Archive for the ‘High Adventure’ Category

Girls learn teamwork, communication skills… in the middle of a lake.

Friday, July 20th, 2012

by Kristi Pallack

Throughout June and July, girls from the Whispering Pines Girl Scout Camp have been paddling up a storm, and learning a little something along the way. Looking at the pictures, you might not realize how much effort it takes to propel a canoe with 3 girls in it forward and backwards. Here's what the girls have to do as part of their canoeing experience:

  • Step 1: The girls are shuttled from camp to the lake, about a 3 mile drive.
  • Step 2: The girls have to work together to get the canoes off of the canoe trailer, and then carry them down a beach to the water. It usually takes about 6 girls per boat.
  • Step 3: The girls hike around the lake to the far beach (Away from the fishermen) while I tow the 6 canoes across the lake, navigating through fishing lines.
  • Step 4: The girls talk about their concerns. Some have never been in a boat before, some are afraid, nervous- a couple girls even said they were afraid of sharks.
  • Step 5: The girls learn what a life jacket is and how it keeps them safe. We talk about how to hold the oars, learn different paddling strokes and get into groups of 3.
  • Step 6: The girls learn to get into the canoes, keeping 3 points of contact on the boat, and get ready to launch.
  • Step 7: I launch the boats into the water and yell “have fun!”
  • Step 8: The girls have about 15 minutes to paddle around and get used to the strokes and working as a team.
  • Step 9: All the boats gather in the center of the lake, side by side. (Everyone learned how to parallel park a canoe!) We talk about how it was challenging to work as a team to get your canoe to go where you wanted it to. We talk about things they could do differently- talk to each other, m

    ake decisions as a group, put someone in charge. Then, I shake things up. Now that they've learned how to work with this group of people- they will learn how to work with others, because they all change places! I give the directions that while we are all together in the center of the lake, everyone will switch spots and boats. The girls have to talk among themselves to figure out who is going where and how they are going to make it happen without everyone falling in the water. Its a really fun trust, balance and communication activity- and its really fun to watch!

  • Step 10: We race! Now that the girls have learned how to work together and have a basic knowledge of paddling, we do some forwards and backwards races.
  • Step 11: Search and Rescue! I have 3 inflatable animals in my canoe- a turtle, a pelican and a monkey. For some reason, I always feel like throwing them out of boat (poor guys). The girls use their new skills to rescue the animals from the water- which gets really interesting when the wind picks up.
  • Step 12: Water sports! Also in my boat, I have 2 footballs and a soccer ball- all of which don't like being in my boat. They like the water, so I throw them in opposite directions on the lake. We did several things with the balls over the summer. We played water polo. We played football. We played catch. We tossed them around and rescued them. The girls came up with different games to play using the balls and animals. They are fun.
  • Step 13: Getting tired, but the day isn't over yet. I tow the boats back across the lake while the girls hike back to the beach. Then, they have to carry them back up the beach and load them back on the trailer- a harder feat after you've been using your muscles all day!
  • Step 14: Did you girls have fun? YES!
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Girl Scouts To Be First Boaters Ever on Rose Canyon Lake

Wednesday, June 13th, 2012

Arizona Game and Fish Department                                                                                        

NEWS RELEASE

For immediate release, June 13, 2012

Contact
AGFD PIO Mark Hart
520-388-4445/520-282-0978©
-or-
AGFD Officer Karen Klima
520-975-6490

Girl Scouts To Be First Boaters Ever on Rose Canyon Lake

MT. LEMMON, Ariz.- The Girl Scouts of Southern Arizona will be first-ever boaters on Rose Canyon Lake when they begin canoe and water rescue training there 10 a.m. Thursday, June 14.

“This is an exciting opportunity for our girls,” said Kristen Culliney, chief operating officer of the Girl Scouts of Southern Arizona. “We are honored to be the first youth-oriented group on the lake and hope that what we teach girls will give them a lifelong appreciation for this mountain and our water resources!”

The training was made possible by a rule change enacted by the Arizona Game and Fish Commission last year as allows youth-oriented service programs to use canoes on the lake from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday during the months of June and July. Eligible organizations must have a permit issued by the U.S. Forest Service for such use of the lake by non-motorize watercraft.

