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Choosing rocks for painting.
Students choose rocks for painting activity.
 
Listening to the discussion.
Listening to stories told by Mescalero Apache Ray Olachia.
 
Preparing for a hike.

Dr. Boyd discusses uses of desert plants.
 
All the students and teachers.
Attending students and their teachers from the Little Schoolhouse in Del Rio.
 
Looking at sotol.
Dr. Boyd explains uses of sotol.
 
Painting a rock.
Discovering how art and rocks come together.
 
Visiting a rock schelter
Decending into a canyon to visit a rock shelter.
 
Listening to the discussion.
Students learn about Native American lifeways.
 
Going into the canyon.
Learning survival techniques in the desert.
 
Inside a rock shelter.
Dr. Boyd discusses art on walls of rock shelter.
 

Pecos Day Camp
February 23, 2004


Location
The Pecos Day Camp activities were held on the SHUMLA campus and on the Shumla Ranch, 50 miles west of Del Rio, Texas.

Instructors
SHUMLA instructors included Mescalero Apache, Ray Olachia, artist/archeologist Dr. Carolyn Boyd, and educator Missy Harrington.

Activities
Students from the Little Schoolhouse 2nd, 3rd, 7th, and 8th grades visited Shumla School on Monday, February 23. The 2nd and 3rd grade students began with a storytelling program presented by Ray Olachia, Mescalero Apache. He also discussed Native American lifeways and demonstrated flint knapping, bow and arrow shooting, and atlatl throwing. Following Ray's program, the children were led by Missy Harrington in an art project to illustrate one of the stories they learned from Ray. Then, after a brief discussion on how Indians made paint and what they painted on, the students hunted for small flat rocks to use as painted pebbles—much like the Indians did thousands of years ago. Dr. Boyd had the students paint symbols from the story that meant the most to them. She taught the children how people in the past remembered important information and how they passed that information along to their children. Hikes and making twine bracelets rounded out their day.

The 7th and 8th graders participated in a Human Survival and Adaptation program. Students learned how archeologists study the diet of prehistoric Indians and the experiments they have conducted to replicate the way food was processed. Dr. Boyd taught students about some of the local plants that were used as a medicine and others that are toxic to humans.   Students hiked into the canyon to explore an ancient rock art site and habitation shelter. Ray Olachia talked with the students about the importance of protecting and respecting archeological sites.

Cost
This program was underwritten by a Texas Parks and Wildlife Community Outdoor Outreach Program grant and gifts to SHUMLA from individual donations.

Information
For more information contact the education division at education@shumla.org or call the office at
432-292-4848.

 

 

Youth Programs
Overview & Program Goals
Pecos River Kids Curriculum
Pecos River Kids Adventure Camps
Pecos River Kids Day Camps
Pecos Teacher Training Camps
Field Programs
Shumla Adventures
A Typical Day in Shumla Adventures
Past Programs

Relive the Adventures

 
           
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Tel: 432-292-4848   |   E-mail: info@shumla.org
Updated: June 19, 2008