Kroka Expeditions Adventure Programs


Item Number: 179

Time Left: CLOSED

Value: $1,250

Online Close: Feb 26, 2013 10:00 PM EST

Bid History: 7 bids








Description

Winning bidder will receive a 50% tuition discount off any program except for the "Adventures with the Orchard School" program from the 2013 Summer Adventure Program offerings for children, aged 9-18 years old.  Prices for programs vary from $950 to $2,500 for a 7 day to a 3 week class. 


This certificate is not valid towards the "Adventures With The Orchard School" or "Writers In The Woods/Summer Inc." sponsored programs and cannot be used in conjunction with other scholarships or barter awards.


About Kroka Expeditions:


Kroka Expeditions is committed to awakening in young people a connection to nature and the spirit within, and a capacity for conscious living and compassionate service. We strive to achieve this through wilderness adventure, community living, farming, and the practice of traditional and indigenous skills.


Our many wilderness adventure summer camp programs offer a variety of skills and experiences for students age 6 to 18 years who come and stay with us for one or two-weeks camps during June, July, or August. While each program is centered around a special activity, such as rock-climbing, canoeing, caving, biking, timber framing, or wild crafts, all programs share a core curriculum that includes living with simplified personal
needs and belongings, putting the needs of the group before those of the individual, and eating locally grown food that is prepared from basic ingredients each day and cooked over an open fire. Students live, work, and adventure together in small groups with several teachers for each group.Kroka Expeditions offers a variety of day and overnight wilderness immersion programs to school groups from all over the United States.


Our methods and curriculum are unique:


The "expedition" is a critical and unique ancient human experience that dates back in history to the earliest nomadic people on the earth, for traveling together outdoors actually creates the experience of "here and now" that can otherwise be elusive in the modern world.


We start by building and tending the sense of community within the group…and class communities that are strengthened by the outdoor elements carry that connection back into indoor classroom life.

Along the way, we talk and tell stories about what we see. Natural history and the environmental science lessons arise form what the children observe and experience firsthand.
Students take on new physical chores and adventure experiences that offer age appropriate physical challenges. We also teach and practice hand craft skills using natural materials from the history of local native peoples.


Gathering, preparing, and eating local food is an essential component of our outdoor curriculum.
We create time and space for the solitary spiritual experience of the mysteries of nature and the outdoor landscape.


We work with students of all ages throughout all seasons of the year.  Our instructors are trained and equipped to teach a diversity of seasonal outdoor adventure skills in any kind of landscape. While most programs begin and end at our base camp in New Hampshire, we also lead expeditions through out the United States, and in South America with our partner Nahual Expeditions of Ecuador."


THE KROKA EXPEDITIONS DIFFERENCE: Immersion, Freedom and Responsibility
At Kroka Expeditions, kids are given a great deal of freedom. In return for that freedom, they are asked to take on a significant amount of responsibility for themselves and their group. They are also asked to be disciplined, work hard and accept our way of life while they are with us. Traveling with Kroka Expeditions is not just an adventure; it is often a life-changing experience. Through the process of learning how to paddle a canoe, climb a bare rock face, or live simply in the woods, Kroka’s teachers also guides students in exploring their inner selves, examining cultural values and discovering different ways of life.








































































































































































































































































AGEGENDERPROGRAM NAMEDATES

LENGTH



STATUS



6 - 8Girls BoysAdventures for Small People6/24 - 6/285 DaysOpen
9 - 11Girls BoysAdventures with Orchard School7/8 - 7/125 DaysOpen
9 - 10Girls BoysChildren of Kroka Village7/21 - 7/277 DaysOpen
10 - 11Girls BoysIntro. to Adventure: Hobbits of Ungava Bay6/30 - 7/67 DaysOpen
10 - 11Girls BoysIntro. to Adventure: Trolls of Penobscot Bay7/28 - 8/37 DaysOpen
10 - 11Girls BoysIntro to Adventure: Goblins of Hudson Bay8/11 - 8/177 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls BoysIn Search of Lost Caverns6/23 - 6/297 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls BoysClimbing Rocks!6/30 - 7/67 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls OnlyWilderness Adventures for Girls - S17/7 - 7/137 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls BoysTreasure Island7/14 - 7/2310 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls BoysLost Tribe of the Ashuelot7/21 - 7/277 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls BoysPirates of Lake Champlain7/28 - 8/37 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls OnlyWilderness Adventures for Girls - S28/11 - 8/177 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls BoysIntro. to Paddling6/23 - 6/297 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls BoysIntroduction to White Water7/7 - 7/137 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls BoysWild Crafts - S16/30 - 7/67 DaysOpen
11 - 13Boys OnlyWild Crafts - S27/14 - 7/207 DaysOpen
11 - 13Girls BoysWild Crafts - S38/4 - 8/107 DaysOpen
13 - 15Girls BoysCaves, Cliffs, and Waterfalls7/14 - 7/2310 DaysOpen
13 - 18Girls BoysCliff Dwellers of the Wild North7/28 - 8/37 DaysOpen
13 - 18Girls BoysClimbers Journey Up North8/4 - 8/1714 DaysOpen
13 - 15Girls BoysFarm Cycle8/4 - 8/1714 DaysOpen
13 - 15Girls OnlyWild Girls8/4 - 8/1714 DaysOpen
13 - 18Girls BoysPaddlers Journey Up North7/14 - 7/2310 DaysOpen
13 - 18Girls BoysCanadian Expedition7/28 - 8/1014 DaysOpen
13 - 15Girls BoysKeepers of the Flame7/7 - 7/137 DaysOpen
15 - 18Girls BoysSalty Survival6/23 - 7/133 WeeksOpen
15 - 18Girls BoysExpedition Pre-Columbus7/21 - 8/314 DaysOpen
16 - 18Girls BoysEquatorial Encounters6/30 - 7/203 WeeksOpen
25+AdultsTeacher Training Program7/1 - 7/66 DaysOpen
25+Adult WomenA Journey for Women7/28 - 8/37 DaysOpen


























































































































































































