“We’re gratified that the Girl Scouts will be the first youth-oriented service program to take advantage of this opportunity to learn how to handle watercraft safely and effectively,” said Regional Supervisor Raul Vega of Game and Fish in Tucson.  “We are sure other qualified groups will do so as well.”

Vega noted that this opportunity is not for the public at large, and that entry into the lake for swimming, wading or other devices – such as pool toys as well as float tubes and rafts — is prohibited.

The seven-acre  lake was closed to watercraft upon opening  in 1960, and to all entry in 1985, to benefit rainbow trout fishermen. Rose Canyon Lake is at approximately 7,000 feet elevation amid Ponderosa pines, making it a popular summer retreat.

Mark A. Hart

Public Information Officer

Arizona Game & Fish Department

555 N. Greasewood Road

Tucson, AZ 85745

office (520) 388-4445

cell (520) 282-0978

fax (520) 628-5376

Mhart@azgfd.gov

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Girls are rock climbing! Come climb with us!

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011

Come try something new, test your limits, and have fun this fall! GS are rock climbing, and we have something for all ages!

Wallflowers Indoor Climbing Series:

September: 11th 11-1 pm, September 13, 20, 27 & October 4: 6-8 pm

Rocks & Ropes

$40/girl/family member

All ages!

Climbing Camp

October 21-22

Whispering Pines on Mt Lemmon

$75/girl

Cadettes, Seniors, & Ambassadors

Special one-time offer! Come to our Climbing Series or Camp and receive a coupon for 20% off any one regularly priced item. Excludes official uniform insignia, and bottles. Expires 30 days from end of program.

For more information about climbing programs and our No Girl Left Inside initiative, contact Ariane at 520.319.3144

Rain Smell

Friday, February 18th, 2011

by Ariane Mohr-Felsen

I ran in the desert this morning and the whole time felt as if I couldn’t breathe deeply enough. The desert smelled of rain to come and with each inhalation I tried to take in as much of that smell–that feeling–as I could. I tried to make out what I was smelling: a bit of creosote, some moist mesquite, maybe desert broom too? I couldn’t pinpoint it, but I think that is part of the magic of smelling rain in the desert–it is so infrequent and so elusive and so unique that it reminds us of how lucky we are to get the rain at all. And for me, I was reminded of how lucky I am to be able to step out into this Sonoran Desert–a desert with tropical roots and one of the youngest biomes on the North American continent–and just take it all in, marveling at how such a wide array of plants and animals eke life out of less than 15 inches of rain a year.

Something about the billowing clouds, the sporadic spots of sunshine, and the illuminated Tucson mountains off in the distance all made me think the last time I was in northern Arizona. Last fall I was up on the second Hopi Mesa, speaking with a teenage boy about his life there. The smell of rain was in the air then too, but it was different: we were in a different desert and the rain smell was accented with hints of different plants. He told me about how his culture believed that rain was brought by Kachinas–Hopi spirits–from the San Francisco Peaks, where I had been earlier that day. I remembered the clouds building over the peaks and pictured them trailing behind us, waiting to rain down upon the Hopi Mesas. The boy said they could definitely use the rain, and that a Kachina ceremony was being planned for that evening.

I and my group continued along our way, ending our day at the Grand Canyon. The next afternoon the rain arrived too, and I smiled, imagining the Hopi boy and his Kachina ceremony.

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I definitely hope that we do not get the same kind of rain on our San Francisco Peaks Expedition this upcoming summer as we got last fall. I don’t think we will–the amount of rain that northern Arizona received was highly unusual. That being said, I am SO stoked for our expedition, no matter the weather. We’ll be prepared with all of the right gear regardless, and just dreaming of days spent backpacking and night spent telling stories around a campfire or snuggled up in our sleeping bags makes my heart happy :) I can’t wait to get to know some new girls on the trip and discover a whole new part of AZ together.

Off to write that gear packing list now ;) …..

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No Girl Left Inside is getting girls connected with the outdoors, but there's more…

Friday, October 1st, 2010

We bring together girls from all over Southern Arizona to discover, connect and take action. Girls explore their passions, develop new skills, make new friends and expand horizons. Girls succeed. Girls fully participate and contribute to our society. We help build the inner foundation that makes girls whole. We are leaders. Find out how you can experience the movement by visiting plastic helmet shaped butane cigarette lighter

izona.org./” target=”_blank”>http://girlscoutssouthernarizona.org.

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