A nature hike, taro patch service project, campfire talent show, stream exploration and “Green Machine” tour are among the place-based learning and team-building activities designed for middle-school students at Hawai‘i Nature Center’s Ahupua‘a Camp.
The program gives participants “a chance to have hands-on experience in nature while experiencing an overnight camp right in Makiki Valley,” said Pauline Kawamata, operations and volunteer program director at Hawai‘i Nature Center.
AHUPUA‘A CAMP
Presented by the Hawai‘i Nature Center
>> Where: 2131 Makiki Heights Drive
>> When: 8 a.m. Aug. 2 to 4 p.m. Aug. 3
>> Cost: $250; $200 for members
>> Info: 955-0100, ext. 114; hawaiinaturecenter.org
The two-day/one-night camp, open to students in grades 6 to 8, is billed as an “ahupua‘a adventure.” (An ahupuaa is a Hawaiian land division typically stretching from the mountain to the sea.)
Camp starts at Pu‘u ‘Ualaka‘a State Park with an overview of geological, biological and human-caused changes to the islands. As participants look out across the Waikiki ahupuaa, there will be a discussion on sustainable practices of the area.
In the evening, campers will have a pizza party and strive for a zero-waste meal, where everything will be reused, recycled or composted.
The second day includes gardening, a watershed exploration and a tour of the center’s “Green Machine” that recycles wastewater — activities that integrate both traditional and contemporary sustainable practices.
Campers will leave the program with a better understanding of environmental stewardship values and outdoor leadership skills, and ways to practice what they learned on a daily basis.