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Nature Education Resources
- Walk
through the buildings and be sure thermostats
are set to proper temperature.
- Catch run-off water from roofs to water flowers later.
- Put up signs to remind
people to turn off lights.
- If you must print on paper,
use half-sheets when possible.
- Get
motion-sensing light switches.
- Use e-mail instead of printed
newsletters or memos.
- Use
low-flow showerheads.
- Use people-powered wagons
for short deliveries within camp instead
of gasoline-powered vehicles.
- Check
the energy efficiency of the building.
Utilize your own property staff, or ask
a professional to help.
- Change filters on equipment frequently.
- Check insulation, drafty windows
and doors, ceilings and walls, air ducts,
refrigerators, air conditioners, furnaces,
and boilers.
- Use computerized thermostats that
set back over time, keep proper temps
in different rooms.
- Install sun filters on windows.
- Photocopy on both sides of the paper.
- Revisit existing programs or activities,
emphasizing conservation
. . . turn "Clean
Cabin Award" into "Cabin Conservation
Award"; "nap time" becomes "human
energy conservation period." Let
the campers put an environmental or conservation
purpose into typical camp activities.
- Use marker boards more, easel pads
less.
- Have
each cabin group adopt a trail for the
camp season, keeping it clean all season
long.
- Use scrap paper.
- Plant perennial flowers and herbs
instead of annuals.
- Check your document before printing – does
it use excessive pages?
- Play games related to environmental
awareness.
- Use computers more, paper less.
- Keep charts: maintenance of equipment,
temperature of refrigerators/freezers,
utility costs. Monitor usage and maintenance
closely.
- Put up educational posters
showing what your camp is doing to conserve
energy.
- When brushing your teeth, turn off
the water.
- Do more outdoor activities
(in every program area!).
- Take short showers.
- Complain about the weather less;
appreciate the outdoors more.
- Add a section to the camp Web site
on how the camp has "gone green."
- Remind people to turn off lights and
close doors.
- Build nesting boxes for birds.
- Re-use supplies. Repair before
replacing.
- Make recycled arts and crafts.
- Start a weather forecasting program
at camp.
- Consider "green" architecture
when you build.
- Be a nature sleuth: develop your
own detective kit with magnifying glass
paper and pencil to record interesting
things you see while hiking.
- Wear weather-appropriate clothing.
- Use rechargeable batteries in your
flashlights.
- Get recycling dumpsters, and
place containers around your camp.
- Have a sound-pollution free day—no
radios, televisions, CDs, or other non-natural
sounds.
- Buy supplies and equipment
that has less packaging.
- Make a compost area.
- Water landscaping lawns and
athletic fields conservatively.
- Change to low energy light
bulbs.
- Pass energy and resource costs
on to members, to encourage them to conserve
too.
- Create an environmental award
or program.
- Create an environmental committee
of staff and volunteers.
- Plant a garden of flowers and/or
vegetables.
- Plant native plants
- Buy supplies and equipment
made from recycled material.
- Good resources: Ten Minute
Field Trips, Project Wild, Project Learning
Tree, Leopold Project, Globe Project.
- Put up bird feeders.
- Find metaphors in nature; teach
life’s
lessons.
- Take a field trip to a nature
center or environmental education program.
- Have a special tree in camp. Give
it a personality, meet by it, tell stories
about its long life.
- Invite camp staff to provide
program ideas.
- Make use of wild land near
your camp.
- Call the experts (free!): County
Soil and Water Conservation, Department
of Natural Resources, 4-H, Agricultural
Extension, private practice, others.
- Keep records of natural occurrences ("Phenology"):
blooming of flowers, arrival of birds
and insects, rainfall, high and low temperatures.
- Create environmental programs
for all program areas.
- Have an award for great environmental
ideas submitted by members or staff.
- Check with others before you
get in the car, combine trips.
- Pick litter up in the parking
lot and grounds.
- Get some washable dishes and
cups.
- Order the right amount of food.
- Use curtains or blinds on windows to
reduce heat loss in the winter months,
and also to keep the building cool during
the summer months by reducing sun infiltration.
- Put identification signs by
some of the trees around your camp.
- Add trees and shrubs around
your buildings to help shade and insulate
them.
- Set computers and office machines
to save energy.
- Participate in local clean-up
projects, like Adopt-A-Highway, park
or stream cleaning.
- Be aware of environmental issues,
provide information to campers, and act
like a concerned citizen.
- Hold an event on Earth Day.
- Ride your bike to work.
- Put up a bike rack for people.
- Check your cleaning chemicals – are
they friendly?
- Check your air conditioner
for leaks.
- Wrap water pipes in insulation.
- Try installing a waterless
urinal or a composting toilet. (They
get better all the time!)
- Put up an energy demonstration
area, where a solar panel, wind, or water
mill powers something.
- Put out weather instruments;
thermometer, barometer, rain gauge, etc.
- Have an area of camp that is kept
free of human impact, put a sign by it
that says, "Wilderness Island."
- Train staff to make use of
natural teachable moments.
- Have a food waste monitoring
program.
- Use less packaging in food
served.
- Remind campers that the trails of
your camp are special, even hallowed.
Add this to closing campfire.
- Show campers the big dipper.
- Tell campfire stories like Where
the Red Fern Grows, or My Side of the
Mountain, or To Light a Fire.
- Check all staff attitudes. Be positive
about the weather, the raccoons, even
the bugs.
- Ask counselors, when walking back
to cabins after the meal, to stop and
show campers three fascinating leaves.
- Have some field guides available
for borrowing. Encourage people to learn
a few local plant and animal names this
summer.
- At the lunch table ask campers and
staff, "Did anyone see any interesting
wildlife lately?"
- Note the differences in how leaves
grow on various tree stems and plant
stems. What does alternate and opposite
mean?
- Set up a tracking station where
you leave some food scraps out by some
moist sand. Check it out tomorrow morning!
- Put up a "bud burst" poster.
Keep track of when flowers and tree buds
open.
- Have a "nature fact for the
day."
- Put up a blank poster where campers
can write up their nature discoveries.
- Have a "a hands-on discoveries"
table for shells, antlers, fungi, etc.
- Make a Mud Pit area.
- Go romp and stomp in the swamp.
- Play in the sand! Build sand castles,
make human and animal footprints, look
for sand wildlife and plants, make sand
angels.
- Cut up and sand a section of a
large deceased local tree. Make a time
line from the tree rings.
- Put up posters about nature from
state, national, and local parks and
nature centers.
- Have nature art work up around
camp.
- Put up a sundial and a windmill
and a water wheel.
- Have a festival for the full moon,
equinox, and just because.
- Give an award to the camper who
noticed something awesome in nature.
- Wear grass, leaves, and wild flowers
in your hat and pockets.
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