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Down on the Farm—How One Camp Grows Its Own
Children and Nature

We talk about it, we sing about, we editorialize about it, some of us even pray for it—the simple joys of childhood mirrored in our connection to the land. Even more difficult to achieve unless you are lucky enough to spend a summer at Gwynn Valley.

Walking the Walk

What would an Outward Bound instructor/career camp counselor and an elementary and high school French teacher have in common? For Anne and Grant Bullard, owners and directors of Gwynn Valley—nearly everything. It's a shared philosophy and a way of living that has found perfect expression in their love of the outdoors and connection to the growth and education of children. That combined with the knowledge and expertise of Dale Robertson, who started the farm at Gwynn Valley, brings a whole new meaning to experiential education. 

Nestled in the hills of North Carolina, Gwynn Valley, with its emphasis on outdoor experiences for primary school children, has adopted a whole foods or "slow food" emphasis, with campers experiencing the life of a working farm, producing their own vegetables for the table, and tending the animals that complete the experience.

It's time to "smell the roses," or better yet walk the fence line at the cattle farm or catch your breath by the stream. Inhale some of those good old-fashioned smells—the ones that animals produce and acres of crops release. Taking time the old-fashioned way speaks to the basic philosophy at Gwynn Valley: the farm speaks a different language to the children—it's about process and flow—taking the time.

Daybreak

It's morning and six-year-old Melissa holds a squirming chick moments after it has hatched in the incubator.  She's feeling the energy of a new life in her carefully cupped hands. Now she'll be able to watch it grow during her summer session at Gwynn Valley. Her chick has a name—Penelope.

The slick fish quivers on the line and ten-year-old Jack gives a slight tug. He's caught dinner—a glistening trout, enough for himself and several of his cabin mates.

"I didn't know it was so hard!" That's the first impression of many campers when it's their turn to milk the cows. Sally, a doe-eyed Holstein, the ultimate Ben and Jerry's cow, stamps and swats her tail patiently as campers get the rhythm of milking and realize it takes slightly more elbow grease than opening a milk carton—plus, it's warm and sweet.  Betsy's milk then works its way to the baby calves and piglets as campers, charged with the bottle feeding of baby animals, bond to the farm pets.

Farm to Table

"What we grow deepens the experience and importance of the connections that we tend to live apart from," says Grant. "As family farmland decreases, fewer children have any idea about how far society has grown away from its roots, and most children today have no idea where any of their food comes from."

Gwynn Valley produces seventy percent of its own food. We raise our own beef, about forty head, and that translates into about two and a half years to table. While we don't emphasize the entire cattle process, the lesson remains that we use what we need. The goats are born every spring and the campers get the joy of bottle feeding them along with the new piglets and calves while watching them grow."

If Pigs Could Fly—Gwynn Valley's Pigs Might Be the First

If it's up to the campers, that is, waking up in the morning can be the best part of the day. Newly born piglets may be waiting for campers to pick one that needs their care to thrive. Each summer with exquisite timing Clarissa, the mama pig, is certain to produce piglets, anywhere from six to twelve perfect, pink, powdery skinned piglets.

"Eat Your Vegetables!"

Parents may be surprised when their children return from Gwynn Valley. That pesky food pyramid has shifted in your favor. The "yuck factor," the all-to-common aversion to leafy or green foods, may change as children take a caretaking role—tending the vegetable garden, waiting for the harvest. Take this a step further and picture the dining hall. The bright green stalks of broccoli rest on each camper's plate. Your eight-year-old is eyeing the plates of fellow campers—will they like it? After all, this child owns that broccoli, watched it grow, listened to what it needed, and proudly measures its performance in the dining room. Somehow life has just gotten very, very sweet.

Tales the Corn Tells

Most packaged corn whether frozen or canned is consumed without a thought as to how it came to the table—the first thing children learn is that corn is giant, and the ears are hidden on the inside. It's not going to be easy. The second thing is campers aren't the only ones who like corn. Worms do, too. But wait, at Gwynn Valley everything is valued, so those worms are harvested before they make pigs out of themselves, so to speak. They become a delicacy for the chickens and a tantalizing lure for the trout at the Grist Mill stream. Another small lesson for the youngest campers in observation and balance in the natural world.

The Pioneer Spirit—Counting for Our Supper

The living history experience is also alive and well at Gwynn Valley. Boys and girls step back in time to early America and touch the pioneer settlers' spirit as they construct the corn husk dolls or make the toys that would be familiar to children in the past. The 1890 Grist Mill provides the camp with its cornmeal, flour, and grits, and a lesson in basic math. Try calculating the amount of corn that will feed the campers at a meal and then you'll be inside the life of Gwynn Valley campers. "The lives of the campers are changed with the turn of the water wheel. They know they are the lucky ones who have found a part of the world that few experience," says Grant.

Far Afield

The camp experience for grades five through eight broadens as campers venture away from the farm and other camp activities to explore mountain biking, whitewater canoeing, rock climbing, and backpacking. Under a skilled staff, the Mountainside program for eleven and twelve-year-olds and Riverside program for thirteen and fourteen-year-olds, incorporates the philosophy and ideals from Gwynn Valley—nothing wasted, all part of a seamless process—as campers discover the hills and hiking trails of the mountains.

Close of Day

The piglets are snuggled against each other, the cows, heads lowing, are munching the last dandelion shoots, and some are lying against the earth. The campers are listening with the lights out . . . the mist blankets the valley, and tomorrow the new chicks will hatch. All is growing marvelously and miraculously—the children, the calves, the corn, the chicks—the richness of life virtually hums.

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