As a parent, it's always gratifying to see your kids "give something back". Our son Matt and his wife Rebecca just finished their first year teaching high school in Opelousas. To culminate the year, they gave 8 students the trip of a lifetime. Four days and three night floating the Buffalo National River in Arkansas was the backdrop to an amazing experience for this group of kids. These students had no canoeing, camping or other real outdoor experience before this trip. Matt is my "guest blogger" for this email. I think you'll enjoy experiencing the river through this blog entry.
First Time Outdoors Students Visit the Gates of Narnia
My wife Rebecca and I have been teaching high school at the Magnet Academy for Cultural Arts in Opelousas, LA for the past year and all of our hard work finally paid off with the opportunity to take eight of our students on the Buffalo River in Arkansas. It was their first real outdoor experience and well worth the work we put into it. We spent four days and three nights on the river, and they experienced many of the joys and miseries that make the outdoor experience so special. They slept on the ground, ate food off of rocks, made s’mores (a first for several), paddled until they got blisters, swamped canoes, rescued their swamped canoes, skipped rocks, hiked in their rain gear, jumped off of rocks, swung from ropes, and visited “Narnia”.
Our second day was much more relaxed, we were able to pull out art supplies and skip rocks. Somehow it is just more fun to draw on each other than on paper, oh well. For the students, one of the very frightening things about spending several days away from modern amenities was going to the bathroom. The students coined the term visiting “Narnia”, and in order to insure privacy they went in groups and left several brave friends at “the gates of Narnia”. For each of the challenges of life in the woods they were able to come up with their own unique way of coping.
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On the morning of the third day we planed to hike from our camp to a knife edge ridge (a narrow ridge about the width of a sidewalk with cliffs on either side). We woke up to dreary, drizzly weather and contemplated skipping the hike, but it is always the somewhat miserable experiences that you remember the most, so we had them all put on their rain gear and get ready for the hike. To begin you have to walk quite a ways through waist high grass then along a dirt road. We then climbed from the road up the side of a hill and onto the ridge. As it was still rainy most of the kids were not up for walking across. Two of them did though; it really is scary especially in the rain. Afterward when we asked them if they were sacred they said “No you wouldn’t have let us do it if it was dangerous.” It’s a little disconcerting to have that kind of trust from someone.
We woke up early on the last morning and paddled out 9 miles in the rain to Gilbert. We all changed into car cloths and headed to a restaurant for an early lunch. Even after a real difficult last day and a half, all of the kids were in high spirits. Many said it was the best senior trip they could imagine and all hoped to have more opportunities to do things in the outdoors in the future.
When we returned home at 9:30 p.m. Rebecca and I laid out all of the equipment in our garage to dry. Then headed to bed after deciding to deal with the mess in the morning!
7 comments:
Matt and Rebecca,
I loved reading about your adventure with your young students. I know this experience will help them in life. They now know they can overcome obstacles and achieve their goals in spite of adversity. What a great story!
Momsy
Matt:
What a wonderful trip to take "first-timers" on. Must have been extremely gratifying to see them mature and rise to the challanges as the days passed. Would have loved to have such a senior trip myself. Several years ago took my three kids on vacation in Arkansas and spent 3 days in Gilbert - population 47 not counting the dogs. Anyone that has been there knows what a neat little community it is. Again, congrats on a great trip and wonderful mentoring experience.
Matt & Rebecca,
That's just awesome! Love your blog.
Thank you both for all your tireless efforts to enrich young lives with the beauty that lies off the grid and on the Buffalo River.
When we were there we paddled as slow as we could hoping our adventure would never end. Now you have introduced another generation to that wonderful feeling...that the wilderness should never end. God bless.
MATT AND REBECCA..LOVED READING YOUR BLOG ON YOUR STUDENTS ADVENTURE INTO THE WILD! YOU CONTINUE TO AMAZE US AND WE ARE SO GRATEFUL THAT YOU TOOK THE TIME TO REWARD YOUR STUDENTS WITH A TRIP THAT WILL HELP MOLD THEM INTO WHATEVER THEIR FUTURES HOLD. YOU GUYS ARE UNSUNG HEROES!
PATTY & BRENT
I admit, I cried just a little thinking about how much fun that sounds like. Thank you for sharing.
Thanks for sharing your trip. I could not help but notice you and your wife must be doing some tiling. Yea I am in the middle of a remodel project and have made many trips to the home improvement stores, and you last picture of the gear caught my eye with all the mortar, grout float, etc stuck in with the gear. Good luck if you are still at it (does it ever end).
Yep. We're a pretty magical bunch...
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