HIGH MOUNTAIN INSTITUTE where nature & minds meet FALL 2013 What does HMI Mean to You? page 3 Alumni Profile: Honest Food From HMI to La Saison page 12 Our Own Adventures page 14 1 Part of the gift that HMI has given each of us is the permission to take lightly the things we also need to do well. inside this issue ON THE COVER: Semester XXXI, 2nd Expedition, Sawatch Range Above: Sawyer Frisbie, Semester XXXI, 2nd Expedition, Sawatch Range 2 | HMI Fall 2013 3 What Does HMI Mean to You? 5 Alumni Summit Challenge 6 Visiting Teacher Exchange 8 Family Fun Nights at HMI 10 Coffee in the Backcountry 12 Honest Food: From HMI to La Saison 14 Our Own Adventures 16 18 20 22 Phases of the Moon Shaping a Sacred Space HMI 15-Year Anniversary Alumni News What Does HMI Mean to You? By Danny O'Brien, Acting Head of School I am glad to be home at the High Mountain Institute. Current students often ask me about my favorite memories from my first stint on County Road 5A. I have lots of them, of course. I don’t think I’ve yet mentioned, for example, the large bull that visited our tarp on BLM land in RMS XIV. I haven’t told students about the Upper School Director who asked me what had happened to his student who had recently returned from a Semester in Leadville. This principal couldn’t believe that the quiet and timid adolescent who he had sent to HMI was now making powerful announcements in all-school assemblies and receiving praise from classroom teachers for his participation. As I tell our current students about HMI’s past, I find myself eagerly awaiting the opportunity to boast about Semester XXXI’s exploits sometime in the future. The stories that HMI students eagerly devour help link the chain of HMI’s history. Even if students from different Semesters never meet, these tales bond those who occupy the same cabins and classrooms. Our spectacular Anniversary in June did my anecdotes one better— I connected with students and faculty that made up Semesters before my arrival in 2004 and during my time away. I learned over the weekend how sad I am I did not get to know these people at HMI (I am working on that now—please come to one of our alumni reunions this year!). However, I also felt part of a kinship that extends beyond one Semester or point in time. At the reunion, I was honored to speak about what being a lifelong part of the HMI community meant to me. The most gratifying part of the experience was the reception the talk received: many of the 360 alumni and friends who attended the reunion told me later that they feel similarly about their experiences at HMI. I’ve included excerpts of the speech so you can read what I think it means to be a graduate of the High Mountain Institute. It’s an attempt to lay out what we all share in common. But I’d like to hear what you think too—please email me (dobrien@ hminet.org) with your understanding of what it means to be part of the HMI community. I’d love to hear from you. We’ll publish your responses in our next newsletter. Now, here are my words, taken from my contribution to HMI’s June Anniversary: …continued on page 4 The stories that HMI students eagerly devour help link the chain of HMI’s history. Even if students from different Semesters never meet, these tales bond those who occupy the same cabins and classrooms. 3 …continued from page 3 Leading expeditions while working for HMI is some of the most stressful work I have ever done. Even for a confirmed extrovert like me, two weeks of analyst/architecting, spontaneously motivating, relationship mastering, and driving was exhausting. On top of this, I had to remember to stay warm and dry, bomb proof, navigate by squiggly lines, be on time, not burn bagels, and to give feedback in the SBI format. When I was promoting HMI to prospective students around the country, I used to promise applicants that they would learn more than they thought possible while at HMI—but that they would also laugh so hard that they would forget they were learning. The best part of that line was how true it was. When I think about our trip to Jacob’s Chair in RMS XIV, I remember playing hours of Animal Kingdom (and finally, finally—on the last night of the When you step back a minute an entire Semester looked an awful lot like an expedition. I could go on forever, of course. I’d stop whatever I was doing to watch Dave Lembke summit something new in RMS XVII. I’d make students drop again and again into the same slot canyon so Michael Gregory could get his perfect movie sequence in RMS XXII. I’d admire Sam Critchlow and Karl Remsen for making math fun with potato guns and solar cookers, and I’d be amazed once again by how convincingly Matt Turnbull could turn himself into a Pilgrim to teach about the American colonies. On expeditions, we taught the concept of “expedition behavior,” known as “EB” for short. You exhibit ideal EB when your actions promote the strength and success of the community. You can imagine this is a pretty transferable skill. In fact, I remember explaining to students that they had to know this about EB: “EB isn’t just about the way to act on an expedition. EB is life.” On expeditions, I often shared a reading with students. Part of it goes like this: And it wasn’t just expeditions. When