Here Little Mouse….

Imagine yourself a sly fox, tiptoeing through the dewy grass, senses on high alert. A flash of movement catches your attention, you take off, sprinting after the small mouse. It dives into a tiny hole just as you are closing in on it! Foiled this time, but you know it won’t be long before you sense another mouse scurrying along.

This is how we started our morning, in an epic capture the flag style battle of the foxes and mice. We continued our embodiment of woodland creatures as we gathered stores for winter (we were feeling the chill this morning!). All the way to Grape Valley, we collected what we thought squirrels and chipmunks might stash away, and then created “cupboards” to hide our treasures in. After taking a short walk, each woodland critter was given the challenge of finding their way back to their cupboard. Navigating back to their cupboards was no problem, but we may need to observe the real chipmunks and squirrels a little more closely to determine what they actually stash away for winter!

After we ate our actual human lunches, painting and fire making got into full swing as we enjoyed the afternoon sun.

Thanks for a thoughtful, energetic and imaginative day Chickadees!

-Emily + Krista

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Where’s that Tree??

Hey Folks,

We had a fun week again in Collingwood that saw us venturing all over the map – building fires, eating pears and grape jelly, getting stuck in mud, running from hail, epic burr battles, new songs (Aster and Goldenrod – maybe you’ve heard it?!) and even some archery.  It was a jam packed week!

Our overarching theme for all days was deepening our sensory awareness.  While this happens regularly through our Core Routines and play, we were deliberate this week in removing dominant senses to get more intimate with the Forest.   We tried out a classic – blindfold tree walk.  Student’s were led (more like zigzagged and spun – an exercise in trusting as well) by a partner to a random tree in the Forest with the inability to see.  They had to use their other senses to get to know the tree and it’s location, before being led back, unblindfolded and let loose to find it.  It was remarkable to watch the hunt unfold and debrief the tactics used to locate the trees – and more often than not students were successful!  We scaffolded this with other sensory awareness challenges, sit spots and games, and got to practice moving quietly through the Forest with our fox feet, listening closely with our Deer Ears and eventually using our Owl Eyes to see as well.

Thanks to all those that made it out to the Meet The Teacher night.  We hope you got to explore some of the special places your kids have grown to love and now have a better understanding of where all their stories take place.

Take Care!

Matt and the FNS Crew

Feeling at home in the Forest

Have you ever pretended to be a raccoon, exploring the world around you in the dark? Or embodied a fox, chasing mice through the fields? Or spent valuable time with a tree, getting to know it personally? All in a day’s work at forest school!

As the leaves begin to change, the students are getting a solid lay of the land at Memorial Park. The connection the students feel to the forest is more apparent each week. The question “when are we heading to the woods?” starts getting asked at ~8:50am. A favourite place is “The Forts” (as they marked it on our big map), and they can now easily lead us to this spot. The journey there is never direct though as it always involves many an interesting plant and creature sighting! Caterpillars and spiders are abundant and crowd pleasers, and the salamanders have not disappointed us yet with a sighting each week.
Thank you to all who came out to “Meet the Teacher”! We will see everyone next week for some new adventures!

-Emily and Travis

Falling into Fall…

Hey Folks!

What a week of sunshine we had!  And to celebrate the changing of seasons and prepare for the Fall Equinox next Monday, we took advantage of this warm weather and created a new ritual we like to call “Fall into Fall”.  It’s simple – take a ride in our giant voyageur canoe on the big pond, head out to the deeper water and challenge ourselves to jump in!  We had a blast all week as students made the leap, saying a final goodbye to Summer.

As is the case with all weeks, our days vary quite a bit – too much in fact to summarize all the magnificent little details here (be sure to check out the whiteboard at the end of the day which highlights some group-specific fun).  However, we did have some moments we’d love to share!

Our plant of the week was the Rose this week, and what better way to get connected with it then to make something yummy from the rose hips – tea!  Over the course of the week, students collected, chopped, and boiled to make a sweet tea unlike any other over the fire.  We also set some aside, dehydrated them and made tea bags as we prepare a warm pick-me-up for chillier days this winter.

Students also received their journals this week and got to work filling them with inspiring thoughts, new findings and lots of cool observations.  Journaling is one of our core routines – something we will visit weekly – and is so important.   One of our Meaford teachers summed it up nicely: “By the end of the semester we hope the journals will be full of observations and stories weaved into a bigger picture of nature connection.”

And of course, there’s everything else: swimming, infusing oils, charcoal art, fire building, the continuing of caterpillar mania, natural ropes, a Blue Heron grad ceremony, hikes and adventures, sit spots, pine resin torches, songs, carving and more.

Have a great final weekend of Summer!

Matt, Krista, and Emily

Suns out, Funs out!

The sun was out and so were the critters, both the children and the animals that is! We worked on finding stillness and sharpening our senses while playing camouflage, skills that came in handy while searching for life in the forest later on. A salamander, toads, many caterpillars and bugs, and even two pileated woodpeckers were spotted by our keen owl eyes. Time was well spent getting into journaling, which was taken on keenly by the group. Today’s recordings were things that we noticed in our immediate surroundings. By the end of the semester we hope the journals will be full of observations and stories weaved into a bigger picture of nature connection.

