Learn to Plant and Grow. Explore Opposites in Nature. Enjoy!

Here in Sisters Country we are blessed with bounty. Deschutes National Forest spills out from our doorsteps, blanketing snow-capped mountains with pines and stretching out to the volcanic wastelands in McKenzie Pass. We also find blessings where the land has been tamed: our farms, ranches, and farmers markets provide local, ethically produced nourishment and community alike.

Notable among all the bounty is Seed to Table, a nonprofit educational farm helmed by a strong leader and lifelong Sisters community member, Audrey Tehan. Her team, including education coordinator Aude Girin, has responded to Covid-19 and Oregon school closures with home-based learning.

Aude Girin teaches kids with fun and farm activities at Sisters Farmers Market.

Aude Girin teaches kids with fun and farm activities at Sisters Farmers Market.

Usually, the Seed to Table team would be in the schools and kids would be on the farm, going hands-on at this time of year. Instead, the organization sent home seed packets and soil with the kids’ school packets.

Adults and kids from anywhere can take advantage of the videos Seed to Table has made for this time. Dig in and enjoy the possibilities at SEED TO TABLE ONLINE FARM.

Looking for a fun activity that doesn’t require planting a garden? Scroll down to their Week 2 exercise, “Exploring Opposites in Nature. “

Nature Sit Spots with Susan Prince

"Sit spots" in nature help us get plugged into the big natural world. Wonderful stuff! Read all about it below. Some of this information originally appeared in an article by New Oregon director T. Lee Brown in The Nugget Newspaper. Here, we’ve added some helpful links and other new info. Enjoy!


Local kids used colorful Sharpie pens to make a “story map” with nature connection teacher Susan Prince at New Oregon’s summer solstice event.

Local kids used colorful Sharpie pens to make a “story map” with nature connection teacher Susan Prince at New Oregon’s summer solstice event.

How to do a ‘Sit Spot’ in nature

Kids and adults alike can enjoy a regular “sit spot” in a natural setting. From reducing anxiety to improving test scores, the benefits of nature time has been proven both by common sense and by over thirty years of scientific research.

Formerly a nature educator in California, Susan Prince has taught Sisters Country kids through Deschutes Land Trust, SPRD, schools, and New Oregon Arts & Letters. Here she shares tips on getting reacquainted with nature.

The quick summary version?

1) Turn off your phone

2) Sit quietly in nature for 20 minutes

3) Share your experience by drawing a “story map.”

Now let’s dig into some details.

Fox Walk & Owl Eyes

Before heading out, try walking very quietly like a fox, while using your peripheral vision like an owl. “You can see so much more when you’re out there, if you use these tools,” said Prince. Here, she shares her own backyard experience with us. You can listen here on streaming, or download the MP3 file to your device:

Sitting

Quietly walk to a spot in nature. Your backyard may work. If you can go out into a field or forest, sit 15–20 feet away from other people. Housebound? Look out an open window. Set a timer for 20 minutes, and sit.

Observe what’s around you, engaging all your senses. The wind in your hair, the calls of birds, sunlight on water: notice everything around you. Try closing your eyes for a while so you can concentrate on sounds and smells.

It may take a few minutes to let go of everyday worries and settle into being with nature. “If you’re frustrated or impatient, that’s okay,” said Prince. “You’ll still notice things. Next time, it’ll be easier.” If people or machines intrude, notice them the same way you might notice a ladybug or a squirrel.

Story Map

After your sit spot, gather everyone around one big sheet of paper, with plenty of markers or crayons. Chat about what you saw, heard, and felt in nature, while drawing pictures inspired by your experience.

“Our ancestors would be going out hunting, gathering, during the day, and they would come back — no books, no TV, no phones,” Prince said. “They would share what they saw out in nature with everybody around the campfire, and that’s how people in the community learned.”

“They learned where the berries were, where the foxes lived, where the bear was, perhaps,” she said.

In other words: primitive social media, without hearts, likes, or swipes. While nature awareness on its own brings many rewards, Prince said “repeating the story back to the community is a really key part of it.” If you’re socially isolated, send a photo of your solo drawing to friends or family.

