THF 



NATURE-STUDY REVIEW 



DEVOTED PRIMARILY TO ALL SCIENTIFIC STUDIES OF NATURE IN 



ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS 



Published monthly except June, July and August. Subscription price, including mem- 

 bership in the American Nature Study Society $1.50 per year (nine issues). Canadian post- 

 age 10 cents extra, foreign postage, 20 cents extra. 



Editorial 



Blue mountains, bluer lakes, beautiful forests, dashing streams, 

 squdgy, overgrown swam.ps, rocky heights, — all these formed the 

 environm.ent of the second Nature-lore school for camp council- 

 ors last June. Mrs. Gulick was to have had us at Cam.p Aloha 

 but at the last m.om.ent was obliged to turn us over to her neighbor, 

 Miss Coyle at Cam.p Ke Ora, and no one could have been a more 

 sympathetic, helpful and efficient hostess than she proved to be. 



The pupils who gathered there were the kind that one loves 

 to teach; they were eager, ready for anything, and had a true appre- 

 ciation of the value of nature-study in cam.p life. Many of them 

 had already worked in cam.ps and were keen to get hold of methods 

 that would m.ake nature-lore an integral part of camp life. 



There were lectures in the early m.oming in the recreation 

 hall and a bluebird took this opportunity to dem.onstrate her 

 originality by building her nest in brazen robin fashion on the 

 top of a post of the porch before our very own eyes. The days 

 were given to hikes, each one for a special study of trees, birds, 

 plants and especially of the geology as recorded in the mountains, 

 valleys and cliffs and interpreted by our inspiring leader. At 

 odd m,om.ents we invented tree gam.es, bird games and every 

 other kinds of an out-door game that we could think of; and we 

 had our suppers anywhere in the landscape that we chose and 

 had them, cooked over as m.any different kinds of fires as our 

 cam.p craft leader was m.aster of and that is saying much; and 

 at night we studied the stars and then sought our woodland 

 shacks which were filled with the brooding spirit of slumber. 

 Such restful nights they were, even though once in a while an 

 importimate whip-poor-will took a fancy to serenade us. It 

 was as a whole a most interesting week, helpful and inspiring 

 alike to teachers and pupils. 



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