With the summer winding down we took full advantage of the warm weather and spent the afternoon at the beach. Swimming was a highlight, and likely last dip in the bay of 2019 for many! A memorable day for sure.

We look forward to exploring nature again with you next week!

-Emily and Travis

What do muddy pants, dirty hands and ear to ear smiles have in common?…

……..All were a major part of our day as Chickadess at Forest school today!

Serious construction got under way as soon as we got to Lakeside, where the students spent time looking for frogs, fashioning fishing apparatus, digging rivers and burying pipes to observe the water flow. Teamwork was abundant in carrying the heavy buckets of water, and all were fascinated when the water came shooting out of the pipe systems. We also built a fire, found caterpillars and bugs, and made some dirt cakes.

After lunch we took a trip to the “magic dirt mountain” and searched for magic stones, which we decorated with paint and glitter! We made sure to thank the earth for our stones, as we read a story about giving back when we take from the environment.

We also found a mysterious jawbone on our travels. Who can tell us what it might be from next week?

-Emily + Krista

And we’re back!

Hey Folks!

A big welcome to all our new families, and welcome back to our old friends at FSFNS this year!  It’s hard to believe how far we’ve come and how much we’ve grown since day one, and as we enter our 5th year as a school we are more excited than ever!  At the end of each week we’ll have a post up about some of the highlights from our Painted Turtle and Snowy Owl programs.  Follow along all year, and without further ado, here we go.

We had a great week with all our students connecting with the land, ourselves and each other and really starting to get to know the area.  For some of our students, it was a chance to notice many changes and reconnect with old favourite places.   For others, it was an opportunity to discover and explore pieces of  our wonderful space.  Our days were filled with getting to know one another and reminiscing – and of course fires, hikes, play, imaginations running wild, storytelling, nature breaks, bugs (especially caterpillars!), wild edibles and plants, music, fishing and so much more.

Given our approach to education, our days varied immensely with each day unfolding the way it needed to, given the interests and emergent opportunities.  From fires to fishing, caterpillars to toads literally everywhere, thunderstorms to hot sunny days, we took the time to just settle in this week and get familiar with some of our core routines and our new community. We look forward to uncovering all there is to see and learn this year!

Cheers,

Matt, Krista and Emily

Chick-a-dee-dee-dee!

Welcome to the Tuesday Chickadee group friends and family!

Had you been anywhere near Bygone Days you would have heard us calling enthusiastically to one another “chicka-dee-dee-dee!” all day long. We worked on our quiet fox feet as well, to make sure that we don’t surprise all the critters before we get a chance to observe them.
Discovering our mutual love for frogs, we headed to the pond to search for some. We met the Painted Turtles group there and helped them work on a frog sanctuary, and fine tuned our magnifying glass skills with some interesting fungi found on a log.

As the sun moved across the sky we headed to Maple Forest, with a special mission to create some nests for our new found “eggs” (golf balls). The chickadees keenly took on a caring roll for their egg, and we came up with a game where each chickadee built a nest to camouflage their egg from the “weasel”. One egg was camouflaged so well it is still in the forest!

The laughs were rolling and the questions were flowing, it was a great day to be a Chickadee! I am looking forward to the new discoveries we will have next Tuesday in the forest!

Emily

Back to the Forest!

Welcome Meaford family and friends!

Blue skies welcomed us to Memorial Park today, where old and new faces had the opportunity to explore the park together. While the playground adjacent to the school building offered a fun opportunity to begin building peer relations in the early morning, it was the forest that offered up it’s true magic to us today. On our wanders we happened upon countless bugs, lush moss, a salamander, toads, and many plants that sparked lively conversations. The trails offered us room to run and the trees a place for practicing some quiet reflection. Filling in some special spots on our map helped us feel oriented in the new location. Travis helped us get into sit spot mindfulness with a story, but alas a snake discovery proved very distracting! There were lots of laughs and “wows” as we eased back into the flow of a forest school day. Forts in the woods and the critter discoveries were brought up by many as highlights at the end of the day. We are looking forward to what the forest will teach us next week. In the meantime, be sure to ask about beach glass, how to skip a rock and the best place to find salamanders.

Cheers!

Emily and Travis

Welcome to Wasaga!

Hey Folks!

We are thrilled to be opening up our new school in Wasaga Beach at the Nordic Centre on Blueberry Trail Rd!  This beautiful area is the perfect backdrop for our FNS program with tons of trails to explore and all the mysteries of the forest waiting to be discovered.

Last week, we had an Open house that drew a great crowd of folks to come a check out the space.  Thanks to all the new students and families that had the chance to meet their teachers and explore the trails and the “wax hut” – our new classroom complete with wood stove!  Speaking of teachers, in Wasaga this year we’ve got two excellent mentors: they are Krista, a long time FNS instructor in Collingwood, and Travis, who is brand new to our program but no stranger to the outdoors.  Get to know them by checking out their bio’s here.

Check back here weekly to see what the students have been up to on their journey!

Thanks,

Matt (on behalf of the FNS Crew)