you step back a minute an entire Semester looked an awful lot like an expedition. Life could be consumed by AMX, cook crews, activities, community meetings, and drives to Dr. Lisa’s office. Add the fact that I had to teach three history classes—there wasn’t much time in the days for anything else but HMI. trip—getting to be the lion for a few glorious minutes) more than I think about the stress of three days of drenching rain. But it was also so much fun—and I would do it all again in a heartbeat. We got to laugh, to celebrate, and to honor each other for stretching ourselves and for jobs well done. would accidently tumble into the moat on their way to that night’s circle? And who was I not to laugh at it? 4 | HMI Fall 2013 And while I haven’t forgotten my frozen feet on the winter expeditions in RMS XIV and XVI, I also remember the moat I built around my quinzee to stay warm and how I forgot to warn kids about it. Who knew that each of my students If I had my life to live over, I would try to make more mistakes. I would relax. I would be sillier than I have been this trip. I know of very few things that I would take seriously. I would be less hygienic. I would go more places. I would eat more ice cream and less beans. Part of the gift that HMI has given each of us is the permission to take lightly the things we also need to do well. Remember, we have to keep up our EB, so no shortcuts. But we also can brush our teeth and eat our beans while being as silly as we want to be. I feel this is a lesson most out there never learn, and it makes us HMI’ers better friends, partners, spouses, parents, and contributors to the communities we choose. Alumni Summit Challenge “Your Semester, Every Semester” The 2013 Alumni Summit Challenge is officially underway! Your participation in this year’s challenge is a great way to honor your Semester or Summer Term, your classmates, and your time at HMI. It is also your chance to support HMI, and every Semester or Summer Term to come. We hope you will join us again as we celebrate the magic of HMI’s first 15 years, and help ensure the future of the next 15! To participate in the Challenge, please visit hminet.org/giving/webforms/donate! 5 Visiting Teacher Exchange By Ben Dougherty, Assistant Head of School H MI piloted our visiting teacher exchange last spring when Jessica Watkin, Master Mathematics educator from Miss Porter’s School in Connecticut, spent three days at HMI working closely with our math department. She and our two math teachers reviewed curriculum design, engaged in discussions of pedagogy and best practices in math education, and she observed classes and provided feedback while also engaging fully in the HMI student experience during her stay. After her experience, Ms. Watkin reflected: In the three days I spent at HMI, I was awed by the beauty of the environment, moved by the simplicity of the daily In my role at HMI, I have the opportunity to travel to different parts of the country and visit our sending schools as I join the admissions team in our effort to tell more students and families about HMI. I get to visit lots of schools and meet dedicated and talented faculty and staff. Each school has its own culture and its own pulse. As I enter my fourth year here, I have been thinking increasingly about how we can partner with our sending schools to better support our students and to enhance and broaden a professional learning community that transcends the walls routine and the students' loyalty to the program, and impressed with what I saw in the math classrooms. What a of any one school. Building even more collaborative partnerships with schools and educators from around the country ] Building even more collaborative partnerships with schools and educators from around the country from our varied sending schools will benefit our students, our faculty and our schools. treat as an educator to spend three days watching other educators practice our craft, to engage in conversations about the teaching and learning of mathematics, and to eat plenty of good food! I flew home to Connecticut with many things to think about and many ideas to enrich my own teaching. I also found myself in an unexpected role to my girls who have returned from HMI forever changed and who are 6 | HMI Fall 2013 desperate for someone to listen and nod and understand a bit about the place they love so much. from our varied sending schools benefits our students, our faculty and our schools. ] I hope to coordinate more opportunities for HMI faculty to visit our sending schools, to observe classes and school culture, to meet with departments to discuss curriculum and educational theory, and to engage in the school communities intimately. Similarly, I would like to invite more master teachers from our sending schools, particularly in the subject areas of math, science, English, history, ethics and Spanish, to visit HMI and to work alongside our teachers on curriculum development, classroom observation, discussions of pedagogy and best practices, and to observe HMI and the student experience. In addition to the practical professional development opportunity afforded to both our faculty and those of our sending schools by developing such a partnership, the