We arrived at the Jackson Hole, WY airport at about 11:30pm Sunday night. The waxing half moon helped us find our cabins at the Teton Science School. We probably had the kids in bed by 1am, and got a late start the next morning. We pushed breakfast back to 8:30am Monday morning. This is what I saw on Monday 29 January 2007 when I stepped out of my cabin (Sleeping Indian) at 8:19am.
Day five – presentations
Group photo – 2007
Back: LP (Trip Leader), Jody (Host), Ellen (Writing Instructor), Alyssa (Sponsor), Christian, Mike (Teton Faculty) Cédric, Nate, Brock (Sponsor), Adrienne (Teton Instructor), Andrew (Teton Instructor), Kristin (Art Instructor)
Middle: Jodie, Andrés, Charlotte, Rachelle, Nick
Front: Caroline, Karlin, Dana, Samuel, Keith
Research Presentations:
Our plane for the trip home.
Day five – last day.
Morning hike up to Coyote Rock. (-40 F w/wind chill)
Snowshoeing up to Coyote Rock in the morning.
Breakfast in the snow.
One last rise to the top.
View from Coyote Rock
Fabulous Five: LP, Ellen, Kristin, Brock & Alyssa.
Out of the wind.
Journaling diehard.
Birdman.
Caroline adds color to her journal.
Cédric adds to the community journal.
Day four.
Loving the field work — reading tracks.
Nate working with his group on their science project presentation.
Karlin doing some journaling.
Samuel listens to his group as they get ready to defend their hypothesis.
Sunset on the Teton Range.
Grand Teton sunset.
Listening to Beth McIntosh concert.
A concert in the lodge. The students loved the soulful, earthy music.
Beth McIntosh picks a thoughtful tune.
Day three.
Bald Eagle on Telephone Pole. Spotted by Christian on return trip from Elk Refuge.
Standing to get good shots of the Elk.
Binoculars were useful to get a closer look.
A lot to see on the Elk Refuge.
Approaching Elk on their daily trek from the feeding area.
Young Elk learning to fight.
Bambi has the largest rack on the refuge.
Sleigh ride out to the Elk herd.
Moose walking through camp in the morning.
Day two.
Near the end of the Snowshoe trail.
One last hill before home.
Finding a new vantage point to gather clues about the nature of the Teton Range.
Making a journal entry.
Back to studies.
A little time for playing in the snow. A frisbee diversion.
Looking for signs to answer to the question, “What happened here?”
The group gets a lesson on gathering clues and observing the surroundings.
Day one.
Learning to draw; Blind drawing exercise.
Digging a snow pit to take measurements.
Learning to crosscountry ski. Gliding without poles.
Moose love to lick the salt off of the cars.
Sunrise on our first Teton morning.
Christian finds a good shot.
Cédric works on his journal in the airport during our six hour delay in Dallas.
Quote:
“[The Teton Trip] is the best thing this school does.”
-Skip Mange
Retired Upper School Physics Teacher
1994, 1996 Teton Trip Staff
Writing Assignment from Ellen
First: Find some silence and immerse yourself in it. In your journal, describe the silence.
Then:Fill a page (even a whole spread) with your perspective of the world today. This can include words and/or images.