May 8, 2008
When I walked into Backcountry Experience last Saturday, I thought I'd be walking out with a water bottle.
Instead, I left with a story. Actually, two.
Amanda Rydiger, a student in Robert Aspen's sixth-grade class at Miller Middle School, delivered the first; Becky Rockis with Backcountry Experience delivered the second.
Amanda recently won the third annual Backcountry Experience Outdoor Writing Competition in the middle-school class. Backcountry Experience has sponsored the area-wide school competition for the last three years hoping to empower education through nature writing. Backcountry's Becky Rockis said the store gave away more than $3,500 this year to six winners. For Rockis, stuff isn't important.
"I'm passionate about education and nature," she said. "Our writing competition is a way of getting kids involved in the world around them."
For Durango Nature Studies, Amanda's and Rockis' words are magic. Like Rockis, Durango Nature Studies hopes that students like Amanda keep writing, drawing and exploring. Thus, Durango Nature Studies is proud to offer the writings of this year's middle school winner, Amanda Rydiger.
"Amanda, wake up. We need to be outside. It's a beautiful day," my dad told me early one Saturday morning.
I told him I was tired and didn't want to wake up. "We're going on a really fun hike up to a waterfall," he said. We'd done that hike a few weeks earlier, so I didn't want to give up sleeping. I got up because he told me we were meeting friends. I've learned it's always more fun to hike with friends.
We got to the top of the waterfall and played in the water. Above the waterfall were small stairs someone had made in the rocks. We walked up the stairs and found a giant mud pit. After a great mud fight, we swam in the water and cleaned off.
We were heading back to the mud pit for another mud fight when I saw something moving in a tree. My dad said it was probably just a crow. "Ya!" I said. "Probably a really big fuzzy bird." My sister shouted, "That's definitely not a bird!" Someone else yelled, "That's a bear!" Looking closer, we saw a mother bear and two cubs.
Everyone freaked. We walked away saying the "Pledge of Allegiance" loudly. We saw that the mother bear had sent her cubs up the tree, and we were scared that she was going to come down, but the mother bear didn't. As soon as I got home, I jumped out of the car and ran to tell my mom.
I am so glad I went on our crazy adventure. It was fun to see three bears on one hike. What a great day outside!