Postcard-perfect wilderness images are not necessary. During a Sisters High School sit spot, “you could hear people doing construction on the Hayden Homes,” said Prince. “Students worked that right into the map.”

Age and Attention Span

“There’s a certain amount of supervision required, to make sure that kids stay where they are” and don’t distract each other, said Prince. She said she’s been surprised how rarely they try to talk.

A person’s attention span is an important consideration, but “it isn’t necessarily age-related.” Prince told of a group of homeschool students, mere 2nd through 4th graders. “Those kids could sit for half an hour; they could really hang in there,” she said. “The middle school kids actually had a harder time.”

Sit spots are a practice. Just as in sports, arts, or music, the more you practice, the better results and the longer you can stick with it. “People can definitely get the hang of it,” Prince said.

Coyote Mentoring

Much contemporary education focuses on informing students of various scientific facts. Parents, teachers, and the Internet jump in with information long before a kid has a chance to observe and explore.

Prince prefers the “coyote mentoring” approach favored by her teacher Jon Young, author of “Coyote’s Guide to Connecting with Nature.” If a student noticed a snapping turtle, the mentor might ask, “What do you think about that snapping turtle? How long has it been there? Where does it go in the winter?”

The student learns to think and learn from their personal observations. “If you have to go figure out what the snapping turtle is doing by watching the snapping turtle, you’re going to remember it,” Prince said with a laugh.

Returning

Experts recommend returning to the same spot over and over. “We notice the changes from day to day, week to week, season to season,” Prince explained. “We’re not just walking through it anymore. We’re integrated.”

Read all about Susan Prince’s approach in The Nugget Newspaper this week (online here).

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Happier, More Confident Kids

by T. Lee Brown

Most studies agree that "kids who play outside are smarter, happier, more attentive, and less anxious than kids who spend more time indoors." As Danielle Cohen writes on childmind.org, benefits of playing outside in nature include:

Nature Kids-pond.jpg

Building Confidence
"The way that kids play in nature has a lot less structure than most types of indoor play," writes Cohen. "Letting your child choose how he treats nature means he has the power to control his own actions."

Promoting Creativity
My own spin on this: current lifestyles in much of America put kids in structured environments most of the time. They're at school, being shown how to color in the lines, or on the soccer field, being instructed in the game's rules. Unstructured play encourages brain development, imagination, and creativity. In nature, there's an unlimited supply of unstructured objects and environments for play and curiosity. It may take a little while for your child to catch on; you and they will both need patience.

Teaching Responsibility
Kids learn to be responsible for their own bodies while interacting with unpredictable environments—with sticks, animals, mud, and the like. They also begin to understand how they're part of a larger web of nature. Smaller children will realize that pulling up a flower kills the plant, for example. 

Stimulating the Senses
As Cohen reports, "Nature may seem less stimulating than your son’s violent video game, but in reality, it activates more senses—you can see, hear, smell, and touch outdoor environments. Richard Louv, author of the book Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children From Nature-Deficit Disorder, warns that 'As the young spend less and less of their lives in natural surroundings, their senses narrow, and this reduces the richness of human experience.' "

Moving & Exercise
Take a walk. Pick up some logs and make a teepee. Make a pile of leaves, dirt, pine needles, and jump right into it. These are not sedentary activities like staring at a screen. "Not only is exercise good for kids’ bodies, but it seems to make them more focused, which is especially beneficial for kids with ADHD," according to Cohen.

Thinking More
The wonder we experience in natural settings causes us to ask more and better questions. Whether raking up pine needles in the backyard or watching a stunning sunset over Mt. Washington, our kids learn to think more and better when exposed to the outdoors.

Reducing Stress & Fatigue
"Urban environments require what’s called directed attention, which forces us to ignore distractions and exhausts our brains," Cohen reports. "In natural environments, we practice an effortless type of attention known as soft fascination that creates feelings of pleasure, not fatigue."

Read the Original Article
Read Childmind's Ideas for Getting Your Kids Into Nature