August 1, 2020

Watershed Expeditions at Home, Summer 2020


Week 1: Exploring your Watershed

Activities at home: Boat Building, Scavenger Hunt, and Map Making

Campers were encouraged to map a water droplet in their watershed by using an online mapping tool.

Then explore the movement of water in their watershed by building a boat from just 2 pieces of foil.

During the scavenger hunt campers were encouraged to notice life in their watershed, like trees and birds. Campers became more aware of the idea that water supports life.

What does water support in your watershed that makes sounds? Campers were encouraged to make a “sound” map of their watershed.

Highlights during our virtual camp session: Campers got to know each other by sharing an object that symbolizes a hobby or an interest. Some of the most memorable objects included a matchbox car, an aquarium, and a compound bow. Then we shared adventures from exploring the activities. Afterwards we played team building games. Encouraging group thinking like solving one-minute mysteries together is a great team builder. Try this one: A man left on Friday and returned on Friday but was only gone 3 days. How is this possible?

Photos from week 1:


Boat building, boat floating!


Ready to go on a scavenger hunt. 


Found leaves for the leaf rubbings!

Sound Mapping your watershed!


A Sound Map.

Week 2: Making a Difference in Your Watershed

Activities at home: Neighborhood clean-up, Bug Hunt, and Message in a Bottle (i.e. pen pal with another camper)

What an amazing group of campers! They ruled the “trash mob” challenge and went out to make a difference by cleaning up their neighborhood.

Many of the campers took advantage of being in a buggy place to explore bugs for the Bug Hunt. The Roly Poly discovery was my personal favorite. Who knew they were basically terrestrial shrimp?

The last activity was writing a letter to another camper. Cultivating a new friendship through letter writing was our environmentally responsible way of sending a “message in a bottle”.

Highlights during our virtual camp session:

We toured a trash barge on the Mississippi River. This was the highlight of the entire month for many campers! Rachel with Living Lands and Waters showed us around and we saw that one barge is for tires, one for scrap metal, and one just for trash. It was impressive and monumentally sad to see that so much garbage is in our rivers. We also got to see their toy collection and the creepy doll fence.

Another highlight was exploring real messages in bottles. Missouri River Relief has found many over the years. Campers got to choose which bottles to explore. It seems many are written as blessings for others and wishes for good fortune.

Photos from week 2:

Rachel from Living Lands and Waters visiting via Zoom.

Living Lands and Waters Trash Barge!

Rachel and Chad transporting the trash from the river to the barge.

Rachel’s favorite river find.

Portraits of our Watershed Expedition Trash Heroes:

Trash Heroes every one of them!

Bug Hunt fun!

Week 3: Telling the Story of Your Watershed

Activities at home: Smoosh Book, Water Coloring, and Found Object Art

Campers got to create their own Smoosh Books. With just one piece of paper, campers made a 6 page book using Kirigami, the Japanese art of folding and cutting paper. These books were then used as journals.

Campers were also given supplies to create a watercolor that tells a story in their watershed. The results were so creative!

Last but not least campers learned about environmental artists and how they often work in harmony with the natural environment by using materials such as leaves, flowers, branches, soil, sand, stone and water. By doing so artists often change the way we view the environment and help us rethink how to "see" the world around us. Get ready to be amazed by what the campers created!

Highlights during our virtual camp session:

Glass whisperer Libby Reuter gave us a tour of her studio and introduced us to her watershed stories called Watershed Cairns. Each cairn, made from repurposed glass, is used to mark and visually connect people, land and water, providing an opening for community discussion about fresh water.  Campers were then encouraged to tell their watershed story through a variety of artistic mediums including journaling in their smoosh book, water coloring and found object art. Evidence of how Libby inspired our campers can be seen below!

Photos from week 3:

Watershed Cairns studio tour! Libby Reuter explained her process; both the skills needed to create the cairns and her inspiration. If you are curious to see photos of the cairns taken by Joshua Rowan visit https://www.watershedcairns.com.

Telling Watershed Stories through watercolors:

Found Object Art Masterpieces:


Week 4: Connecting Others to Your Watershed

Activity at home: Watershed Project

The watershed project activity allowed campers to synthesize everything they had experienced during camp. Over the past few weeks they had explored their watershed, completed a neighborhood clean-up to make a difference, and learned ways to use art to tell stories. Now they get to pick an issue they care about and create a project that explores that issue using any medium and then share it with other campers. Many campers mentioned that creating this project and sharing it was their favorite part of the entire month! Campers made posters, videos, and books using computers or paint to create impressive educational materials and artwork!

