Monday, January 24, 2011

Climbing The Devils Tower

Devils Tower (Lakota: Mato Tipila, which means “Bear Lodge”) is a monolithic igneous intrusion or volcanic neck located in the Black Hills near Hulett and Sundance in Crook County, northeastern Wyoming, above the Belle Fourche River. It rises dramatically 1,267 feet (386 m) above the surrounding terrain and the summit is 5,112 feet (1,558 m) above sea level. Devils Tower was the first declared United States National Monument, established on September 24, 1906, by President Theodore Roosevelt. The Monument's boundary encloses an area of 1,347 acres (5.45 km2). In recent years about 1% of the Monument's 400,000 annual visitors climb Devils Tower, mostly through traditional climbing techniques. More after the break...

Climbing The Devils Tower
Climbing The Devils Tower
Devils Tower (Lakota: Mato Tipila, which means “Bear Lodge”) is a monolithic igneous intrusion or volcanic neck located in the Black Hills near Hulett and Sundance in Crook County, northeastern Wyoming, above the Belle Fourche River. It rises dramatically 1,267 feet (386 m) above the surrounding terrain and the summit is 5,112 feet (1,558 m) above sea level.

Climbing The Devils Tower

Climbing The Devils Tower

Climbing The Devils TowerDevils Tower was the first declared United States National Monument, established on September 24, 1906, by President Theodore Roosevelt. The Monument's boundary encloses an area of 1,347 acres (5.45 km2).

Climbing The Devils Tower
Climbing The Devils Tower
Climbing The Devils Tower
Climbing The Devils Tower
Climbing The Devils Tower

Climbing The Devils TowerIn recent years about 1% of the Monument's 400,000 annual visitors climb Devils Tower, mostly through traditional climbing techniques. Text Link

Source:http://www.funzug.com/

Wednesday, January 19, 2011

Bungee Jump Adventure Vacations

By: Laura Evans

Bungee jumping adventure vacations are not for the faint of heart. However, if you are one of those who thrive on the rush of adrenaline, a bungee jumping vacation might be perfect for you.

Samrat Treks & Expedition Pvt. Ltd.

Try bungee jumping in Nepal. You can take the Ultimate Bungy Shuttle from Kathmandu for the roughly three hour drive to the Friendship Bridge or get to the Bridge by your own means. You will drop 500 feet over the Bhote Koshi River gorge. Samrat Treks also offers a two day trip, with the first day devoted to bungee jumping. (The second day offers the a choice of river rafting the Bhote Koshi River, the steepest river in Nepal or a trip to an area canyon.)

For more information, please see: Samrat Treks & Expedition Pvt. Ltd.

Bungee Jump Adventure VacationsCenter of Gravity

Do you want the buzz of a bungee jump without being exposed to the elements? If so, visit the Center of Gravity, at 100 feet, the world's highest indoor bungee jump. Located at the West Edmonton Mall in Alberta, Canada, Center of Gravity also offers bungee trampolines if you would like a tamer thrill.

For more information, please see: Center of Gravity

Over the Edge

If you are looking for bungee jumping in the USA, take a peek at Over the Edge. Over the Edge offers several bungee jumping locations in Idaho. Bridges that you can jump from range from the 487 foot Perrine Bridge in Twin Falls to the 90 foot Beaver Dick's Ferry Bridge, located near Boise. The other bridges that Over the Edge uses are near Glenn's Ferry, near Cottonwood and between Perrine and Shoshone Falls. Over the Edge books groups only.

For more information, please see: Over the Edge

Trekking Team

Trecking team has two terrific bungee jumping locations in Ticino, Switzerland, at the 007 Goldeneye and Centovalli Valley. Bungee off the more than 721 foot Verzasca dam, made famous in the James Bond movie, "Goldeneye." You also take a roughly 229 foot plunge off of a railroad bridge over the Isorno River in the Centovalli Valley, the oldest bungee jumping location in Switzerland.

For more information, please see: Trekking Team

Tuesday, January 11, 2011

The Environmental and Adventure School

Eileen McMackin had a dream, a dream that would benefit others. Her dream was to have a school that focused on environment and stewardship, and encouraged students to be leaders. Learning about and experiencing nature would not be an isolated class, but would be integrated into the academics of a middle school curriculum. Ms. McMackin got her chance to share her idea when Superintendent, Ron Barnes, asked teachers to come forward with ideas for staff-initiated schools that would fill the needs of students and their families in Lake Washington School District.