 
      
 
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      
      

History of Kroka:


Kroka Expeditions was founded by Misha Golfman and Lynne Boudreau in 1996, as a year round adventure school affiliated with Hilltop Montessori School in Brattleboro, Vermont. The initial emphasis of the program strived to combine elements from the "American Outdoor Tradition" (to which both Lynne and Misha were a part of as an Outward Bound instructors and guides at Mahoosuc Guide Service) and the "Russian Outdoor Tradition" (in which Misha was raised and educated). Other aspect of Kroka came from both partners seeing a need to change both traditional outdoor education (to make it less contrived and more real, and to bring stronger and lasting connection to nature) and traditional environmental education (to make it more engaging, inviting dynamic and real for children).


The actual conception and curriculum of Kroka were the theme of Misha's master's project at Antioch New England Graduate School. Kroka's founding principle was to bring children into nature using the very dynamic modern pursuits of White Water Paddling, Climbing, Caving and Mountaineering. Our curriculum of natural sciences, traditional and indigenous craft skills, arts and music, and the philosophy of simplicity are brought into the experience in measured doses as participants become ready for them. The focus in teaching is always on positive change in the world, special human contributions to the society and wonders of nature, rather then on negative effects of human activity on the environment. Elements of Waldorf Educationwere included in the curriculum starting in 1997 by Lynne, who was teaching at Morning Song Waldorf School at that time.


The summer adventure program grew from its humble beginning of 35 students to be 240 strong, reaching into areas of sustainable small building design and construction, forestry, farming, fiber arts, subsistent hunting and ocean exploration in our hand made giant canoes. Soon, Misha and Lynne were approached by Johanna Gardner, one of Kroka's field staff with an offer to move the operation to her 100-acre Trollhaugen Farm in Newfane, VT.


In 1999, Kroka was approached by the Waldorf School of Baltimore with a request to develop programming for the school. This marked the beginning of second arm of Kroka: Outreach Programs that supplement the Waldorf School curriculum. Each year dozen Waldorf schools from around the country come to Kroka to participate in learning expeditions and wilderness skills programs. Over the past nine years Kroka has developed wilderness skills and adventure curriculum for Waldorf grades 6 - 10, with many programs directly connected to the participating school's themes of study (Geology, Astronomy, Odyssey, etc).


Five years ago Kroka made a decision to become a Waldorf Inspired school. Waldorf teacher training is now an integral part of our staff training along with the study of singing, eurhythmy and other Waldorf inspired art and movement forms. Experienced Waldorf educators join Kroka programs each summer to share their teaching experience and learn how we work with children in the outdoors. In 2006, Lisl Hofer, an experienced Waldorf teacher, joined Kroka as a first ever Semester Programs Coordinator.


From it's beginning Kroka founders and later staff have worked with groups of local youth as an after-school adventure program. Participants of this program have later formed a core of Kroka's advanced paddling, climbing and wilderness team. Those young people also became Kroka's first apprentices laying a foundation of what is to become an apprenticeship program that has one or two year-round apprentices and a dozen seasonal apprentices.


As long time public school educators, Misha and Lynne have witnessed struggles of many bright and talented youth, who are not able to succeed in the confines of the traditional classroom. Misha always recalled his struggles through school, engineering and two teacher colleges, one in Russia and one in the US. Lynne, as a special education teacher observed how some of most difficult students, when taken out of the classroom into active outdoor and home like environments thrived. At Kroka summer programs, students who were identified with ADD and ADHD often performed exceptionally well. At the same time as Kroka was growing, so was Lynne and Misha's family. Through raising four boys, partners further learned of different learning styles and needs. Through years of teaching and guiding they have also observed the continuing decline in "willpower" amongst young people. This is how the idea of practical education was born.


With support from Kroka's youth club members and their parents on one side, and clarity of the needs of youth on the other, Kroka began the development of the Vermont Semester Program, which ran successfully in 2004 for the first time. The ideal of Kroka education is to teach all academic subjects in direct correlation to practical living needs of the students. It is accomplished through running the semester as a continuous extended wilderness expedition by ski and canoe, the kind that will inspire youth with its breadth and sense of adventure and purpose.


Year 2003 brought a new and wonderful direction to Kroka: We began a lasting partnership with Palugo, a sustainable dairy farm near Quito, Ecuador, operated by former Ecuador Minister of Agriculture Francisco Dammer. From that partnership grew the exchange of teachers and apprentices between two entities, summer programs in Ecuador and eventually a Vermont - Ecuador semester program which ran for its first time September - December 2007.


Development of residential semester programs and sustainable construction programs also contributed to the development and stability of our campus village: First there was a garden, then the farm animals, then beautiful indigenous dwellings from around the world. The need for additional farmland and room to grow campus into sustainable village, where students and staff families live and work side by side, as well as our desire to be in close proximity to a Waldorf School prompted the decision to move. In June of 2007 Kroka Expeditions purchased 75 acre Seven Oaks Farm in Marlow, New Hampshire and moved its entire operation in October of the same year with the help of 85 enthusiastic volunteers.


Link is www.kroka.org


 

Special Instructions

PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS IS A FUNDRAISING EVENT AND THERE ARE NO REFUNDS. 


All winning bidders will be charged a transaction fee of 5%, not to exceed $20 per item, to cover a portion of the auction transaction fees.


Standard postage for mailing certificate to be paid by winning bidder.


We thank you for helping with this and supporting the school.

Donated by

Kroka Expeditions