Washougal parent Amber Seifert was chaperoning a recent class trip to Bonneville Dam when she overheard one of her daughter Olivia’s middle school peers say to another student, “We could have learned all of this at school.”
“After a few minutes she said, ‘Oh, but then I guess we wouldn’t get to be outside all day,'” Seifert said, smiling at the memory.
It was Thursday, June 6, the second day of the Washougal middle school students’ annual three-day outdoor environmental school hosted by the Friends of the Columbia Gorge and partially funded by a Camas-Washougal Community Chest grant.
The Jemtegaard Middle School students had hiked Hamilton Mountain near North Bonneville the previous day and were preparing for a trip to Beacon Rock Doetsch Day Use Area, about 18 miles east of Washougal in the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, on Friday.
They were exploring a pond near a scientific research center at the Army Corps of Engineers’ Bonneville Lock and Dam when Seifert overhead the youngster’s comments.