Ms. McMackin drew many of her ideas from the experiences that she and her own children had in camp settings and youth service projects. Founding a school that would provide a community for students was very important to her. As her discussion with Ron Barnes ended, he stated, "It sounds like you have a school!" Through the following year she worked with three other teachers, Wayne Tannhauser, Brian Healy, and John Hamilton to turn the vision of a school into a reality. Then, in 1999 it happened, the Lake Washington School District Environmental and Adventure School opened its doors to students.

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolEileen McMackin had a dream, a dream that would benefit others. Her dream was to have a school that focused on environment and stewardship, and encouraged students to be leaders. Learning about and experiencing nature would not be an isolated class, but would be integrated into the academics of a middle school curriculum. Ms. McMackin got her chance to share her idea when Superintendent, Ron Barnes, asked teachers to come forward with ideas for staff-initiated schools that would fill the needs of students and their families in Lake Washington School District.

Ms. McMackin drew many of her ideas from the experiences that she and her own children had in camp settings and youth service projects. Founding a school that would provide a community for students was very important to her. As her discussion with Ron Barnes ended, he stated, "It sounds like you have a school!" Through the following year she worked with three other teachers, Wayne Tannhauser, Brian Healy, and John Hamilton to turn the vision of a school into a reality. Then, in 1999 it happened, the Lake Washington School District Environmental and Adventure School opened its doors to students.

Camp Hamilton

To introduce a strong sense of community and belonging, and to start each year immersed in environmental studies, we spend a week at Camp Hamilton. Camp Hamilton is a great place to learn about the flora and fauna of northwest forests and wetlands.

Located northeast of Duvall, up a bumpy country road, it is very secluded and protected. It also has a variety of ecosystems. There is a lake, where students learn about the insects that live on or near the water. A healthy forest encompasses the whole camp, where we learn about succession and how to identify dominant trees and plants. The lake-edge marshes, accessible by canoe, are filled with moss covered snags and submerged logs. There is also a section of land bordering the camp that has been logged, so students can see the changes in habitat brought about by the removal of trees.

Lake Hannan is located in the center of the camp. It is great for kayaking, canoeing, and swimming, and water quality investigations. In a study of macrobiotics, we wade into the lake with insect nets, skimming the top of the water for insects. We place our samples in cups for a closer look. Using identification charts, and hand held magnifying glasses, we classify the insects before returning them to the lake. The kind and quantity of insects is an indicator of the health of a fresh water ecosystem. We learn that Lake Hannan is a healthy, clean lake. (Although some of us are a bit squeamish about swimming after our insect investigation!)

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolIn the forests, we experience lessons on succession and soil layers. We learn the key characteristics of the Douglas-fir, western red cedar, and western hemlock trees. We learn about the healing power of sword fern spores, taste wild huckleberries, and build debris shelters that could be used to survive a night in the forest.

In another session, we investigate the benefits of a wetland. We place sponges side by side in a long pan, and then poured a cup of water, containing silt and debris, into the pan from the top. By the time the polluted water reaches the base of the pan it is noticeably clearer. That launches a discussion about how a wetland absorbs water which reduces flooding and filters pollutants. Destruction of wetlands creates severe environmental problems as areas lose their ability to control flooding and cleanse water. We all gain a great respect for what our wetlands do for us.

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolCamp Hamilton is a great place to learn about watersheds; the boundaries of the camp itself form the Lake Hannan watershed which feeds Hannan Creek and the Snoqualmie River. Using a clean garbage bag, pieces of sponges, lots of scrap paper, and color dye, you can create an excellent replica of a watershed and see how the fertilizer placed on lawns anywhere can affect the rivers and streams. Fertilizer causes excessive plant growth in the water, which removes oxygen from the water, killing plants and water animals.

Fill a garbage bag with paper to make geographical features, then, place the sponges throughout the diorama to represent wetlands. Add a few drops of dye in areas throughout the model to simulate fertilizer. Then take a spray bottle filled with water and spray the whole model. The dye will run into the streams and go into some wetlands. In the end, not much dye gets to the main river. However, if you remove the "wetlands" you will notice that all of the dye runs into the rivers and streams.

