Return to Programs and Events main page.Return to Wolf Ridge home page.Summer camp for kids, including on-site and adventure programs off-site.Weekend and week long programs for a variety of ages.Credit-bearing summer courses in Environmental Studies for undergraduates.Environmental education internships at Wolf Ridge.Bring a school group to Wolf Ridge.Return to Wolf Ridge home page.

Family
and Elderhostel Activity Offerings

Your Wolf Ridge program will include selections from the following class offerings. Family Program class offerings are adapted to the age and interest of the participants. Please see individual program descriptions below or call for a complete listing of your programs offerings.

Adult Level Classes: Your program may include opportunities for adults and older teens to learn and play in an adult oriented class. Possible class offerings may include: Plant Study, Climb and Rapell, Birds, Competitive Orienteering and Superior View Hike.

Age Group Classes (3-6 year olds): Your program may include preschool opportunities. Class time includes indoor and outdoor activities, games and songs, as well as a rest period and snack. The preschool curriculum has been designed specifically for Wolf Ridge and has been field tested extensively.

Age Group Classes (7-14 year olds): Your program may include opportunities for children to learn and play with others of similar age in a small group of peers. Age groups will be based on number and ages of the participants. All classes taught by one or two Wolf Ridge trained naturalists.

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Daytime Activities

Animals
Animal Senses
Animal Signs
Beavers
Birds
Small Mammals
Snowshoe Hares
White-tailed Deer
Wildlife Management

Plants
Forest Ecology
Plant Study
Trees and Keys
Wetlands Ecology

Aquatics
Fisheries Management
Frozen Lake Study
Lake Study
Stream Study

Earth Science
Acid Rain
Geology
Weather Forecasting

Human Culture and History
Living Lightly
Ojibwe Heritage
Ojibwe Snowshoe
Seeds of Change
Voyageur Life

Personal Growth
Adventure Ropes Course
Rock Climbing

Team Building
Basic Survival
Imagination Games

Outdoor Recreation
Beginning Orienteering
Canoeing
Competitive Orienteering
Cross Country Skiing
Dogsledding
Superior Snowshoe
Superior View Hike

Evening Activities

Adventure Ropes
Animal Trivia
Astronomy
Block Printing
Campfire
Canoeing
Creature from Wolf Lake
Creative Expressions
Dream Catchers
Family Folk Dance
Lake Superior Game
Night Hike
Owl Pellets
Paper Making
Rock Climbing
Star Lab
Volleyball
Voyageur Canoeing
Woodland Art

Evening Naturalist Presentations

Bats
Bears
Bogs
Critter Tales
Echoes of the
Ancient Skies
Fur Trade
Glaciers
History of the
North Shore
Logging Camp Life
Loons
Moose
Night Sky
Prairies
Raptors
Ravens
Spiders
Wolves

Brief Descriptions (in alphabetical order)

Acid Rain
After participants learn about acid chemistry they will visit our precipitation monitoring site, measure pH of samples, and explore acid rain causes, effects and interrelationships.

Adventure Ropes
The Wolf Ridge adventure ropes course consists of six events between towers 25 ft off the ground. participants will traverse the course while attached to safety lines. The experiences on the course are used as a metaphor for participants' lives. It is hoped they will apply their gained personal growth and awareness to everyday life. In addition to the instructor 3 adults are required to assist during this class.

Animal Senses
By doing experiments with their own senses, participants will learn how senses work. Through games and role playing, they will compare their sense to those of other animals, and learn why senses are important for survival.

Animal Signs
Participants will learn, by tracking animals out of doors, the variety of evidence left behind by animals and what we can learn about them from that evidence. During spring, summer and fall, they will also practice the research techniques of radio telemetry.

Animal Trivia
This game divides animal information cards between two teams for study. Quiz questions are then asked from the collected cards, and score is kept for each team's correct answers.

Astronomy
Using a telescope participants will observe current astronomical events or objects. Major constellations in the night sky will be taught and illustrated with stories.

Basic Survival
After prioritizing the basic needs in a survival situation, participants will spend an hour in a “survival situation”, make a fire, build a shelter, and boil a pot of cider. We recommend that an adult accompany this class.

Beavers
Participants will participate in a beaver dress-up activity that illustrates the physical adaptations of the beaver. A hike along Sawmill Creek offers an excellent opportunity to observe the effects of beaver activity on the environment. A skit of fur trade era characters offers insight in human and beaver interaction in the past.

Beginning Orienteering
After learning the definition and history of orienteering, participants learn parts of the compass and how to set and follow a bearing. Distance measurement is taught through individual pacing and applied math skills. Participants will demonstrate skills while on a course. These skills will be applied to map work and the outdoor ethic they can help people obtain.

Birds
The amazing diversity of birds will be studied, with emphasis on field observation. Participants will use binoculars, field guides and will be introduced to bird banding. They will also play a migration game. Close up viewing of birds is possible at the bird banding station and "Chickadee Landing".

