Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Outing to North Lake Whatcom: 9/26/15

We gathered at the pedestrian and dog friendly entrance to the N. Lake Whatcom Park with playful hearts ready to go exploring! With grey clouds promising rain, many of our SeaStars arrived prepared for a five hour outing in fair weather, not necessarily the conditions at hand. Hannah suited us up from her cadre of raingear, and we began our journey...

Before we set out, we gathered leaves of all colors and crafted a circle cycle of life. We reflected on its mysterious winding path and discussed how each color represents the seasons of the year and the seasons of our life. Looking around at the green emerging from the decaying woods, we understood that fall and winter, death and decay, have their place. And that we too are part of this circle cycle.
This ended up being a great reference tool for our day, asking the girls “So, where does this tree fit into our circle of life?” etc. We talked about humans/animals/things we had known that had died before finishing the wheel. Death as a part of life, a necessary stage to support and nourish new life. This message emerged repeatedly in the forest around us in the form of the decomposers role. We found it echoed in the fungus, slug love and the function of nurse logs (via interpretive dance). Do ask your Sea Star about "Cubicle Butt Rot" and it's job in the forest to turn trees into dirt!

It might have taken us half the day to find a good sheltered place to eat snack as it was still chilly and drizzly. After a leisurely munch and chatting session, these girls initiated and negotiated their own version of Contagion Tag. So that warmed them up! The mentors stood amazed by the squeals and peals of laughter as these girls widened their circles with a raucous play time. It was lovely.



We played on the shores of Lake Whatcom for the remainder of our day, building cairns, exploring the beach and half submerged logs and getting quite happily wet, as the weather warmed. We gathered for a moment to explore a couple wild animal skulls and pelts and discussed the special adaptations these animals have to survive and thrive. We used that theme of what makes one special as a segue into a quiet peaceful place, spreading out to enjoy some reflective time by the lake. 


Heading back toward the trailhead (five hours flew by!), we thanked the lake for its many gifts: beauty, peace, sunlight, and the source of life itself for all of us by providing all the water for our households' use. 

Mottos especially in use today: Widen the Circle, Be Prepared, Collaborate and Compromise, and Stretch Your Edge

Want more photos from the outing? Check out our photo album here!

Words of the day? “Lake Whatcom, pelts, dirt and dead things!

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Service for International Coastal Cleanup: 9-12-15


Welcome to the Sea Stars' New Blog! We've switched over to a Google-based system, and are in the process of figuring out this new blogging deal... Bear with us throughout! Hope you enjoy it! Our complete photo album can be found here.

We believe you're never too young to make a difference, and these two groups of girls proved that on Saturday by picking up pounds and pounds (80 lbs!!!) of trash and recyclables from the Salish Sea shoreline. These trash busters became Shoreline Seekers, Log Lookers and Sand Savers. In our smaller groups of determined garbage detectives, we scoured the shoreline and muck, poking around in those many hidden spots in and under seaweed, bushes and rocks for every piece of trash we could find, no matter how small.

Highlights from our day:

* The collaboration between the Seastars and the Ospreys, collectively referred to as the Seaspreys!  Though more girls means less individualized attention and small group bonding, it gives girls the chance to serve and explore with other girls in the program and feel like part of something beyond their regular group.
The Seaspreys starting their day off streeeetttchiing with some Marine Animal Yoga!


* The respect and profound observations made by girls about a dead shark we discovered (Spiny Dogfish). After lots of discussion, pondering, wondering and poking, our heightened attention gave way to curiosity and we decided to open up the Shark's carcass. We have so much gratitude for this learning opportunity and the moment to wonder about all the internal organs. And wow. The aroma of the not quite freshly dead sea creature will be a smell memory forever! Deciding to dissect it was a chance for these girls to a group discussion about what the Native Americans did with this animal, and why we should leave it as lunch for the birds as opposed to burying in the sand.
Holly flipping our shark friend over



*Love letters to the Salish Sea. The girls took a quiet moment to individually write in the tidal sand their thoughts, prayers, wishes and/or gratitude for the sea and all life within.
The girls out writing their love "letters".



*The girls’ determination to leave no garbage behind. Not only did they pick up the large and easy to spot garbage, they made sure to use their eagle eyes to find and remove even the tiniest pieces of plastic (smaller than a fingernail!). As we learned, these "micro trash" items can have the greatest impact on wildlife, for they are much more likely to be mistaken for a yummy, colorful food item by wildlife than the long plastic pipes we found.
Working hard as a team to pick up garbage-- we found some big stuff!


* Watching how the EC mottos are becoming internalized. Girls consciously applied these on Saturday:

- Safety First (we discussed how to work with potentially dangerous garbage carefully, or not at all)

- Widen the Circle (girls included everyone, not just those they know well)

- You See It, You Own It (though we didn't litter the trash, we became responsible to pick it up)

- Build Bridges Not Walls (... in how we speak and act toward one another)

- Everyone Helps (each one of us was an important part of the solution)

- All Things Are Connected (girls reflected on how the Nooksack River connects the mountains to Bellingham Bay, which is connected to the Salish Sea, which is connected to the Strait of Juan de Fuca, which is connected to the Pacific Ocean, which is connected to the Atlantic Ocean, etc. And how we were connected to the 500,000 other volunteers participating in the ICC this day)

- LIBK (girls were great at letting us know what was working and not working for them throughout the day)

- Walk Your Talk (even after a long day of trash harvesting and tired bodies, the girls applied their integrity as a group to haul the trash uphill with commitment and determination to the waiting truck)

* Watching some girls' eager encounters with boot sucking mud

* At day's end discussing the things each of us can do to reduce the amount of marine debris, such as walking/biking more, driving less; being mindful of sustainable practices when shopping for food; sustainable boating; buying things with less packaging; reducing our consumption in general; reusing things; being mindful of what we put into storm drains and waterways that lead to the sea; and participating in the International Coastal Cleanup!

Our words of the day: "Life, death, water and mud. Garbage, be gone!"

-Holly