Although some of the activities change from year to year at Camp Hamilton, community building and environmental studies is always an important focus as we begin each school year. The learning and experiences that start at camp continue to be an important part of the curriculum and school activities throughout the year.

March Adventure Week

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolOver the four years EAS has been a school, what began as a two-day late winter outing, has become a full adventure week in March. Each teacher designs a different week-long adventure and students choose where they want to go. Environmental science, personal challenge, and experiential learning are powerful components of these trips. This year the options included: a San Juan Islands biking trip that focused on native plants; a rigorous backpacking trek on the Olympic coast; an Arts in the Wilderness retreat with a watercolor artist in the Jim Creek Wilderness Area near Darrington, Washington; a high desert geology trek in California; and a day-trip option in and around urban and rural areas of Puget Sound, Mt. Rainier, and Seattle.

Bowman Bay

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolIn the spring our whole school of 135 students plus about 45 teachers and parent leaders, camps in tents at Bowman Bay State Park. At Bowman Bay we fill our week with sailing, marine science, oceanography, pioneering, crafts, forest ecology, and a service project in partnership with the park ranger.

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolWhile on board the sailing vessels, students are the crew, and learn valuable lessons on teamwork, knot-tying, and stories and songs of the sea. We are expected to be able to tie three nautical knots with our eyes closed. We learn and practice the duties of each "watch" rotation and sailing position, including the basics of navigation and entering our location in the ship's log.

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolMost students' favorite positions are at the helm and bow watch. If we are lucky at our turn at bow, we might see a Dahl's Porpoise or even an Orca Whale. We close each day at Bowman Bay with stories, songs, and skits led by students at campfire.

Curriculum

The EAS curriculum weaves the theme of environment into the core areas of study. Our school-wide theme is Interdependent Relationships – People and Environments. Environment is defined broadly, to include all of the relationships in our lives.

Teachers plan units of study together, and wherever possible they integrate learning around important themes. For example, when we studied the natural and cultural history of the United States, groups of students each investigated a particular U.S. watershed.

We began by reading, Paddle to the Sea, by Holling Clancy Holling, a story where a small carving of a canoe, made by a young boy, makes it all the way to the Atlantic Ocean from Lake Superior. As we began our study in science, we mapped our watersheds and researched wildlife habitats, land use issues, climate, and environmental degradation. In social studies we researched the indigenous people who first lived in our watershed regions. In language arts we wrote and word-processed stories of how various indigenous objects travel from the start to the end of our watersheds. As the objects travel downstream, the stories of the watersheds unfold. In art class we illustrated our stories with color, and black and white, detailed drawings. We bound our finished books, and keep them in our school to share with others. Many are of exceptional quality.

Linking subject areas together around significant themes intensifies learning and results in projects and products that have long-lasting impact for students. The four-year cycling of curriculum themes at EAS includes: Where Have the Salmon Gone and Why Should We Care?; Becoming "U.S."; Earth on Edge; and Pacific Rim & World Relations.

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolFriday Projects

As part of our school's environmentally centered curriculum, EAS students and staff engage in weekly stewardship projects known as Friday Projects. There are currently five on-going projects and every student participates in three nine-week project rotations each year.

Projects include such activities as: designing and restoring wildlife habitat; teaching third and fourth graders from nearby elementary schools about their environment; trail improvement; native plant propagation; soil and water testing; and creating interpretive trails and signs.

At the end of every nine-week session, the groups of students prepare entertaining presentations to share with the whole school and members of the community who are able to attend our presentation day. Presentations usually include a combination of PowerPoint, drama, and sometimes even a song or two.

Students enjoy Friday Projects because the outdoors becomes our classroom where we learn about the environment by doing real work. This is far more stimulating than learning out of a textbook. Our teachers notice that learning transfers from one project to another – and that, combined with what we learn in the classroom and on our expeditions, leads to powerful connections. Below are the five Friday Projects with their respective purposes:

The Environmental and Adventure School1. Bear Creek – This group has recently been surveying a 37-acre brownfield along the Sammamish River, in hopes of eventually restoring part of the site to a more natural wildlife habitat. The Bear Creek group also develops interpretive trails and related materials at Classic Nursery, along Bear Creek, in Redmond, WA.

