lakes and rivers, or across the Pacific Ocean .
- Published in Education