Block Printing
Participants will learn about the history of printing. They will learn the ancient technique of block printing to express a natural history event experienced or inspired while at Wolf Ridge. Participants will take home their original 4"x5" art block for future printing, as well as 6-12 printed cards.

Campfire
Enjoy songs, stories, and skits around the campfire. Your liaison will organize and present one campfire during your stay. This is a great way to wrap up your visit to Wolf Ridge.

Canoeing
Participants will use Wolf or Raven lake as a classroom as they learn about canoeing history and equipment. They will practice technique on the lake. They will experience the value of canoeing as a physical activity and how it affects their relationship with the environment.

Competitive Orienteering
Participants will be involved in a problem-solving situation utilizing compass and map reading skills, keen observations, geography, speed, and physical stamina.

Creative Expressions
Participants will participate in activities that creatively capture their experiences in the natural world. Through activities in poetry, theatrics and storytelling the participants will express the awareness and emotions generated by their Wolf Ridge experience.

Creature From Wolf Lake Game
An exercise in observation and communication adapted from Project WILD. Each group of 2-4 participants must describe a pictured animal in their journal entry. Then the journal is given to another group (without the picture), and they must draw their impression of the animal from the description.

Cross Country Skiing
While indoors, participants will be introduced to equipment and selection, as well as appropriate clothing. Beginning lessons will be offered before touring (up to 3 kilometers) of Wolf Ridge trails.

Dogsledding
Get a taste of the excitement of this unique northern way of life, as a dogsledder joins us for the morning. We’ll have an introduction to the history, equipment and background of the sport. Then we’ll meet the dogs, help harness them, and ride along as they run a practice loop.

Dream Catchers
Participants will learn the history of the dreamcatcher, a traditional Ojibwe craft. After an hour of work the participants will have created a dreamcatcher using branches, artificial sinew, beads, and feathers.

Family Folk Dance
Even those who don’t normally like dancing will enjoy these simple and fun circle and line dances. Dances are for all ages, and are taught; no experience is necessary. Join the live band “Wild Thyme” in these simple expressions of joy.

Fisheries Management
After investigating the habitat needs of stream fish, participants visit the Sawmill Creek field station where they will make a working stream model, will identify aquatic invertebrates and will fish for trout and other fish.

Forest Ecology (All day class w/ bag lunches)
Participants will learn about trees and their value as both a living and a harvested resource. They will also learn that forests are much more than a collection of trees. "Adopting" a tree and touring a forest management area are some of the field activities. The final activity is a role play in which participants need to develop a management plan for a hypothetical forest. This is an all day class paired with either stream study, fisheries management, beavers, animal signs, or cross country skiing.

Frozen Lake Study
Participants will examine the ecosystem of Wolf Lake under the ice. Working in groups, they will explore the lake through holes drilled in the ice. Studies will include plankton sampling, ice depth and structure, lake bottom structure, and possible catch and release activities.

Geology
Participants will gain an overview of various kinds of rocks and how they were formed, and the changes that occur due to erosion. Hills will be climbed and glacial features will be observed.

Imagination Games
Using their imagination, playing games, solving problems, and working through challenges, participants practice teamwork and learn "how we play toady is how we live tomorrow."

Lake Study
Participants will examine the physical, chemical, and biological properties of Wolf Lake. Wearing boots, which are provided, and working in small groups, the participants test temperature, pH, and dissolved oxygen. They will use nets to collect and examine aquatic animal life and will evaluate the health of the lake based on their findings.

Lake Superior Game
Around a giant map of Lake Superior, participants are assigned roles to play and places to live. Each is given a personal environmental dilema involving the lake. A clear pail representing Lake Superior stays clean or becomes polluted (food coloring) based on the participant's decisions.

Living Lightly
Participants will examine resource use at Wolf Ridge. They will recycle and compost solid waste, examine dorm water use and efficiency. Energy efficiency will be illustrated using photovoltaics and an energy bicycle. Finally, participants will consider the impact of human population and our individual lives upon global resources, and determine ways to conserve and use resources efficiently.

Night Hike
Participants will hike a designated route, stopping to do activities along the way. These activities will lead to a better understanding of night time communications and senses. Participants will have the opportunity to sit solo and experience the night.

Ojibwe Heritage
Participants will travel to a recreated Ojibwe site where they will practice skills common 200 years ago. Skills include firestarting using a bow drill or flint and steel, preparation of wild rice and raspberry tea, making basswood twine and black ash baskets. participants will be introduced to Ojibwe history and language. Stories will be told to give insight into the Ojibwe perception of natural events.

Ojibwe Snowshoe
Participants will be introduced to Ojibwe history, seasonal lifestyle and use of natural resources. After learning the basic of snowshoes, they will travel on snowshoes to a recreated Ojibwe site of 200 years ago, learning about the uses of different trees along the way. At the site they will listen to legends and learn some skills the Ojibwe had. Another snowshoe hike returns to the classroom for a short conclusion.

Owl Pellet Dissection
This activity offers a chance for participants to dissect sterilized Barn Owl pellets. Each pellet contains a small mammal skeleton which the participants reconstruct, glue on cards, and bring home (to delighted parents)

Paper Making
Participants will learn about the paper making process, its history, and then make their own recycled paper. The final product, a postcard, takes two hours to create with an overnight drying period.

