Day one.

Learning to Dra
Learning to draw; Blind drawing exercise.

Field Work
Digging a snow pit to take measurements.

Learning to Ski
Learning to crosscountry ski. Gliding without poles.
Salty Moose
Moose love to lick the salt off of the cars.
Alpineglow
Sunrise on our first Teton morning.
Christian
Christian finds a good shot.
Cédric
Cédric works on his journal in the airport during our six hour delay in Dallas.

Getting Dressed for Winter: Learn to Love the Layers!

If you missed the December 12 Teton Trip meeting, then you also missed Mr. Green’s fantastic presentation about how to get dressed in the morning. The main goal here is actually your safety, not looking cool. Here’s an easy way to remember all the parts you will need to stay warm:

Wear Wickies, Warmies, Wetties & Windies when weaselating.

1. Wickies:

This base layer of silk long underwear, or some type of synthetic alternative such as capilene wicks the moisture away from your body when you are skiing or snow shoeing, so you stay dry and cozy.

2. Warmies:

This is your insulation layer. Some good options are wool or synthetic fleece. I would suggest packing an extra Warmie top layer in your backpack for times when we stop to talk about something or write something in the field.

3. Wetties & Windies:

This outer shell should protect you from water and wind. Snowboard pants & a rain shell are a good combination, for example. Your Warmies won’t do you much good if they are wet.

4. Weaselating:

You will find out about that when we get there…

2007 Trip Details

19940202-kp-sm.jpgDid you miss the first meeting in the gameroom today?

No worries. (Just don’t let it happen again.) Everything we covered is posted under the heading 2007 Info.

If you are a junior or senior at Principia Upper School, you need to consider making this trip part of your life. It will stay with you for a long time. Just ask Peter Krogh (1983 Teton Trip). 24 years later, he still thinks that “the Teton Trip was one of the highlights of my four years at the U/S.”

So there.
Go find Ms. Ragnow or Mr. Green and get an application.

1983 Article about the Teton Trip

The Casper Star-Tribune
Casper, Wyoming
Thursday, 10 February 1983
by Charles Levendosky
(The Teton Trip’s very first Writing Instructor)

“Learning on skis in Teton’s winter silence”

In the mountains there are silences so deep that we plunge unexpectedly into our forgotten commonality with the earth.

Last week teaching at the Teton School of Science in Jackson Hole I was reminded of that silence and that common spirit. Students stood in small groups on their cross-country skis hushed by the intensity of soundlessness in this winter landscape, as if they were in a cathedral or library. Perhaps they were, for there was learning and there was awe.

For the past two years Principia High School of St. Louis, Missouri has sent twenty juniors and seniors with selected teachers for the Teton School of Science. They come to participate in a program called Creative Expressions from Nature which evolved from two learning projects begun by the Jackson Hole High School called Art in Nature and Literature in Nature.

Creative Expressions from Nature blends the teaching of natural scientists from the Teton School of Science staff, artist/architect George Vlastos, and myself, as poet. Journals offer the opportunity for an articulate blending. The white pages of those journals – like like the snow around them records their ski tracks – imprints their thoughts, drawings, information, poems, fragments of ideas, feelings, and the week’s experiences.

This is an exciting kind of teaching and learning. It is a total immersion into a learning setting, as a child when teaching itself to walk; leaning, falling, toddling, with no fixed boundaries except body and place. Those arbitrary boundaries between disciplines like science and art are erased. One compliments the other. Winter survival is part of winter ecology is part of an awareness of place and habitats and a growing sensitivity to oneself and what one participates in. And the awesome silence around us and in us with which we create.

Many of these students have never seen skis, but learn confidence in their ability to travel miles across snow. They learn to differentiate moose scat from coyote’s, pine from fir, the types of snow and what they mean to someone in a winter environment. They learn to draw, or to express themselves visually. They learn to be more open in expression of feeling as poem, as a sensitive use of language, beyond mere carriers of observed information. They learn to listen beyond words.

It is an intensive week, but it exemplifies the kind of learning situation which all our students deserve. It accepts more than information. We used to call it ‘affective education’. Education that appeals to an emotional base so we make what we learn truly ours; it becomes integrated into our silences. What we love, we learn more quickly, more thoroughly, and with more care. We call that ‘dedication’.

When the students went out in teams to observe, draw and write, no one had to remind them to respect the environment. Over and over again, with different students, I saw them stop and stand in quiet contemplation, listening to a raven’s caw, the creek’s flow below the ice and snow, the prisimatic reflection of the sun off stellar plaques of snow, and their own breathing. This place, this week was being silently etched into each one of them.

I know I sensed the earth, listening, too.

2003 Participants

Students
Jeanne Arbez
Emily Bleichman
Maggy Bort
Christina Daugherty
Joe Fitzgibbon
Sam Glover
Stephanie Golmon
Lisl Hinrichs
Jon Hinthorne
Jason Loomis
Betty Munoz
Bonnie Treworgy
Spencer White

Principia Staff:
Jim Evans – History Teacher
Lynn Evans – French Teacher
Mimi Bilsborrow – Administration

Writing Instructor:
Susan Els

Art Instructor:
Greg Houda – Jackson, WY High School Art Teacher

1987 Participants

Students:
David Bailey
Selby Eddy
Andy Parker
Staar Prewitt
Heather Stolz
Phebe Telschow
Anne Toevs

(…this is a partial list – please help me fill in more names if you went on this trip, or know someone who did! send info to: kristin@xyzant.com )