first-hand experience and awareness of what students experience both at HMI and in their sending schools is invaluable in creating advocates to support our students and alumni with transitions to and from HMI. The High Mountain Institute attracts talented and ambitious educators who invest themselves in developing innovative and rigorous curriculum and pedagogy while also fully embracing all three legs of the HMI stool— academics, wilderness, and a small, intentional community. These gifted educators are often early career teachers and due to the small size of our school, most work independently within their discipline and therefore have no department to co-develop their curriculum and their craft beside. The opportunity to develop a network of peer educators, to share their passions and experiences and to learn from and beside master educators inspires and challenges all participants. If you would like to discuss this opportunity further please contact me at bdougherty@hminet.org. Excellent educators are always hungry for constructive, honest feedback that will inform their teaching… but it is such a challenge in busy schools to carve out from the daily routine the right amount of time and the right kind of structure to make that happen. That leaves beginning teachers starved for feedback and mid-career teachers left without the opportunity to hone their skills of observation and critique. By establishing this program in March, HMI has found a way to enrich the learning opportunities for their faculty as well as their students, to deepen their partnerships with sending schools, and to share the unique culture and community of HMI with other educators from around the country. —Jessica Watkin, Mathmatics Faculty, Miss Porter's School 7 n u F > Family Nights at HMI By Carrie Mallozzi, Apprentice Program Coordinator I n the past few years there have been several new faces in the HMI community. I am not referring to the new students that arrive every August and January each Semester or the 20 plus Summer Term students or even the new faculty and apprentice faces. I am instead speaking of the babies and now young children that have become part of the fabric of HMI. Many alumni will remember Jack and Porter Barnes gracing the halls and woods of HMI and delivering treats to students on project day. For most of HMI’s history they were the only faculty and staff children until the arrival of Annie McFee in 2008 (daughter of former staff and now HMI Trustee, Kate Bartlett). Since then, eight more young ones have been added to the ranks ranging from 13 months to five years with another arrival expected by the time this newsletter comes out. HMI students have always loved having dogs on campus (Zuby, Elphie, Siena) and now they have the chance to interact with children as well. Some students have much younger siblings, babysit, or live on campuses where faculty children abound. You can tell immediately how much our students adore young children by the swarm surrounding our young visitors before they can get through the front door of the Barnes Building. Several families have decided to capitalize on this love and attention by attending meals on campus and weekend events. Walk into the climbing hall on a Tuesday night at 5:30 and you can usually find 4-6 kids romping on the climbing mats with a dozen students before dinner. During dinner you’ll see high chairs, and teenagers helping toddlers to eat all of their dinner. 8 | HMI Fall 2013 ved HMI students have always lo y, having dogs on campus (Zub have Elphie, Siena) and now they the chance to interact with children as well. These family dinners bring a sense of community that goes beyond the classroom and field and allows students to learn more about the lives of faculty and staff, and the adults and families that influence their lives while at HMI. It also provides a valuable experience for our children to interact with teenagers and see where their moms or dads spend their days. Recently I took my daughter Hattie on the train with the “big kids” and not only did she adore all the attention, the students were equally excited to interact with a two and a half year old. She now insists that we drive by the train on the way home from day care every day and points out the bumpy tracks, the red train, and says, “Momma, I rode train with big kids.” As HMI grows older so too will the children of the faculty and staff. It is unlikely that many of us will still be living and working at HMI when our children are old enough to attend, but I sincerely hope that Hattie and her soon-to-be little brother have the opportunity to understand this place that has been so special to both their mother and father (Cooper Mallozzi, former faculty RMS XI-XX). In addition to the nine current faculty and staff children, there are and will continue to be alumni children added to the HMI community. We may be more than 10 years away from having the first faculty/staff or legacy child attend HMI (or 5 years if Porter Barnes decides to attend) and there may be many changes to the school in that time (more cabins, new technology, different faces), but I have no doubt that the mission and values of HMI will continue to create meaningful experiences for kids of every age. 9 Coffee in the Backcountry By Justin Talbot, Director of Wilderness Programs & Risk Management H ot drinks are a staple of HMI backcountry living and for many instructors (and some students) making and drinking coffee is the pinnacle of the hot drink experience. On expeditions coffee is almost always sipped from the ubiquitous HMI 16 ounce “baby Nalgene” which fits easily into a jacket pocket to warm the drinker’s hands as it cools to a drinkable temperature. Many instructors get very attached to the ritual of making coffee and have perfected their coffee making systems over the course of weeks spent in the backcountry. Just remember, coffee is light so don’t skimp when calculating the amount you are going to bring on your trip. Chances are that your friends who say they won’t want any coffee will change their mind when they see how happy you are. They’ll want “just half a cup,” so figure out how much coffee you want to bring and then double it. Next thing you know your friends will want coffee every morning---but that’s perfect, you’ve got extra! Here are a few of the favorite methods for making this simple yet rewarding backcountry treat. French Press The one liter French press is an instructor favorite. The field version of the French press is typically plastic and weighs about half a pound. It can fill up two hearty coffee drinkers and is easy to clean (unless you let the grounds sit and freeze). Some people like to use an insulated mug/French press system, with the most popular made by Big Sky Bistro. Insulated French presses are a great option for winter trips where you can simply add the heavy press to your sled. Cowboy Coffee When choosing how to grind your coffee, choose the finest setting on the grinding machine. Add a few tablespoons to a mug or small water bottle, pour in some hot water and let sit for ten minutes so that the grounds can settle in the bottom of your vessel. This method takes some patience, as drinking too early will lead to a mouthful of coffee grounds. Cowboy coffee is one of the best lightweight and inexpensive options, since you don’t need to carry anything more than coffee! Coffee Sock Christopher Barnes’s preferred coffee brewing method in the backcountry. He has literally made hundreds of gallons of coffee for himself and his co-instructors using a coffee sock. Many instructors have received a piping hot Nalgene of coffee from Christopher before getting out of their sleeping bag. The coffee sock is a simple porous fabric bag that you put about a quarter cup of coffee in and pour hot water through. Google “coffee sock” for more information and places to buy one. Starbucks Via Simple, but expensive. Via is a blend of dried coffee concentrate and super fine coffee grounds which results in a powder mixture that easily dissolves in hot water. One serving is good for eight ounces, so if you want the typical 16 ounces serving bring two packets per day. Via is one of the best Leave No Trace options for coffee drinkers as you don’t need to pack out grounds or find an appropriate place to disperse them. Via is also the most popular winter option for HMI instructors. Coldbrew Concentrate For shorter trips coldbrew coffee concentrate is a good option. To make the concentrate let a pound of coffee sit in about two liters of cold water for 24 hours. The resulting liquid is then passed through a dense filter leaving a coffee concentrate. A third of a cup of the liquid concentrate mixed with a mug of boiling water makes a perfect cup of coffee. The concentrate can be stored in an extra water bottle for use during your camping trip or frozen into cubes for easy use in the winter. Life in the backcountry is structured by numerous yet deliberate systems which bring us order and efficiency while we’re away from home. No matter which method you choose, making coffee in the backcountry is one of these systems that merges front-country life with backcountry life and brings comfort and style to our time in the field. HMI Faculty & Staff share their delivery system of choice and why drinking coffee in the backcountry is so great Ben Was Press, now Cowboy (getting tougher) It’s all about camping in style! LibbeyCowboy Drinking coffee is a great time to be social and solve the worlds problems. Peter Cowboy / Insulated Press in the winter Life is good, why not make it better? TomVia A great way to jumpstart the day. Cam Instant Coffee I’m not picky. WhitneyCowboy How could you not love coffee? Eliza O Via It makes me a better wilderness instructor. Laura French Press Warm, delicious, a good morning ritual. JustinCowboy Good views and good coffee, perfect! Rob Coffee Sock Wakes me up for another day of work in the mountains. 11 d o o F t s e n o H From HMI to La Saison By Natalie Felice Niksa, RMS IV 12 | HMI Fall 2013 HMI’s program is balanced. No matter what style of learning one requires, HMI’s curriculum offers a hands-on approach which encourages students to grow and be engaged—whether it is in the classroom, the backcountry, or life on campus. I found my niche in the kitchen at HMI, both crafting meals on campus for the whole community and with my tarp group during expeditions. Although the ‘menus’ we created in the backcountry never tasted quite as good on campus, the excitement, shared enjoyment, and overall happiness received through cooking and sharing food sparked a passion that I followed. In 2001, one year after my HMI experience, I attended The Culinary Institute of America (CIA) in Hyde Park, New York. My journey at the CIA included 36 months of immersing my hands, heart, and senses into a craft established by culture, land, { and the ability to express and share a simple natural pleasure needed by all—honest food! HMI's challenges helped me realize my passion for cooking. The curriculum, terrain, and weather all required strong will, daily effort, and an attitude that could not accept defeat. At HMI, I learned the value of working with a team. Whether it was making brownies without butter, eggs, or an oven, or sharing that last morsel of a yogurt covered pretzel, I discovered that food feeds our spirits, uplifts our attitudes, and communicates without words during the most triumphant and fragile of times. No matter how difficult the day—whether it was cold hands, tired feet, or sunburnt lips—the nourishment received from food and the communion of sharing meals together united us as a team, ultimately pushing us to reach the next base camp. My husband and I started our company, La Saison, a specialty foods and custom events group based in Napa Valley, California in 2007. Feeding people is our life. Although it is difficult to slow down in an industry that constantly demands the new trend, it is necessary so that I don't forget where I have been, what I have accomplished and who I have helped along the way. I thank HMI for introducing me to a new platform for success, and helping me find my place in this vast world of possibility. At HMI, I learned the value of working with a team. Whether it was making brownies without butter, eggs, or an oven, or sharing that last morsel of a yogurt covered pretzel, I discovered that food feeds our spirits, uplifts our attitudes, and communicates without words during the most triumphant and fragile of times. { I remember a distinct moment while in Leadville, Colorado where time stopped. The snow was falling, and I was in Who’s Hall printing my final paper for History. The moment was still, beautiful, and full. Something happened in this moment—I felt accomplished. While printing my final paper, I reflected on my moments of endured challenges, tiredness, and the emotions of fulfillment, all experienced within the last four months. At times, I felt nothing existed except the present moment. 13 Our Own Adventures By Matt Turnbull, History Faculty errands with the non-existent air conditioning in Ryan's weathered Subaru. The 95-degree heat of a hard western summer foreshadowed a potentially arduous road trip beneath determined suns. To make matters worse, the passenger-side window only descended via the driver-side control, which resulted in frequent requests to "Lower! Lower!" when gaseous emissions of the human variety mandated a little extra airflow. I reminded myself that we do not do the best things because they are easy and a little suffering is good for the spirit. A lthough I like to claim I work throughout the year (reading history books, writing college letters, etc.), one of the perks of teaching is that there really is a lot of time for adventuring to be done in June and July. This past summer I embarked on a canoe trip with Ryan Johnson, an old college friend and 2011 Summer Term Science Faculty. We ventured north to Canada for an eight-day paddling trip that culminated in Great Slave Lake, the fifth largest and number one deepest freshwater lake in North America. After sporadically planning the trip since January, we reveled in the perpetual dusk of July nights at the 62nd parallel. We left Spokane, Washington following two days of sweating through 14 | HMI Fall 2013 We could have chosen a variety of closer waters and spent less time in the car, but the isolation of the chain of lakes that would carry us to the immensity of Slave Lake tugged us far north. The road trip, it turned out, was excellent. Slate gray skies moderated temperatures across the beautifully sweeping landscape. We traversed the Rocky Mountains in Alberta and flew past hours of golden canola fields. Farther on, the blooming plants ceded to the scrubby aspens, birch, and evergreens of the taiga forest in the Northwest Territories. Two and a half days of determined driving brought us to Yellowknife, the capital of the Northwest Territories on the north arm of Slave Lake. We caught a ride up the Ingraham Trail, literally the end of the summer road, and dipped our paddles in Tibbit Lake. We meandered through pristine waters in a flattened, stubby landscape, eerily barren from a recent fire. The burned out trees belied traditional notions of scenic beauty, but provided fine homes for wildlife; within an hour we spotted a moose and her calf on the shore. Later from camp we watched two bald eagles patrol the skies above their massive nest, which was perched like a turret on the highest gnarled tree in the neighborhood. An assortment of terns, gulls, eagles, hawks, and loons kept us company in the marked dearth of human companions. Disembarking at a small island for lunch, we got up close and personal with a loon when she exploded from the water next to our canoe. We had inadvertently sidled up to a nest and the bird was none too happy. Her chick, plumy and brown with youth, skittered across the rock to seek shelter, while the mother chortled maniacally, beat her wings at full breadth, and thrust her snowy chest out of the water. Her agitation was profound and provoked our hasty retreat. We clambered back into the canoe and shoved off, less intimidated than impressed by the vigor of the loon's defense. After a last glance into her blood red eyes, we paddled on. More numerous and less haunting than the loons, the gulls and terns exhibited a no less persistent paranoia of intruders, dive-bombing the canoe when we neared their rocky roosts. Though they inevitably pulled up before colliding with our heads, my ds, the If you are going to the beach, the woo it, roll swamps, or the wilderness, really get into will in it, and get rid of all the protection that re you separate you from fully appreciating whe d, and are. Become alive, not removed and insulate teach your children to do the same. Survival for Children — Tom Brown, Field Guide to Nature and great fear was that, as I craned my neck to admire the magnificence of natural flight, a winged trooper would lighten its load and land a well-directed fecal attack. The threats of thrashing loons and screeching gulls paled in comparison to the specter of desanguination by the squadrons of mosquitos that hounded us on swampy portage trails. Clad in rain jackets and head nets, we trudged gear and boat through dense forests a few times each day. The arched cave of the canoe on our shoulders became a sauna that left us drenched beneath our bug armor. We became necessarily efficient at reaching shore, strapping buckets and dry bags into the boat, and paddling vigorously into windy open water to shed interloping mosquitos from our backs. Cheap rubber boots proved to be our most valuable gear. They kept us steady on slippery rocks and defended us against the muck of the swampy portage trails. Inevitably, though, the muck won out and we became mired in knee- high sinkholes as brown, chunky liquid spilled over the tops of the boots and submerged our feet. The muck was dark, thick, and meaty—the tangible embrace of the earth on our bodies. Mosquitos buzzed, feet squelched, sweat rolled, and muscles ached. It felt wonderful. The calm blue waters and soaring eagles were magnificent and I took note of their beauty, but it was being run off by loons and gulls and in the muckiest, sweatiest, most bug-infested moments, with gravity pressing the canoe into my shoulders and the mud sinking beneath my feet that made me feel most integrated into the environment. This, I think, is one of the ways to truly feel a connection to a place. It is liberating to abandon civilian anxieties about comfort and cleanliness and immerse oneself in a landscape. In being driven off by pure animal instincts and embracing the muck and the mire of the land we allow ourselves to move toward more meaningful experiences. We commit to becoming subjects of our interactions with nature, senses open to the touches, smells, and sounds of a place, rather than objects moving across space, gazing through a screen at detached panoramic images. After a certain number of HMI trips, it can be easy to lose that sense of immersion. The wilderness can instead become a workplace and the landscape a setting for class. Great Slave Lake took me out of that routine and allowed me to experience the process of knowing a place in ways I do not often relish in as an instructor. Immersing myself into a new landscape, disconnected from the checks, plusses, and deltas that command my attention during HMI expeditions, reminded me of the joy of the adventure. In turn, it refreshed my focus on helping students shed the insulation of daily life in order to more fully appreciate the places through which we travel: the personal and professional satisfactorily integrated. Maybe I can consider my northern adventure a bit of "work" after all. Phases of the Moon By Peter Kernan, Mathematics Faculty 16 | HMI Fall 2013 S emester XXXI started with a full moon. For most, this was an auspicious and warm welcome to Colorado. The Semester has since experienced a second full moon on a brisk Thursday night— a radiant glowing orb in a clear night sky. Two more full moons will rise before this group of students departs HMI. Each moon cycle is a reminder of passing time and one of the many tools that help us reground and focus during our busy Semester. Recently, the students played a full mooninspired game of capture the flag around 8:15 pm, two days after the full moon, still with enough lingering light to illuminate the darkness. Students were hooting and hollering after a long week of academics and were mostly occupied with expending their reservoirs of physical energy. Their energy and enthusiasm demonstrated a true testament to the wildness and connection to nature one feels when experiencing a full moon, especially at 10,000 feet. After the game around 8:45 several students paused before re-entering the artificially brightened spaces that become our existence postsundown. We watched