Highlights during our virtual camp session:

Sharing the watershed projects was the best! So many issues represented and so many creative ways to raise awareness about each issue. So proud of every camper! 

Photos from week 4:

Watershed Projects:

Jaron participated in the Flat Branch Creek community clean-up. His issue was raising awareness about trash in our creeks and his message was that trash is bad for animals.

Jessie created a photo collage to document trash in the Rocky Fork watershed.

Fox created stencils, sprayed a storm drain and raised awareness about not dumping chemicals in storm drains since they lead directly to creeks!

Tobias created a watershed education comic about stream pollution issues.

Tucker created a news flash video explaining reasons to stop littering. The script is paraphrased: “Reason #1 litter goes into water, water gets dirty, it affects every single life form on earth. Reason #2 dirty water can make us sick. Tip #1 limit trash on roads which will then limit trash that gets in our water. Tip #2 instead of littering, throw your trash in the garbage can. If it won’t fit in the garbage can, then just drive it over to the dump.” This image is a screenshot from his video.

Linus documented trash along the Hinkson creek at a golf course through a video mockumentary (he pretends to be David Attenborough). Linus suggests putting more trash cans along the trails at the golf course (he documented only one) and handing out trash bags to golfers.

Leo created a poignant 1 minute video about her observation of the power of water to carry rocks in Little Bonne Femme Creek. Here is a quote from her video: “When you’re thinking about water washing things away, if it can carry rocks, what else can it carry? Pesticides? Trash? Pollution? If it’s bothering me, how is it affecting them?”

More Highlights from our virtual camp session!

Campers also created a Diamante Group Poem. Each session created a unique poem:

Crawdad’s (Thursday AM) Camp Poem:

 Stream

  small, wet

 running, flowing, walking

 minnows, crawdads, plants, pools

 scuttling, pooling, rocking

 large, streams

 Missouri River

 Mussel’s (Thursday PM) Camp Poem:

  Stream

  bubbly, sparkly

 glistening, running, meandering

life, light, lakes, abundance

  lilting, eating, leaking

 large, luscious,

 Missouri River

 Frog’s (Friday AM) Camp Poem:

 Stream

 fast, cold

 flowing, rising, running

 forest, rainforest, mountains, swamp

  bubbling, gushing, fishing

slimy, smooth

Missouri River

 Blue Heron’s (Friday PM) Camp Poem:

 Stream

  stinky, extreme

 spelunking, speeding, falling

 bark, nose, tree, litter

  glittering, dying, sparkling

 sticky, shpadoinkle!

 Missouri River


And last but not least, as a warm up for writing the poems, campers were asked to name as many places as possible where water could collect in a watershed. 

Collectively, they were able to name 60 places!!!!!

1.       Creek

2.       Pond

3.      Lake

4.      Street gutter

5.      Ocean

6.      Puddles

7.      Rivers

8.      Riverbanks

9.      Fields

10.   Valley

11.     Campfire ring

12.    Trash cans

13.    Rain garden

14.   Hole

15.   Trench

16.   Storm Drain

17.    Sewer

18.   Pipes

19.   Sinkhole

20.  Stream

21.    Sidewalk

22.   Waterfall

23.   Cave

24.  Reservoir

25.   Leaves

26.  Horse trough

27.   Tributaries

28.  House gutter

29.  Aquifer

30.  Spring

31.    Glaciers

32.   Snow

33.  Floodplain

34.  Wetland

35.  Marsh

36.  Bayou

37.   Delta

38.  Bog

39.  Fen

40.  Waterfall

41.   Sea

42.  Hot spring

43.  Geyser

44.  Icicles

45.  Well

46.  Ravine

47.  Canyon

48.  Plants

49.  Clouds

50.  Channels

51.   Oasis

52.   Peninsula

53.  Wood cracks

54.  Plant pots

55.  Rocks

56.  Volcano steam

57.   Skin

58.  Hair

59.  Pool

60. Box

Amazing! 

Thank you campers for making our first Watershed Expeditions a blast!

 

 

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