Showing posts with label Kerry Wood Nature Centre. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kerry Wood Nature Centre. Show all posts

Thursday, September 01, 2016

Jim Robertson on his retirement

As this mere player leaves the stage …
Looking back on 31 years in Waskasoo Park

Paraphrased and cribbed shamelessly from an article by Martin Edwards

Shakespeare’s As You Like It features a speech by the melancholy Jacques on the seven ages of mankind. “All the world’s a stage, and all the men and women merely players,” he begins, and reflects on the seven-stage journey from infancy to old age. With 31 years under my belt in my current job, I think there were also seven stages of my time at the Kerry Wood Nature Centre and with the entire Waskasoo Park Interpretive Program.

First, there was the honeymoon, when I had seemingly infinite goodwill, momentum, political support, and thus had the maximum opportunity for creating the best urban park interpretive program that I could. This was so refreshing! After leaving the oh-so-political bureaucracy of the national parks, all of a sudden the whole of my political world was in support. City Council and senior administration, even our local provincial and federal politicians loved what was happening in Waskasoo Park. Some even came to have their pictures taken here!

The second stage was resistance. Maybe I was oblivious or just lucky, but apart from the hard dollars-and-cents issues that plague anyone working in the real world, I never noticed great resistance to what we tried to do here. Going to cost-recovery programming met some opposition, but has since proved to be our salvation. Originally, everything we did in the interpretive program was free of charge. We now raise fully one third of our budget, and that enables us to do so much more than simply keep the doors open and the lights on.

After resistance came building. We did the first revamp of Fort Normandeau’s exhibits in 1990, when the park interpretive program took over the operation of the fort, and then completely replaced them in 2013–2014. We expanded the Nature Centre twice, first in 1989 and again in 2000, and did two interim exhibit renewals before completely redoing them last year. Our staff numbers have increased over the years, in part from the support of the City and largely due to our “self-generated revenue”. This is what pays for the approximately 800 programs we deliver every year.

The fourth stage has been embedding the successes. This was when achievements were fixed in place and, through policy, board development, repetition, and collaboration with our partners, became part of the organisation’s DNA and what the community expected of us.

To be honest, the fifth stage was boredom. We brought in the changes, won the battles, built and embedded. I then asked “what now?” The thought of another year of developing and monitoring our budget, supervising ordinary day-to-day operations, and changing light bulbs didn’t appeal to me. I did look around for other possible jobs, but I’m glad I didn’t leave, because I would have missed out on the sixth, innovative stage: renewal.

I was able to use this time to challenge the organisation—and myself—to reach for new heights. While I was very happy with how the Waskasoo Park Interpretive Program got started, it has been the renewal stage that I am most proud of today. We have re-invented ourselves as a stand-alone society, separate from the Museum and the City. I went back to school and—with support from the Normandeau Society (now WEES)—got my MA in Environmental Education. We have replaced all the old, outdated exhibits with ones better suited to today with modern messaging. Our programs are well received. Our nature preschool program was a cutting-edge program when it started, and is still a model for similar new programs. Our finances are sound. City Council and administration are still happy with us. The NOVA Imagination Grove and the Kiwanis Harmony Garden are amazingly successful. Structures and trails in the Sanctuary are being rebuilt, and the interpretive signage along the Waskasoo Park trails is being renewed.

Finally, there is a seventh stage. I’m unsure what it is yet. I would like to think that I could cycle past boredom again into another time of renewal, thus delaying the final stage. There is still so much to be done. The interpretive signage in the Sanctuary and throughout Waskasoo Park has to be replaced. Our programs always need to be tweaked, and sometimes need wholesale replacement as Alberta Education changes its curriculum. Parts of our new exhibits could be improved upon. I’d love to see our self-generated funding increase further, so that we could expand the operating season at Fort Normandeau and bring in some special expertise at the Nature Centre.

But I could be wrong. It might be the seventh age according to Jacques: decrepitude, when the years of toil have taken their toll on the player and it is time to leave the stage and go without fear into the calm pastures beyond. Everyone has a “best-before” date. I see that we now have a strong team in place to continue to build on the foundation we’ve created since 1985. I’m happy to step aside and watch where fresh new ideas and energy take the Waskasoo Park Interpretive Program. Besides, I still have things to do, places to go, and people to see. I’d better get on with it before decrepitude seriously sets in.

There will be a goodbye drop-in reception for Jim from 3:00 to 5:00 on Friday September 2nd in the 
Nature Centre.

Jim at the Kerry Wood Nature Centre opening in 1986.

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Imagination Grove

Work is well underway for Imagination Grove, the new nature playground here at Kerry Wood Nature Centre. Here's a quick look at what's going on today.

Some of the materials that go into a nature playground

This should be quite the climbing structure

Our new amphitheatre in the works

No more turnstile gate

Things are coming along nicely, with more on the way. Watch for the upcoming announcement of our opening in October. Then be sure to come down and play!

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

Take Me Outside



We were thrilled to be a part of Colin's journey. Colin spent a day in Red Deer giving talks at Annie L. Gaetz elementary, G.W. Smith elementary and West Park Middle schools. He also did a tour of the Nature Centre and had lunch with a couple of the interpreters.

Here at the Nature Centre we have been dedicated to sharing the outdoors with children, for 25 years. With all the new initiatives in preschool and kindergarten outdoor-classes, it is worth noting that the Nature Centre's Nature Nursery program has been an outdoor program for nearly 20 years. Our kids spend 1/2 of their time, each day, exploring the Sanctuary's forests, fields and ponds. In May, June and September, when the weather is a little more forgiving, Nature Nursery is an entirely outdoor program.

Kids need to be outside. There is a growing mountain of evidence to support the idea that the 53-hours/week of screen time that North American kids are getting (outside of school hours) is doing more harm than good. We're seeing increased rates of childhood obesity, increased rates of ADD/ADHD and a increase in the psychological distance between people and nature. Our own research - conducted by Jim Roberston as part of his Masters thesis - indicates that kids who are exposed to early nature-based education develop into more environmentally-aware citizens. They exhibit more empathy for nature and for natural environments.

So to Colin: Congratulations. We are inspired by your run and I am personally, proud to call you my friend. To the nature-educators around the world: Keep doing what you do. The children of today and the natural environments of the future are depending on you.

Monday, July 11, 2011

A rare rafting opportunity!

Rafting season is finally upon us! Now that the nice weather is making more of an appearance, it's time to get out on the river and have some fun. This coming Friday, July 15, will be the first installment of a novel and thoroughly enjoyable float we're running this year: moonlight raft tours. It will be a late night, but well worth it as we'll get to see life on the river after dark. Seats are $45 + GST/person for KWNCA members and $50 + GST/person for non-members. There are still a few seats left; call the Kerry Wood Nature Centre at 403-346-2010 for more information or to reserve your spot.

If you're not able to make the July run of the Full Moon Float, don't fret! We'll be running another one on Saturday, August 13. Registration is open now for this trip, as well as for all of our regular Tuesday/ Thursday night Raft and Roasts and Saturday afternoon 3-hour Scenic Tours. Or, if you prefer a more intimate trip with your family, private tours are also available. Call the Kerry Wood Nature Centre for more information.

Happy Summer, everyone!