An Experience That Changes Lives
Wednesday, October 7th, 2009Wendy Liscow, Program Officer

One warm, crystal clear morning in August, I was lacing up my hiking boots with great anticipation. Not only was I going to get to leave my more formal foundation program officer uniform at home, but I was also going to a site visit at the South Mountain Reservation to meet the Student Conservation Association’s Newark-area service corps. I had been to visit the crews last summer at Newark’s Branch Brook Park and was blown away by the high school students’ enthusiasm and the skills and knowledge they had accumulated over seven busy weeks. This visit promised to be equally gratifying.
As I pulled into the Dog Park parking lot, I was welcomed by the Student Conservation Association’s Newark Project Director Renee Winslow who escorted me into the woods where 30 sweaty, dirt-covered teens eagerly greeted me. They immediately showed me the trail they had been restoring and regaled me with the adventures that went along with this arduous task. They had been moving huge rocks, digging ditches to divert rainwater, rerouting trails, cutting brush, and removing invasive plants. They had endured the heat, the rain, and the bugs to literally, and figuratively, arrive at the other end of the trail with a great sense of satisfaction. This experience was an once-in-a-lifetime opportunity (though in a few cases it was a thrice-in-a-lifetime opportunity, since several students were returning for the third summer) that changed their entire relationship to nature and the land. See for yourself:
