Friday, November 19, will be more relaxed than the previous two educational and intensive days of the National Workshop. We will take behind-the scenes looks at interpretive facilities, heritage resource venues, and other local places to visit with those who know these locations best. There is a fee above regular workshop registration to cover the cost of these optional off-site sessions.
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1. Rafting the Black Canyon of the Colorado River
Share in the history, desert wildlife, and beauty of the Black Canyon of the Colorado River aboard a motor-assisted raft.
Black Canyon is the canyon where Hoover Dam was built and this excursion will provide an extremely rare view of the dam that very few people have the opportunity to see—from the bottom up. The high canyon walls rising nearly 2,000 feet from the river’s edge are massive and impressive.
River guides will steer you through this magnificent geological area. Surrounded by the El Dorado Mountains, which were formed about 15 million years ago, Black Canyon gets its name from the black volcanic rocks that are found throughout the area. If we are fortunate, we may see desert bighorn sheep, ospreys, or great blue herons. We may also see archaeological and mining artifacts from decades past.
We will spend three to three and a half hours on 12 miles of gentle water enjoying the terrain’s variation from sheer cliffs of multicolored rocks to sandy beaches and secluded coves.
Cost: $105
Time: 8:15am–4:00pm
Meals Included: Box Lunch
Travel Time: One Hour Each Way (Two Hours Total)
Accessibility: Travel will be by motorcoach; put-in area will have uneven surfaces.
Suggested Gear: Hat, Sunglasses, Sunscreen, Layered Warm Clothes, Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 55
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2. Wildlife on the Strip: Siegfried & Roy’s Secret Garden and Dolphin Habitat (Half Day)
Right on the Strip is an attraction that defines the wild in Vegas in a whole new way. Join NAI as we go to The Secret Garden and Dolphin Habitat at the Mirage where tigers, lions, leopards, and dolphins enjoy a side of Vegas few get to experience. Siegfried and Roy’s Secret Garden and Dolphin Habitat is an education and research-based facility that hosts thousands of school children each year for educational programs. It also serves as a place of enjoyment and education for hundreds of thousands of visitors each year. Curator of Education Missy Giannantonio will talk to our group about their Ocean Totes, education trunks that teach about our fragile ocean resource and their educational programs offered to K–12 school students.
You will be delighted when we enter the wonderful, secluded, behind-the-scenes world of beautiful wildcats. This attraction displays six different showcases of lions, tigers and leopards.
Whether you come to see the dolphins or some of the rarest white lions in the world, The Secret Garden and Dolphin Habitat may prove to be a workshop highlight.
Cost: $20
Time: 8:30am–12:30pm
Meals Included: None
Travel Time: 30 Minutes [Maximum] Each Way
Accessibility: Our group will be walking the approximate one mile from the Riviera to the Mirage; facilities are accessible.
Suggested Gear: Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 40
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3. Exploring the Mojave Desert: Red Rock Canyon and Spring Mountain Ranch State Park
Red Rock Canyon National Conservation Area (NCA) was the first designated as an NCA managed by the Bureau of Land Management in November 1990.
Red Rock Canyon has lots of geology, history, and natural history to explore. From the basket makers of the Paiute to the cowboys and settlers of the Old Spanish Trail, foundations of a sandstone quarry and archery range, to ranching, its history spans many eras. With 10 plant species indigenous only to Red Rock Canyon, naturalists will thrill to the local bionetwork that includes desert bighorn sheep, mule deer, Mojave green rattlesnakes, and wild burros.
Red Rock Canyon has recently built a new visitor center that is LEED certified and has a large inside gallery, picture window, amphitheater, and many state-of-the-art outside exhibits.
On our visit to Red Rock Canyon we will be talking with the manager as well as partners in the process and development of the new visitor center, meet artist and NAI National Workshop keynote speaker Sharon Schafer, who will have an artistic presentation of the desert life zones.
We will travel from Red Rock Canyon to Spring Mountain Ranch State Park, where we will learn about local history. The many springs in these mountains provided water for Paiute Indians and later brought mountain men and early settlers to the area. This oasis was later developed into a combination working ranch and luxurious retreat by a string of owners who have given the area a long and colorful history.
Cost: $45
Time: 8:45am-4:30pm
Meals Included: Box Lunch
Travel Time: 45 Minutes Each Way
Accessibility: Trails have uneven surfaces.
Suggested Gear: Hat, Sunglasses, Sun Screen, Water, Warm Clothes In Layers, Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 50
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4. Historic Ranching & Current Day Conservation: Walking Box Ranch (Half Day)
This session has been cancelled.
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5. Sandstone and Petroglyphs: Valley of Fire and Lost City Museum
Valley of Fire, Nevada’s largest state park, derives its colorful name from the spectacular multi-shaded red, golden yellow, and orange sandstone formations exposed there. The sandstone cliffs and rocks are part of the Navajo Sandstone Formation that is found throughout southern Nevada and in many areas of the Southwest.
This area was once the bottom of a deep ocean basin that eventually became part of a vast desert that existed about 150 to 180 million years ago. The eerie landscape formed from great shifting sand dunes, complex uplifting and faulting, followed by extensive erosion.
Early humans inhabited the area and left behind petroglyphs dated to over 3,000 years old. Their visits probably involved hunting, food gathering, and religious ceremonies. Fine examples of rock art can be found throughout the park.
We will leave Valley of Fire and head for theLost City Museum, where the story of the long-lived and rich civilization buried beneath the Mojave Desert sand is unearthed in meticulous detail. The artifacts there tell the story of people who for centuries traveled through and lived in southern Nevada. Archaeologist Dena Sedar has worked and studied these pieces of the past and will give us a glimpse of what life was like for the early inhabitants of the hot, dry Mojave Desert.
The museum is located on an actual prehistoric site of Ancestral Puebloan Indians who first populated southern Nevada beginning about 300 B.C. We will have the opportunity to see an excavated pit house and reconstructed Puebloan houses.
Cost: $50
Time: 8:30am–4:00pm
Meals Included: Box Lunch
Travel Time: One Hour Each Way
Accessibility: Trails have uneven surfaces.
Suggested Gear: Hat, Sunglasses, Sun Screen, Water, Warm Clothes In Layers, Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 30
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6. By Land and Water: Lake Mead National Recreation Area
The first and largest national recreation area in the National Park Service, Lake Mead NRA offers breathtaking desert landscapes, water recreation opportunities, and diverse natural and cultural resources. The park’s staff and partners use this setting to provide environmental education programs that teach local children about park issues, history, and life in the Mojave Desert.
Take a walk back in time on the Historic Railroad Trail. This easy, two-mile hike follows the path of trains that brought supplies needed to build Hoover Dam. Now used mostly for relaxation and fitness, the trail is also used in one of the park’s environmental education programs, Hiking Through History. Join an NPS ranger to learn more about the history, workers, and families of the Hoover Dam era.
After our hike, park interpreters will welcome us aboard Forever Earth, a houseboat converted into an aquatic classroom. While the boat cruises through the brilliant blue of Boulder Basin, we will eat lunch and enjoy great views of Lake Mead NRA’s desert mountains. We will also participate in an environmental education lab led by University of Nevada, Las Vegas Public Lands Institute, a partner of the National Park Service, to learn about how Forever Earth helps engage kids about invasive species, water quality, and other park issues.
Cost: $50
Time: 9:00am–4:00pm
Meals Included: Box Lunch
Travel Time: One Hour Each Way (Two Hours Total)
Accessibility: Travel will be by motorcoach; trails have uneven surfaces.
Suggested Gear: Hat, Sunglasses, Sunscreen, Layered Warm Clothes, Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 23
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7. Desert-Mountain Juxtaposition: Desert National Wildlife Refuge and Spring Mountains National Recreation Area
Against the boundaries of a city known for wild living, is the largest national wildlife refuge in the continental US. This vast wildlife refuge, over 1.6 million acres, contains over 6 major mountain ranges rising to an elevation of almost 10,000 feet and the largest intact block of desert bighorn sheep habitat in the Southwest. The area has been utilized by people for thousands of years and has major archaeological and historical significance.
Spring Mountains National Recreation Area provides a forested, spring-fed oasis. The mountains offer a haven for wildlife, a cool retreat for visitors to get away, and a vital watershed that feeds numerous springs. Charleston Peak is the crown jewel of the mountain range. Rising to 11,918 feet, it is the only peak in southern Nevada above timberline and is sacred to the Southern Paiute people.
Our excursion will begin at Corn Creek, an oasis for birds, wildlife and people. Visitor Services Manager, Angelina Yost will give us an overview of the interpretive plans for the refuge. We will explore the trail system with Archaeologist Heidi Roberts and Biologist Laurie Simons and Natural Resources Officer, Amy Nichols, will talk about the challenges of having a National Recreation Area on a sky island.
Kyle Canyon is where a major recreation complex is being developed. There we will learn about the USFS interpretive plan, which forms the foundation upon which a new, state of the art visitor center. We will hear about facilities that will be environmentally, socially, and economically sustainable so they can effectively engage people in enjoying and caring for the Spring Mountains.
Cost: $45
Time 8:00am–5:00pm
Meals Included: Box Lunch
Travel Time: 45 Minutes Each Way
Accessibility: Travel will be by motor coach; trails have uneven surfaces.
Suggested Gear: Hat, Sunglasses, Sun Screen, Water, Warm Clothes In Layers, Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 40
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8. Museums Day: Las Vegas Natural History Museum, Old Mormon Fort State Park, and Nevada State Museum
Join us as we explore various museums in the Las Vegas area.
First we will visit the Las Vegas Natural History Museum, where we will meet Pam Thomas, education director. Pam will take us on a special visit to the Treasures of Egypt Gallery, a museum highlight. Here visitors explore how archeologists unearthed some of Egypt’s most renowned treasures, including the Tomb of Tutankhamun. The exhibit includes artifact recreations of the Golden Throne, chariots, the Golden Shrine, and outer sarcophagus. You will then have time to explore the rest of the museum on your own.
At our next stop, The Old Mormon Fort, interpretive ranger Don Bolton will describe to us how Las Vegas came into existence through faith, hope, determination, and the ability to overcome adversity. Las Vegas, Spanish for “the meadows,” once was an oasis with free-flowing water. In 1855, a group of 29 Mormon missionaries built a small adobe fort near a creek and irrigated their crops. Today Nevada State Parks manages the site and exhibits illustrate each of the different eras in the fort’s history.
Our final stop of the day will be the new location of the Nevada State Museum (pictured above). The museum is so new that it will not be open to the public when we visit, but what a behind-the-scenes story it will tell. We will learn from museum staff how the project went from interpretive plan to completion and what it is like to move a huge collection from one location to another.
Cost: $50
Time: 8:45am–3:30pm
Meals Included: Box Lunch
Travel Time: 30 Minutes Each Way
Accessibility: Indoor facilities fully accessible; trails have uneven, dirt surfaces and may be rocky
Suggested Gear: Hat, Sunglasses, Sun Screen, Water, Warm Clothes In Layers, Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 45
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9. Stories on Stone: Sloan Canyon Petroglyph Site
Sloan Canyon National Conservation Area’s 75 square miles provide peace and solitude for those who visit the unique scenic and geologic features and extraordinary cultural resources. Surroundings vary from lowland dry lake beds to volcanic rock peaks reaching more than 5,000 feet.
The centerpiece of the area, though, is the Sloan Canyon Petroglyph Site, which Archeologists believe has been in use for over 2,000 years. With more than 300 rock art panels and 1,700 individual design elements created by native cultures from the Archaic to historic eras, this is one of the most significant cultural resources in southern Nevada.
The rock art panels are distributed over a distance of about one mile. We will visit this magnificent mile with archeologist Mark Boatwright and NCA manager Robbie McAboy as we explore the theories for the abundance of petroglyphs in this location. Our transportation will be four-wheel drive due to the remoteness of the site, so be prepared for the jostle associated with rough roads. We will also hike a half-mile trail to get to Petroglyph Canyon, where we will see a further concentration of ancient rock art panels.
Cost: $70
Time: 9:00am–2:00pm
Meals Included: Box Lunch
Travel Time: 45 Minutes Each Way
Accessibility: Roads are rough and trails have uneven surfaces.
Suggested Gear: Hat, Sunglasses, Sun Screen, Water, Warm Clothes In Layers, Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 15
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10. The Heart of Las Vegas: The Springs Preserve
Gazing at Las Vegas’s desert landscape, it’s hard to imagine that the area was once home to natural springs and lush meadows. Las Vegas is Spanish, translating to “the meadows.”
The Springs Preserve, a 180-acre cultural and historic attraction, is now on the site of those springs, which dried up in 1962. Their far-reaching mission aims to teach people about Vegas’s past as well as getting them to think about a more sustainable future. The preserve features museums, galleries, outdoor concerts and events, colorful botanical gardens, and an interpretive trail system. Education programs supervisor Aaron Micallef will lead staff from around the preserve to talk to our group about how staff plans programming to meet such an expansive mission.
Education about the past is one key component and we will expand our knowledge at the Origen Experience. We will learn about early inhabitants who made the springs their home and see interactive exhibits that explore the geological history of the Mojave Desert and the formation of the valley and the springs.
We will also learn about the myriad of wildlife that call the desert home with an exhibit of live animals including Gila monsters, lizards, snakes, desert cottontails, spiders, and more.
Education about conservation and preparing for the future is another aspect of the site and that is accomplished in the Desert Living Center. Here we will see how the exhibits and architecture demonstrate the benefits of recycling, conservation, and alternative energy with a behind-the-scenes tour of their LEED Platinum-certified facility.
Cost: $45
Time: 9:15am–3:45pm
Meals Included: Lunch at On-Site Café
Travel Time: 20 Minutes Each Way
Accessibility: Travel will be by motorcoach; trails may have uneven surfaces and are not wheelchair accessible.
Suggested Gear: Hat, Sunglasses, Sunscreen, Layered Warm Clothes, Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 45
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11. 2010 Service Trip: Burrowing Owl Habitat Enhancement, Floyd Lamb Park
Become energized with a wildlife restoration project that enhances the habitat of the western burrowing owl, Athene cunicularia hypugaea, in the heart of urban Las Vegas.
Floyd Lamb Park owned by the city of Las Vegas is located at the north end of the Las Vegas urban area, and these owls are a western bird of conservation concern. Come out to the Mojave Desert, learn about the habitat loss and destruction of burrows due to human disturbance and land conversions. The Nevada Bird Conservation Plan classifies the burrowing owl as a priority bird species and recommends several actions to protect and maintain burrow habitats, including mitigating for loss of owl nest sites by constructing artificial burrows.
We’ll install and create artificial burrows in strategic locations to maximize the number of breeding owl pairs in the park, and add rock features where necessary. We’ll also learn how to monitor nests and take a population inventory using owlet aging charts to age resident pairs. We’ll also work on trail enhancements to complement burrowing owl habitats.
Cost: $45
Time: 8:30am–5:00pm
Meals Included: Box Lunch
Travel Time: 30 Minutes Each Way
Accessibility: Travel will be by motorcoach; trails and work area have uneven surfaces.
Suggested Gear: Hat, Sunglasses, Sun Screen, Water, Warm Clothes In Layers, Sturdy Shoes, Camera
Maximum Number of Participants: 50
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12. Keeping that Cutting Edge: Trainers Sharing with Trainers
Certified Interpretive Trainers: If you’re not going on an off-site session, consider attending this workshop tailored just for you. We are offering this special “inside off-site” on Friday as an experiment, in the hope that it will meet participants’ needs. (In past years we offered a similar session as a pre-workshop, but trainers suggested it might work better as an option during the off-site day).
This workshop provides interpretive trainers a venue for sharing ideas and discussing best practices, methods, and techniques used in the Certified Interpretive Guide course. Communication and sharing information are critical to staying current, expanding your training repertoire, and promoting the profession.
This is the best opportunity for new trainers to garner some of those “tried and true methods” and for more experienced folks to sharpen skills and maintain that fine edge that keeps us at the forefront of our profession. This session is open to all Certified Interpretive Guide instructors and those who have taken CIT training but have not yet finished their certification.
Our three facilitators bring solid experience from diverse backgrounds, having taught CIG for state and federal agencies and zoos, and as a semester-long college course. We plan to demonstrate some of our best practices, and hope participants will bring ideas to share. Expect a fast-paced day of discussion, activities, games, and demonstrations. Take home inspiration, recharged passion, and a CD of interpretive training outlines and lesson plans.
Cost: $25
Time: 8:00am–5:00pm
Meals: On your own.
Instructors: Kelly Farrell (CHI, CIT), Sarah Keating (CHI, CIT), and Patrick Barry (CIG, CIT)
Suggested Gear: Note-Taking Materials, Camera, Comfortable Clothes for Moving Around
Maximum Number of Participants: 30