Recently, STRIVE Prep – Sunnyside Community Adventure Program (CAP) students headed up to the mountains outside Fairplay to explore the Beaver Ponds Environmental Education Center. They started off the trip on a beautiful Colorado morning by stopping at Staunton State Park for a short hike. The students learned about compasses and navigation and led the way to Davis Ponds, a 2-mile roundtrip hike. They had a great time sniffing the ponderosa pines and asked loads of questions about lichen, deer signs, and other things they saw along the way.
Once base camp was ready to go, Kevin Hosman, Director of Operations at Beaver Ponds, gave the group a tour of the property. At 10,200 feet, students were feeling the elevation change as Kevin hiked them around. Students were able to see both current and abandoned beaver dams, an overgrown forest thinning project, and a stump from a tree that lived from the 1360s all the way to the mid-1900s. Beaver Ponds is working toward generating all of their own power, so students were able to look at the solar panels and windmill that currently create most of the electricity for the buildings.
Beaver Ponds has a small farm, as well, so after the tour it was time to feed the animals. Eric Chatt, the Site Manager at Beaver Ponds gave us a tour of their greenhouse. The students loved hand-feeding the goats, alpacas, and llama barley grass that they had harvested, and wanted to know all about what they do with the animals. The goats are all long-haired goats whose coats can be harvested to make yarn; the kids were very interested in how the animals are shaved and how the hair is processed. As the sun started going down and the temperature quickly dropped, Kevin took the group over to an active beaver pond, where they spotted two beavers swimming around! Inside, he showed the group sage that glows under black light and a “tree cookie” to analyze growth rings.

It was a chilly night (down into the low 30s) but everyone woke up in good spirits the next morning. The group went on a morning hike to explore the rest of the property and played Camouflage in the forest. With a stop at Kenosha Pass for lunch and a sit spot among beautiful aspen trees, it was time to say goodbye to the forest and head down from the mountains.
A special thanks goes out to all of our supporters and funders that help make our partnership with STRIVE Preparatory Schools possible this school year, including: Ladd Foundation, Larrk Foundation, and PeyBack Foundation.
Written by: CI Instructors, Jessi Burg and Sarah Rudeen
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