Yesterday's outing in the Old Growth Forest was filled with creativity and inspiration as we wandered, sat, ate, pondered, and created art of all forms below the giant Sentinals. The morning brought beautiful weather with a mix of misty rain
and sunshine as we loaded up Moose, the Wild Whatcom mini-bus. Before getting on the bus, we shared as a group what came to mind when we thought of art. We agreed that "art is anything you create," as one girl shared, including drawings, paintings, poetry, music, dance, books, and storytelling. We challenged the girls to think about the idea of all art as a form of storytelling - a theme we would continue to explore throughout the day.
The girls' imaginations were already in high gear as we set out on our journey to the Shadow of the Sentinals Trailhead. With an hour of driving ahead, we set our minds to the task of creating a group story, word by word, each girl continuing where the last had left off. As words became sentences, our first story of the day began to unfold. The girls created the following comical and creative storylines, adding one word at a time, turn by turn:
Story #1
Last night when I was hugging my pink koala, I was drooling on my pillow. Suddenly, I remembered I was thirteen! My mom woke me up to see a large manatee. Because I was thirteen, I screamed and jumped off my pillow. I landed on my pink koala. "Ouch!" she cried. "Whaaaa...that hurt!" I crawled over to my mom, who comforted me with a musty smelling onion and I started to cry on my pillow and the koala kissed me. "Happy birthday, you were fooled," the musty smelling onion cried! Then I decided to slice the onion.
"Ahhhh," I yelled, "You smell!"
"Well that hurt a lot, and I'm so sad."
Suddenly, there appeared a weaner dog that was yellow and fat and ferocious! The dog had kankles with boils. It pounced on the large manatee. The manatee screamed in pain!...TO BE CONTINUED...
Story #2
The Story of the Famous, Yellow, Fat, Ferocious, Kankled Weaner Dog
Once upon a time there was a famous, yellow, fat, ferocious, kankled weaner dog puppy. The weaner dog had a green lawyer. The weaner dog lived in a yellow, fat house. His name was Pig. He liked to play with his friends in the snow. After he was done playing in the snow, he went inside and had hot chocolate. He would always pre-make the hot chocolate and when he came back in, it was always luke-warm. He was very sad but he was also always baking papaya pie! He was sad because his friends made fun of him for being fat...TO BE CONTINUED...
After an impressive round of Silly Story Creation, we arrived at our destination, the Shadow of the Sentinals Interpretive Trail. There was snow on the ground all around us so we bundled up before setting off on our adventure.
The girls used their Collaborate and Compromise skills to lead us down the trail, stopping to check in with the group before turning off the main path. There were informative signs all along the trail, with pictures, facts, poems, and diagrams explaining our surroundings.
We hiked until we got to a giant Douglas Fir tree, said to be 680 years old! The girls joined hands and wrapped around the tree. It took all 9 girls to fit around the tree!
We continued down the path, noticing the giant trees around us, both alive and dead. We discussed the important role of snags and fallen trees, and the differences we noticed in this forest compared to other forests we had been in.
We hiked slowly, and observantly, until we completed the half-mile loop and found ourselves back at the bus. The bus became our classroom for a brief, interactive story of the history of this place. We then loaded up our packs with all the art supplies we could carry and headed back to the trail to find a peaceful, inspiring place to do art in the old growth.

The girls settled under the 680-year-old giant fir tree to do some artwork, creating drawings, story-boards, fictional narratives, poems, paintings, and even some nature art. We set up a stove at our new "base camp" and made hot beverages to keep our bodies and minds warm!
After about an hour of creating and enjoying the beauty of the place we were in, we spread out to sit in silence for peaceful place. The sun, previously covered by clouds, began to shine through the forest canopy just as we settled into our chosen spots for peaceful place. Though we all could have stayed in that place and in that moment for the rest of the afternoon, we regrouped to share our stories and creations from the day. And what an amazing display it was!
We shared our
Attitude of Gratitude for the place we were in and then made our way back to the bus. Many girls agreed this was a place that they would return to and a story they would bring home to friends and family!
Please enjoy the full album of the day,
here.