in awe as an orangered, mostly illuminated moon bridged the gap between horizon and sky. "I think moonrises are my favorite!" said Jennie Yoors. "Wow, that just made my week!" agreed Caroline Grip. with the question on hand is hard to shake. One of the things I appreciate most about our students and their relationship to the moon is summarized simply: They are observant and they are curious! "Why haven't we seen the moon all expedition?" Sleeping under the stars, our students begin to notice natural cycles. Why is the night time on this expedition so much darker than the first? Students ask questions and are struck by the complexity of the natural world. Experiences like this are a trigger for larger questions, and a deeper consideration for many aspects of our world that we take for granted. "How do you know when the moon is going to rise?" "I thought the moon was only visible at night! Why can I see the moon during the day?" Sometimes it might take an the initial hook to capture a student's interest, such as pointing out an observation that tests their understanding, but soon they are perplexed, attempting to resolve dozens of questions about the moon's phases and how it can impact the lives we lead. Although the places we most often inhabit occlude our senses from the cycle of this natural phenomena, the moon does have an impact on our lives. At HMI we are fortunate to Each moon cycle is a reminder of passing time and one of the many tools that help us reground and focus during our busy Semester. A lesson I learned from a math education guru, Dan Meyer, this past summer is that while teaching he strives to achieve three things surrounding perplexity. He wants himself and others to capture perplexity, share perplexity, and eventually resolve that perplexity. Engagement arises from perplexity and once students have captured interest in an idea or concept, engagement spend so much time under the night sky, whether out in the wilderness or simply walking to the cabins at night. I hope that when our students return home, as they do now, they will continue to settle into bed and inquire about the perplexity of the natural world, aiming to unravel mysteries and ask questions of that which is right in front of them. 17 Shaping a sacred space By Rob Backlund, Science Faculty What makes a building more than just a manufactured space? What experiences need to occur to turn a physical space into something more with meaning and memories? How does a building transform from being just a building and into a sacred space? ince coming to HMI I have pondered these questions. Where, among the nine buildings that dot the Lodgepole Pine forest, would I find a sacred space that would become something more than just infrastructure? The answer came much more quickly than I anticipated, at the start of my first semester (Semester XXVII). The reason for this, I now realize, stems back to experiences that have shaped my sense and understanding of a sacred space. S “He lives in a yurk,” I hear my mother state to a friend over the phone. I instantly assume that whomever she is talking to, has never heard of a “yurk”. “Yes, a yurk in Kelly, Wyoming. It is a glorified round-house,” she explains to her friend who asks for a “yurk” description and location. The phone conversation ends. I feel obliged to tell my mother that my home is not a “yurk” but a yurt. I have come to realize that a space is sacred not only by shape, but more importantly by the summation of experiences within it. “Oh, a yurt,” she replies. “Yurk, yurt, what’s the difference?” I internally grumble that there is a huge difference, but say nothing. My yurt in Kelly is a space where I have great memories. The anecdote provided by my mother, however, is an example of the difficulty that occurs when one tries to describe their sacred space to others, especially when it is essentially defined by a shape; a circle. Prior to becoming a faculty member at HMI, I lived in a canvas yurt, 20 feet in diameter, in Kelly, Wyoming. This yurt sits on the edge of the Gros Ventre River, near the base of the Teton Mountain Range. Yes, it is a round building, but more importantly it is one of the most special spaces in my life. A yurt, rondavel, and ger are a short list of the different names for round structures inhabited by humans dotting the globe. These round, semipermanent structures originate in Central Asia and their history dates back more than 3,000 years. Round structures eliminate the terms house and corner, and in my opinion instantly become home. The walls of a yurt are at most an inch thick. They are usually supported by a latticework of wood that responds to any and all blowing wind. The roof can sound like a roll on a snare drum when rain falls. One can 18 | HMI Fall 2013 In Semester XXV the yurt was replaced by the beautiful octagonal Stuen Hall, and it is this space on campus that I now consider sacred. look through the glass dome at the apex of the roof, and track the path of the sun, the moon, and the night sky. The temperatures of the seasons are not masked by this humble structure allowing one to live with the phenology of the seasons. Prior to Semester XXV, the answer to my earlier questions about the buildings of HMI may