{"id":20634,"date":"2020-07-01T14:07:43","date_gmt":"2020-07-01T18:07:43","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/gsmit.org\/?p=20634"},"modified":"2020-11-05T14:44:34","modified_gmt":"2020-11-05T19:44:34","slug":"inspiring-a-love-of-nature-across-generations","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/gsmit.org\/inspiring-a-love-of-nature-across-generations\/","title":{"rendered":"Inspiring a Love of Nature across Generations"},"content":{"rendered":"
There are many qualities and lessons parents hope to pass on to their children. For Wes Bunch, one of the traits he wants to encourage in his seven-year-old son is a lifelong appreciation of nature.<\/p>\n
Living in Knoxville, Tennessee, Wes spends a lot of time exploring the Smokies. \u201cNot everyone is lucky enough to have a national park in their backyard,\u201d he acknowledges. He traces the beginning of his connection with nature and the Smokies back to a class trip<\/a> to Tremont Institute in 1993.<\/p>\n Their classroom for the next few days would be Great Smoky Mountains National Park, one of the most ecologically diverse parks in the United States.<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n Wes still remembers the bus ride from his school in Kingston, Tennessee, and the excitement he and his middle school classmates felt as the bus pulled onto Tremont Road and crossed the bridge over the Middle Prong. Their classroom for the next few days would be Great Smoky Mountains National Park, one of the most ecologically diverse parks in the United States.<\/p>\n Tremont\u2019s classroom without walls encourages learning through discovery and hands-on, immersive experiences. Wes recalls a night hike to the cemetery during that school trip. Students had fun during the hike, and their teachers used it as a way to teach the students a science lesson about rods and cones in the eye and how the eye adapts to darkness.<\/p>\n \u201cI try to go hiking in the Smokies as often as possible and really enjoy being outside and in nature, and I attribute a lot of that to my experience at Tremont.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n Another highlight for the 11- and 12-year-olds? Learning the word \u201cscat.\u201d A song known as \u201cThe Scat Rap\u201d still entertains students of all ages around campfires at Tremont, demystifying a gross yet unavoidable subject often encountered on hiking trails and important in identifying wildlife in the mountains.<\/p>\n Wes shares, \u201cI try to go hiking in the Smokies as often as possible and really enjoy being outside and in nature, and I attribute a lot of that to my experience at Tremont.\u201d He has started to share day hikes and short backpacking trips with his son. They recently hiked together to Spruce Flats Falls<\/a>. His son loved not only the experience of the hike, but also hearing about his dad\u2019s trip to Tremont as an 11-year-old.<\/p>\n “I want to give him that opportunity [to fall in love with the mountains] too, at an even younger age.\u201d<\/p>\n<\/blockquote>\n The trip to Spruce Flats Falls and down memory lane inspired Wes to sign up for Tremont\u2019s summer Firefly Camp. \u201cMy trip to Tremont for school is what made me fall in love with the mountains. I want to give him that opportunity too, at an even younger age,\u201d he says.<\/p>\n At Tremont, we often witness the love of nature transcend multiple generations. Parents accompany their kids on school trips. Grandparents bond with grandchildren as they participate in community science<\/a> projects such as monarch tagging. Sometimes we even see three generations of family participate in outdoor experiences through our Smoky Mountain Family Camp.<\/p>\nA Different Kind of Classroom<\/h2>\n
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Shared Family Experiences Outdoors<\/h2>\n
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Looking Forward to Future Experiences<\/h2>\n