Plant Study
After identifying some of our most common plants, participants will study and observe interactions between plants, herbivores, and other organisms. Finally, they will learn about plants as resources firsthand by making foods, drinks, dyes, and more. Our study will include algae, fungi, lichens, mosses, ferns and their relatives, conifers, and flowering plants.

Rock Climbing
Participants will experience climbing on the 29-foot indoor rock climbing wall. After a discussion of what emotions and feelings climbing may evoke, they will become familiar with the equipment, techniques, and commands used by climbers and belayers. Belaying instruction, practice and testing will occur before participants learn and practice climbing techniques. Experience climbing and belaying will be used as metaphors for everyday life. 3 adult helpers are required, in addition to the instructor, for this class.

Seeds of Change
This class traces the steps our food takes from the farmer's field to the dinner plate. The participants sample foods, learn the history of seeds, and discover the difference between heirloom and hybrid seeds. Grinding grains, baking, and games will give the participants a perspective of the different methods of farming and the implications of our global farming system.

Small Mammals
Participants will learn characteristics of some of the small mammals of northern Minnesota. By traveling through various habitats, searching for small mammal signs, they will learn the role these small creatures play in the environment. Participants then set out live traps overnight, which will be collected in the morning to observe the animals caught, before releasing them back again to the wild.

Snowshoe Hares
After comparing Minnesota hares and rabbits, participants explore outside areas to find signs of snowshoes hares. They will study the adaptations, predator/prey relationships and population fluctuations of snowshoe hares.

Star Lab / Portable Planetarium
Get an up-close view of the night sky regardless of the weather and hear stories related to the constellations. Using the portable planetarium on loan from North Shore Elementary, small groups of participants will have the opportunity to see the stars of any season.

Stream Study
Participants will examine the physical, chemical and biological properties of Sawmill Creek. Wearing hip boots, which are provided, and working in small groups, the participants will test stream velocity, temperature, pH, and dissolved oxygen. They will also look at the diversity of aquatic animals and evaluate the health of the stream through their findings.

Superior Snowshoe
After learning about the history and types of snowshoes, participants will experience them by snowshoeing across Wolf or Raven Lake to the highlands overlooking Lake Superior. Rest breaks will include discussion of facts and figures concerning Lake Superior.

Superior View Hike
Participants will take a three mile hike along sections of the Wolf Ridge trail system and the Superior Hiking Trail. A spectacular overlook awaits them above Lake Superior. The instructor will involve participants in a demonstration dealing with the importance of the lake's fresh water. Stopping along the way at five different stops, participants will examine the geology, history, and meteorology of the area.

Trees and Keys
Participants will learn how to construct and use a simple dichotomous identification key. Given a map and a simplified tree and shrub key, participants will travel between trees and attempt to identify them correctly. Temperate and tropical forests will be compared and participants will learn about species diversity. participants will receive a tropical forest tree seed to plant and to learn the value of maintaining biodiversity.

Volleyball
Play volleyball on one of our two sand volleyball courts. The courts are lighted and in the winter make for the unique opportunity to play snow volleyball. Volleyballs are provided.

Voyageur Canoeing
Participants will hike down to Wolf Lake and paddle a replica of a fur trade era voyageur canoe. A piece of history comes alive as you take in the beautiful sites around Wolf Lake.

Voyageur Life
Participants will learn the history of early exploration and the fur trade of this northern region by becoming Voyageurs. After paddling a voyageur canoe to an encampment, they will learn about the lifestyle of the colorful voyageur who provided the muscle behind the development of the upper Midwest. Skills of the voyageur and the fur trade will be practiced.

Weather Forecasting
After learning some of the historic changes in the earth's climate, participants will collect data on today's weather, then do demonstrations to understand cloud formation and low pressure systems. An outdoor game will explain the jet stream and its effect. Finally, participants will use their new knowledge to create a forecast for the next day at Wolf Ridge.

Wetlands Ecology
After establishing a common vocabulary in the study of wetlands, participants will gather data regarding the vegetation, hydrology, and soil composition of several wetland types, including swamps, marshes, and peatlands. After returning from a discovery hike participants analyze their data and map the Raven Lake wetlands. They will appreciate the uniqueness, diversity, and fragility of the wetland ecosystem.

White-tailed Deer
Participants will learn about white-tailed deer by exploration of signs. They will track deer, inspect feeding stations, follow trails, and investigate beds. In this way they will learn about adaptations, life cycles and management of deer in northern Minnesota.

Wildlife Management
By playing a Project WILD game called “Oh Deer!” participants will better understand wildlife needs and management techniques. During their tour of various management plots, they will hunt for animal signs, be introduced to modern wildlife management concepts, and may contribute to plot maintenance by cutting, planting, and raking.

Woodland Art
Participants will use the techniues and examples of Woodland Art to interpret some of their experiences at Wolf Ridge. Templates can be used to assist participants with their pictoral stories.

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