![]() Ever wonder what it takes to care for a park in the city? This week, campers discovered what it takes to become a steward of the South Platte River by learning about native plants and animals, doing a service project, and educating others about the River. Monday: Rangers Know their Park Campers kicked off the week the best way SPREE could think of- with learning about scat of course! We studied scat (rubber replicas, not real thankfully!) and tracks of some animals that could be found in the park. We also played a track/animal matching memory game to learn some animal tracks from around the world. After learning about these "bio clues," our next thing to investigate was plants. We learned to identify many of the native plants found in and around the park, used some plant guide books, and made some plant rubbings from around the park. We then got to plant some native wildflower seeds of our own! Now that campers had learned about plants and land animals of the park, it was time to investigate what lives in the water! We did our first critter crawl of the week- we waded in the creek and caught some crawdads and macroinvertebrates! ![]() Tuesday: Rangers Educate Others (Field Day) Our field day is usually later in the week, but we moved it up this week for a special treat! Campers and staff did a service project with a park worker from Denver Parks and Recreation (DPR). We learned a little more about how and why people take care of parks, and then did a trash sweep in Confluence park. After the service project, we cooled down with some water games and had some fun in the park. Wednesday: Rangers are Prepared Today we focused on being prepared for spending lots of time outdoors like rangers do! We made some mini first aid kits to take with us on a trek, learned how sundials work and made one of our own, and got back into the creek to cool off and catch some more critters! Thursday: Rangers at Work and Play! As we had been learning throughout the week so far, one problem that park rangers regularly face (and work to help solve!) is trash in parks. Campers learned about trash facts (did you know it can take 200 years for an aluminum can to break down?) and learned what can and can't be recycled at camp- and why! Learning about trash can be fun... but campers had another even more fun activity as part of their day- rafting! The Cherry Creek dam was raised to temporarily fill up the creek with enough water for our small raft to float on. After gearing up and going over rules, the campers had a blast paddling on the creek together. Friday: Rangers make Impacts
After a week of becoming park ranger experts, campers wrapped up the week by becoming junior park rangers! We made our own paper ranger vests, did a final critter crawl of the week, and also made some bird feeders to hang up at home. Lastly, the campers all took part in a graduation ceremony to finish off the week, and each camper got a state parks passport to take home!
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