2. Backpack Naturalists – Students in this group teach 3rd and 4th graders from neighboring elementary schools about the ecosystem in Big Finn Hill Park, as well as more general environmental concepts. To keep the younger students engaged, the EAS students prepare games and activities to illustrate these concepts.

3. Trail Crew – The main function of this group is to improve the forest trails of Big Finn Hill Park, and to remove invasive plants such as English Ivy and Himalayan Blackberry. This group also works on restoration projects with local community members of the Denny Creek Neighborhood Alliance in Denny Park.

4. Wildlife Habitat – Students in this group are currently constructing an amphitheater in a forested area west of the school building. The amphitheater overlooks a part of the forest that these students have been working to restore and the native plant garden they have planted.

5. Herbarium and Greenhouse – This group has created a set of native plant plaques and has been researching methods of plant propagation. They plan to construct a greenhouse near the school building.

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolThe Friday Projects program gives students and staff the opportunity to work with and learn from experts in our community. It also provides a strong connection between outdoor and classroom learning. Indeed, the knowledge gained during Friday Projects is often later applied in the classroom, particularly in language arts, social studies, and science classes.

For instance, the sixth through eighth grade students just finished researching the history of the Sammamish River watershed in their language arts/social studies class, and many of the topics they studied were directly connected to the Bear Creek Friday Project curriculum. The language arts/social studies unit and the Friday Projects areas of study are related to this year's curriculum theme: Where Have the Salmon Gone, and Why Should we Care?

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolConclusion

Over the past four years, since the Environmental and Adventure School began, students attending EAS have had unprecedented opportunities to learn in depth about the environments that surround us. We have had outdoor experiences that few junior high or high-school students ever have as part of their school learning.

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolThe unparalleled learning and camaraderie that takes place on expeditions, the effective, integrated, environmentally focused curriculum, and the empowering activities that occur during Friday Projects, make EAS an exceptional school. A student at EAS can climb up the bowsprit of a 52-foot ketch, looking for whales, or hike furtively through the forested trails of Camp Hamilton, and honestly call this an educational experience. All in all, EAS is living proof that environmental education is an extraordinary way to have students actively involved in their own learning.

The Environmental and Adventure SchoolAs former PTO President, Michael Crewdson, put it, "If I have to describe EAS, no words come immediately to my mind. For how can you describe everything that EAS is in a single phrase? EAS is a shining example of public education at its best."

by Danna Crewdson and David Perlmutter

Monday, January 10, 2011

Peak District Adventure Days

A Peak Pursuits Adventure Day enables individuals to come along and have a go at a selection of the activities that we offer. Expert instruction and all equipment is included in the cost . Activities on offer are Rock Climbing, Canoeing, Mountain Biking, Hill Walking and Navigation & Kayaking. To take part in these Adventure Days the minimum age requirement is 14 years old with the exception of Peak District Mountain Biking which is for over 18's.

peak district adventure daysPeak District Adventure Days

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Discover the wonder of "Scouting's Paradise"

Philmont's signature program is the High-Adventure Expedition. Available each summer from early June to late August, each 12-day expedition provides opportunities for participants to

Discover the wonder of * Explore the high country in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains of northern New Mexico.
* Experience the thrill of climbing mountains over two miles high.
* Participate in a wide array of activities that teach Scouting skills—archaeology, backpacking, camping, climbing, fishing, forestry, horsemanship, Indian lore, and much more.
* Develop leadership, group dynamics, wilderness problem-solving, and outdoor skills.

Crews hike Philmont's mountains, spending nights at various backcountry camps. At staffed camps, crews can participate in a variety of programs presented by Philmont backcountry staff. Among these programs are horseback riding, burro packing, gold panning, rock climbing, .30-06 rifle shooting, archaeology, mountain biking, and interpretive programs such as homesteading and mountain man rendezvous.

Since Philmont's first camping season in 1939, more than 860,000 Scouts, Venturers, and their leaders have participated in the rugged challenge of its backpacking program.

A once-in-a-lifetime experience awaits your group of Scouts or Venturers as each crew conquers the challenge of a Philmont trek.

Source:http://philmontscoutranch.org/