Third-grad students use their maps to identify land features |
For
Raymond Elementary School third graders, the best way to study local history
and map-making is to get a bird’s eye view. This past Friday, both of
Raymond’s third grade classes, who have been studying the history of the town
of Raymond while making their own maps, had the opportunity to hike Rattlesnake
Mountain. Joined by several parents, this field trip was the perfect chance for
both the children and the adults to get a new outlook on their home town.
When
the school bus parked at the Bri-Mar trailhead off Route 85 on Friday morning,
May 31, the
cheerful third graders were sorted into groups, assigned to parent
chaperones, and told to stick with their group.
The
children took to the trail like a herd of enthusiastic mountain goats. This
journalist soon discovered that the hardest part of the hike was keeping up
with my assigned third graders as they leapt over rocks and ran up the
mountain.
Rattlesnake
Mountain, at just over one thousand feet, is a healthy climb. The trail is 2.5
miles out-and-back, and there are several fallen trees and steep pitches to
navigate. These sections slowed down a few of the hikers, children and
chaperones alike.
“I
think I’m going to die before I get there,” one tired hiker sighed at the foot
of a particularly steep incline.
Happily,
a few water breaks restored everyone’s spirits and allowed the
chaperones to re-collect their groups. The trail evens out toward the top of
the mountain and, as the trees cleared, we caught a few
glimpses of the serpentine, glittering surface of Crescent Lake.
glimpses of the serpentine, glittering surface of Crescent Lake.
“What
lake do you think that is?” I asked a few of the hikers.
“Um,
Jordan Bay?” one guessed.
“Casco
Bay?” another offered.
I
suggested perhaps we should check their maps at the top of the mountain.
Once
we reached Rattlesnake Mountain’s beautiful lookout, a wide, flat
section of glacially polished granite just below the summit, the third-grade
classes split into two groups. One group sat down to examine the colorful,
student-made maps of Raymond that teacher Ms. Begin carried up the mountain,
while the other group ran further up the trail, hoping to find another
viewpoint. After a few quick exercises, the groups traded places so that each
child had the opportunity to compare a hand-drawn map with the view before
them.
“Now,
how do we hold a map?” Ms. Begin asked the assembled third graders.
After
a few guesses, such as “right side up,” we determined that maps should
be aligned with a compass. Ms. Begin used her phone’s compass to determine
which direction was north (directly behind us). After a few shrieked
interruptions when students spotted a tick, or a black fly, or a piece of dirt
that might have looked a bit like a black fly, the third graders settled down
to read their maps.
“So,
what lake is that?” Ms. Begin asked, pointing toward the nearest lake.
“Rattlesnake
Lake!” someone called.
“And
what do we call that lake now?” Ms. Begin continued.
The
children answered: “Crescent!”
Using
their maps, the collection of third graders was able to identify the lakes and
land features spread before them, including Raymond Pond, Panther Pond, Betty’s
Neck on Panther Pond, and the distant stretch of Raymond Cape in Sebago Lake.
Then, with several reminders to tie loose shoelaces
and not to run over the steep, leaf-strewn trail, we headed back down the mountain and toward the waiting bus.
and not to run over the steep, leaf-strewn trail, we headed back down the mountain and toward the waiting bus.
“What
did you think of the field trip?” I asked my group of hikers.
“Loved
it!” said Sage Bizier, my RES insider.
“Yeah,”
agreed her classmate Kaitlin Skillings. “That was the most awesome field trip
ever!”
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