Featured article in enjoy magazine

We are honored to have been featured in Enjoy Magazine for the May 2024 edition. You can read the article online here (Page 20) or below.

young girl playing in a river at WES camp before it burned down in the Carr Fire

Written by Jon Lewis | Photos by Jessica Zettlemoyer

Between 1970 and 2018, some 134,000 fifth-sixth graders got to splash in Clear Creek, hike, camp overnight, marvel at star-filled skies and learn about the natural world during a week long outing at the Whiskeytown Environmental School.

For many, it was their first time away from home and their first extended outdoors experience. It was a chance for personal growth and it became a unique North State initiation of sorts. It all ended on that hot July day in 20 I 8 when the Carr Fire tore through the Whiskeytown National Recreation Area.

The Whiskeytown Environmental School (WES) Community, a nonprofit organization, is working hard co return the humble school to its former glory with a capital campaign it has titled "Grow Back Stronger.” The school remains open, but is limited to daytime use only. It continues to be operated by the Shasta County Office of Education. More than 2,000 K-8 students attended field trips in 2023. Melinda Kashuba, president of the WES Community board, says her group appreciates the daytime use but notes the real magic happens when kids get the chance co settle in for a week of hikes, activities and camaraderie.

Judy Flores, Shasta County superintendent of schools, agrees: "For some of our students, this was their first time away from home overnight and proved co be a real growth opportunity. For ocher students, this intensive focus on science and nature proved to build their love for the outdoors and reinvigorate their curiosity in nature."

Flores, who brought her fifth-graders to WES while a teacher at Shasta Meadows School, says after the Carr Fire, her office heard from dozens of people who spent a part of their childhood at WES. "Many have called it a 'rite of passage' that they wane future generations to benefit from. Others have shared how they pursued specific careers based on their experience and wanting to work in nature. And still others have shared how much it has fueled their passion for hiking throughout our county and region as a result."

New housing is required before WES students can enjoy nature at night, and toward that goal, the "Grow Back Stronger" campaign has raised $5.5 million for three fourplex cabins that can each house 120 students and 24 chaperones for a total of 144 individuals per week. Each fourplex unit would have its own restrooms and showers. The new cabin project has a current price tag of $7.5 million.

Fundraising for a separate $75,000 project to rehabilitate the WES amphitheater is well on its way as well, with about $55,000 collected. Four Rotary clubs (Redding, Redding East, Redding West and Anderson) combined for a $17,250 grant for materials and will donate labor to help rehabilitate the amphitheater. Last fall, East Redding Rotary members began clean-up of the amphitheater area and continue restoring the trail from the amphitheater to Clear Creek. Other projects in the master plan include an administration building, dining hall, utility improvements and road repairs.

The WES Community's progress is exciting, says Scott Einberger, a supervisory interpretive park ranger, and it demonstrates how important the school is to the North State. "Our hope is that we'll be able to show our regional office how much the WES Community has fundraised and find a pot of money in the National Park Service to help rebuild."

Although the park service is committed to rebuilding the school, "it's not going to happen overnight. When we try to get funding after disasters like the Carr Fire, we're competing with every other national park,” Einberger says.

Einberger and his colleagues agree the school is providing its highest value when it's able to host kids for the weeklong sessions. "As great as the day programs are, it adds a massive level when you get youths out overnight in the great outdoors,” he says. "There's just no substitute."

Kashuba and fellow board member Kathy Hill, both former teachers, are fans of the science taught at WES. Following California's Next Generation science education standards, the hands-on lessons cover topics like photosynthesis, the food web, conservation, natural resources, sustainability and Native American history.

"Helping students to get away from screens and experience the outdoors has created a love for the outdoors and for all that is available in our area to explore," says Flores, the county schools superintendent. A week at WES provides a first-hand experience With science concepts they'll be learning about later in school, she adds. "Experiencing the science standards in nature builds understanding in a way that reading about it in a text cannot."

Previous
Previous

How to help rebuild Wes Camp

Next
Next

North State Parent Feature