Somers students learn survival skills at camp
All was quiet in the forest surrounding
Grizzly Base Camp — except of course, for the sounds of nature:
birds chirping, leaves rustling and insects buzzing.
Then came a scream from inside one of
the teepees.
“Spider! Spider!” yelled one of the
girls from a group of Somers Middle School sixth-graders.
Despite all the commotion, finding a
spider hiding in a sleeping bag was probably one of the least
exciting parts of the students’ two-and-a-half-day camping
trip.
The trip was organized as a fun way to
reinforce the school’s sixth grade science curriculum, which
includes a unit on wilderness survival.
Staff members from the Ravenwood
Outdoor Learning Center taught the educational segments at the
camp, which also emphasized awareness and appreciation of the
natural world.
“A big theme is teaching sensory
awareness and learning through experience,” said Brett Holmquist,
who is the director and co-founder of Ravenwood. “It’s about making
connections to the land, and learning about yourself is the other
side of it.”
Over the course of their stay at the
camp, the students gained experience in a variety of survival
strategies and techniques.
Ravenwood offers classes on many
different topics. The group from Somers focused on skill courses on
subjects ranging from wild food gathering to spearing to shelter
construction.
Using sticks, leaves, grass and mud
found in the forest around them, the students built a shelter that
they could recreate to shield themselves from the elements if they
were ever stranded in the wilderness overnight. They also learned
how to start a friction fire using a hand drill.
The activities were also designed to
help reinforce the team-building skills that the students have been
practicing throughout the school year.
“Bringing them here at the end (of the
year) is like one big team-building activity for them,” said Dalia
Jeude, who teaches sixth-grade math at Somers.
After the students arrived at camp,
they were divided into clans of five to six kids. Each day, the
members of each group worked together on various projects and
problem-solving exercises.
One day, for example, each cluster of
students had to build a travois — a traditional Native American
transport device — using whatever materials they could find in the
woods around them. The only item supplied to them was twine.
“That was an example of the kids
working together as a team to build something necessary,” Jeude
said. “Later, they used it (the travois) to gather dry grass to
build the shelter.”
Camp organizers were sure to include
plenty of games to balance out the educational sessions. Somers
sixth-grader Desiree Morris said the “screaming game” was one of
her favorites.
“It’s an Indian game where you take one
big breath and then yell while you’re running to see how far you
get on one breath,” she said.
The group also played a night game in
which they dressed in dark clothing and tried to sneak into other
clans’ camps and emerge with a stolen item.
“We put charcoal from the fire on our
faces,” Morris said. “I think my face was the blackest.”
Holmquist said kids often learn best
when they are having fun.
“We try to keep the whole thing really
fun and playful,” he said. “There are underlying themes and
objectives, but the kids don’t really know that. They just know
they’re having a good time.”