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Thursday, January 30, 2025 at 8:16 AM

About Friendship – And The Earth

About Friendship – And The Earth

New Club Unites Middle School Students

Although less than two miles apart, students attending Lylburn Downing and Maury River middle schools have limited opportunities to get to know one another before arriving at Rockbridge County High School as ninth-graders.

A new outdoor club facilitated by Boxerwood in partnership with both middle schools is helping these youth build friendships not only with one another but also the Earth.

Funded by a 2024 grant from the Chesapeake Bay Trust, the EarthKeepers Club successfully concluded its first pilot year in December, with club members enthusiastically awaiting its return for the 2025 Spring season.

Based at MRMS, the club met weekly through the spring and fall seasons, with a goal of connecting with one another through adventure and environmental service.

“The key element was Barger Pond,” explained Caroline Coons, one of the Boxerwood educators leading the club.

As the youths discovered, this large constructed pond is only a brisk 15-minute walk from the doors of MRMS. Located just outside Lexington city limits, the pond is a natural haven for wildlife.

When Boxerwood learned property owners Charles Barger and Susan Wittenberg Barger were keen to plant more trees around the pond to increase habitat, the idea for the new club came together quickly. With the Bargers onboard, Boxerwood contacted principals at both schools to see if a joint eco-adventure club was something they’d like to pilot, and indeed it was. There were some logistics to figure out, including transport of LDMS students to MRMS, and provision of a school representative from MRMS, yet it all came together.

“Both Dr. Keese at LDMS and Ms. Stevens at MRMS have been fantastic to work with,” said Elise Sheffield, Boxerwood education director who oversees the project.

ABOVE LEFT, working as artists and poets as well as scientists and adventurers, club members found many ways to investigate Barger Pond and its ecosystem, compiling their discoveries at the end of the season in a group field journal. ABOVE, based in the MRMS classroom of science teacher Gretchen Dowless (pictured), who accompanied all trips, Earthkeepers pursued varied outdoor investigations each week, here comparing plaster casts of animal tracks they made at Barger Pond with those in Dowless’ collection.
ABOVE, already seasoned water quality monitors from school-day programs with Boxerwood, club members put their outdoor lab skills to use to determine the abiotic health of Barger Pond. BELOW, dusk at Barger Pond provided its own magic for the Earthkeepers, who witnessed the moon rising and flocks of Canada geese circling the pond for evening haven.

With start-up funds from the Chesapeake Bay Trust, the club commenced April 2024 with 10 pioneering students. Fifteen new students from both schools joined the Club this fall.

“Most of the kids did not know one another and also they represented different grades,” said Caroline Coons, “so we really focused on building relationships.”

Fortunately, outdoor adventure made that easy, said Coons, explaining there was plenty of bonding in the mile-long trek to and from the pond, and of course the experiences that deeply connected them with the natural world and one another.

As part of club format, Boxerwood educators offered the youth two small-group options each week, allowing for youth voice and choice.

Early in the season the EarthKeepers focused on exploring the shoreline, looking for birds, investigating cattails, casting animal tracks, conducting water quality tests, mapping landforms, and so on. But there was also time for art, said Coons, “and they really loved creating walking haiku about what they were seeing and feeling.”

By the end of the fall season, Coons said club members had a clearer understanding of both the value of the pond for wildlife as well as the need for more cover and habitat. That’s when the club moved forward with a reforestation project, begun last spring.

Since very dry conditions were not favorable for planting more trees this fall, the youths focused on protecting the trees planted in spring by installing wire cages to protect from deer predation.

“The stewardship action day in December was very memorable,” said Coons, “the wind was blowing, it was cold and almost dark, and all the kids were working together – they didn’t want to stop: we were a team!”

The twin emphasis on friendship and collective earth care is deliberate, said Sheffield.

“The fact is we hear many accounts of youth today struggling emotionally,” she said, “and those stressors don’t come just from the pandemic or cell phone overuse or social media.

“For some, it’s about climate anxiety,” she said, explaining that major mental health studies have noted environmental concerns among young people especially.

“These days so much is beyond our individual sphere of control, so it’s easy to feel overwhelmed and discouraged,” she said. “Working together, however, on something tangible and real and wonderful as nature – and making a difference – that’s a healing path. It’s a small thing we’re doing, but it matters. We really want to thank the schools again for collaborating with us on this new initiative, and the property owners as well, and of course the kids.”

Now in winter hiatus, the club plans to resume its activities early spring, with tree planting as well as pond kayaking by youth demand already on the docket.


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Lexington-News-Gazette

Dr. Ronald Laub DDS