Showing posts with label Lake Oswego. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lake Oswego. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Summer Nature Day Camp with a Photographic Twist

This year the Friends of Tryon Creek added Nature Photography to their Adventure Camp series. For the first time ever, campers in grades 5 – 7 had the opportunity to spend their week of Nature Day Camp capturing the colors, textures and natural beauty of the park  and nearby environs using digital cameras.

With camp counselors "Fungi" & "Clover" leading the way, Nature Photography campers explored how to use light, composition, landscape photography, and close-ups in an effort to capture unique images. The experience was decidedly positive. As one excited camper reported, “I didn’t know the forest could be so beautiful!”

Over the course of the week campers hiked on numerous park trails and took field trips to Washington Park's Rose Garden and George Rogers Park, among other places. They covered a lot of ground on their expeditions and discovered a variety of flora, fauna and fungi. Snails and slugs were frequent subject material, as were the sweeping trunks of trees towering high above. Campers photographed the occasional bird, bright berries, colorful flowers, and the gnarled bark of some of Tryon Creek’s oldest trees.
At the end of the week, campers selected their favorite photos. We think they are remarkable and are pleased to share them with you:

"I chose my picture because I liked how carefully I had to use zoom, and how it was unique to the other pictures that my fellow campers chose." - Eliana

"I chose this duck picture because it looked best and because it was the only picture of my top five that had an animal in it." - Ethan
"I chose this picture because I like the vivid colors and detailed background. The colors remind me of a sunset and the rose is of a variety that are particularly lovely to me. This picture was taken at the Rose Garden at Washington Park." - Edme

"I chose my landscape picture because I like the relationship between the fern cluster and the logs and the creek. This picture was taken on a bridge over a creek in Tryon Creek State Natural Area." - Lucy

"This is a fern fiddlehead. I didn't expect to see one that was still curled up so late in spring, and it was really cool looking with all the tiny leaves in a spiral shape. The green color was also vibrant against the darker brown forest floor." - Anna
"I chose this photo out of my favorite five because I think it represents my mom. She's bright, blossomed and pretty. I also took the picture because my mom loves the color yellow. I took this photo at the Washington Park Rose Garden." - Selina

"I chose this photo as my favorite because of all the shades of green with the red spores on the fern at the center. It shows the textures of the different leaves and since the leaves overlap you can see through the fern. This picture was taken in the Shakespearean Garden of Washington Park." - Zoe

"I chose this photo because the grey in the stone and the green in the bushes and grass makes everything pop out. Also, it has a creepy graveyard theme with the rock color." - Lindsey

"I chose the picture of the flower because it had a cool spiral thingy on it and it was pink. I took the photo at Washington Park Rose Garden." - Logan
 
Summer Nature Day Camp campers engage directly with the natural world around them. This connection is a key element in cultivating a lifelong relationship with nature and with the Earth. The Friends of Tryon Creek believe that a healthy environment is essential for the wellbeing and sustainability of ecosystems and inhabitants and are pleased to provide opportunities for children, families and adults to connect with the natural world using Tryon Creek State Natural Area as a living classroom. 

For more information on the Friends’ Nature Day Camp Program please visit www.tryonfriends.org.

 

Tuesday, November 20, 2012

A Walk Down Memory Lane at Tryon Creek

Steve Barton at Tryon Creek State Natural Area, November 2012
In 1966, when Steve Barton was in the 8th grade, his family moved from Portland Heights to Lake Oswego’s SW Stampher Road, near the confluence of Tryon Creek and the Willamette River. Barton likens his experience growing up along Tryon Creek to that of young Huckleberry Finn: shortly after moving into the house on Stampher Road he became the proud owner of an old wooden rowboat and spent whole days exploring the creek while his parents were at work. A neighbor boy taught Barton how to tie flies and a budding fly fisherman was born. Fishing became a common theme of his expeditions as Barton caught salmon, steelhead, carp and suckers, and once nearly caught a huge sturgeon. He also came across Tryon Creek’s resident lamprey (one of which tried to wrap itself around his arm on their first encounter!).

Steve Barton loved spending time in the wild. Back in the ‘60’s there was no evidence that an urban population was just a few miles down the road from Tryon Creek: the forest was dense and the well maintained trails that wend through the park today were nowhere to be found.

Barton’s early kinship with nature inspired a lifelong ethic of stewardship in him. To this day he lives in a house whose backyard faces the forest, and owls and deer are common visitors. Barton has imparted that same stewardship ethic – a reverence for nature and desire to protect and preserve it – in his children, both grown.

The Friends thank Steve Barton for sharing his wonderful childhood story and the impression Tryon Creek and the forest made upon him.