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©
2002 Display
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contents of the on-line edition of The Nugget represent a selection
among the stories that appear in the weekly print edition. |
Students
get a taste of wilderness
Nearly
60 juniors at Sisters High School took a walk on the wild side last week
as part of the fall expedition into the Three Sisters Wilderness for the
Integrated Environmental Expedition (IEE) class at Sisters High School.
The IEE program integrates
environmental science, geography, physical education and English in an
afternoon block during the fall and spring trimesters. The annual fall
expedition up the Pole Creek trailhead introduces students to the wilderness
while also teaching valuable lessons in outdoor etiquette and survival,
how the headwaters of Squaw Creek fit into the Deschutes River Basin,
and how the geography of our area impacts those who live and recreate
here.
The students were divided
into small groups of six to eight, led by a senior IEE intern and other
adult helpers. Starting times were staggered and campsites varied to lessen
the human impact in the wilderness. Each small group spent about 48 hours
in the mountains.
Course instructors include
Rob Phelps, Samra Spear, Glen Herron and Rand Runco. More than a dozen
community and parent volunteers helped in the field over the four days
that students were on the mountain.
Starting at the Pole Creek
trailhead, each group made its first push into the wilderness with loaded
backpacks about two miles to where the trail crosses Soap Creek. At this
station students got a short lesson from Rima Givot on the creek, including
its source, temperature and inhabitants.
From Soap Creek students packed
in another two to three miles to their designated campsite which would
be there home for the next two nights. Each group shared the workload
of camp life, including cooking, clean up, and waste management.
A base camp run by instructor
Samra Spear, was set up below Hayden Glacier and provided supplies and
instruction about the next stations of the trip. Hiking high up a lateral
moraine along-side the glacier marked the highlight of the trip for many
students.
Nathan Batara, a recent transfer
from Hawaii, found the two hour struggle up to be well worth the energy
expended.
"When you get up so high along
the glacier it makes you realize how small you are," he said. "It takes
a lot of encouragement and teamwork to keep going because it's so steep,
but the view and the beauty of the glacier makes it worth it."
Each group also made a trek
to Demaris Lake, where instructor Rob Phelps gave a lesson on tree identification
and pointed out signs of glacial activity in the area.
"It was great to see things
in real life after studying them in the classroom," said Batara.
Because of wet weather, one
group had to come out early on Saturday, and two other groups did not
go. |
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