have been more immediately evident, as a more authentic yurt stood on campus. Many remember the old HMI yurt, where apprentices once lived, and many a circle was held with the school community. However, as the HMI community grew, the students, faculty and staff could not all fit into the yurt comfortably for a meeting or circle. In Semester XXVII the yurt was replaced by the beautiful octagonal Stuen Hall, and it is this space on campus that I now consider sacred. Even though it is structurally different in size, shape, and materials from a yurt, I have come to realize that a space is sacred not only by shape, but more importantly by the summation of experiences within it. Semesters now begin and end in Stuen Hall, as they once did in the HMI yurt, and in common between the two buildings is the shape of the first experience that any and all new to HMI will have in it; circle. Circle is a time for students and faculty members alike to express their thoughts, emotions, and stories. It is a time for reflection, contemplation, and listening. The bonds created through listening and speaking at circle help to create each strong, unique HMI community. What makes the old HMI yurt, Stuen Hall, and my own yurt so special, is that the simple structure allows for simple reflection. In an HMI community meeting, everyone can see each other as we all sit in a large circle together. Similarly, in my own yurt back in Kelly, Wyoming, my life and space is contained within one simple circle, and I can comfortably enjoy the whole space at once. Ultimately, it is the sum total of experiences in a place which defines its importance and gives it meaning. This is how I came to know the circle as sacred, and how I have learned to recognize and cultivate the sacred as I move through my life. 19 HMI 15-Year Anniversary Thank You for Joining Us! O n June 7-9, 2013, the High Mountain Institute celebrated its 15-Year Anniversary and bid farewell to our founders, Christopher and Molly Barnes. Over the weekend, we welcomed back more than 225 alumni, 40 former faculty and apprentices, as well as dozens of other family members and friends of the school. From start to finish, the campus was alive with nostalgia for the past and excitement for the future. The weekend began in HMI tradition with a bonfire on Friday night, Saturday was filled with activities including summit attempts, fly-fishing, a fun run, and walks down Harrison Avenue in Leadville. Everyone reconnected in the late afternoon for a square dance, barbeque, and music. 20 From start to finish, the campus was alive with nostalgia for the past and excitement for the future. Whether alumni were returning to Leadville for the first time in 10 years or had stayed since the end of Semester XXX, everyone came back to find the spirit of the HMI community stronger than ever. Only now, this community has grown. As Terrence Word (RMS XVI) remarked at the bonfire, “Now we are all alumni from the same Semester.” Thank you to all of our guests and well-wishers for such an inspirational weekend. We look forward to sharing the next 15 years with you! 21 alumni news FALL 2013 RMS I Hello again, RMS 1! Back in June, a handful of us had a grand ol’ time representing the Old Geezer Crew at the HMI 15-Year Anniversary. It was entertaining to be lumped in with the most recent RMS alumni (some of whom are precisely half our age) and to wander around campus, gaping at the changes since we were students (electricity in the cabins, student bathrooms, a climbing wall). Overall takeaway was how lucky we were to be part of such a grand adventure! The crew there was Leah Chubb-Silverman, who still lives in Portland and somehow has the exact same looks and dry sense of humor that she had at 16, and had photos to show off her adorable son, Teddy; Matt Walker, who lives with his wife in New York and makes documentaries, and who also has acquired both glasses and an I’m-a-grown-man look of wisdom about him at some point in the last decade; Eli (Liz) Robinson, who is, if anything, even more herself – tiny and quirky and hilariously upfront – than ever, and who brought her partner (Callie) from their home in Texas; Jessica Parker, who landed a pretty fabulous gig making custom ceramic growlers (in addition to raising her two kiddos); Christina Davis, who gets the prize for coming the furthest for the Anniversary, having basically ended her stint guiding adventures in Africa for the event, and flew back to life in the states a mere 72 hours before rolling into Leadville; and yours truly, Alexa “Bo” Holleran, who spent the summer farming and potting before launching onto the midwifery track with an expedited Nurse Practitioner program at the University of Vermont. My wife, Brenda, also came along, and whole-heartedly approved of the crew; the eight of us all rented a Leadville log cabin together, complete with hot tub under the stars. If you weren’t there, we missed you, and I promise we spoke about YOU specifically as we reminisced…and especially about Angie Herring, who was getting married that week, and Charlotte Blau, who was in her last few weeks of pregnancy, and 22 | HMI Fall 2013 who became “the proud owner of a tiny pet human”, Hazel, later in the summer. Congrats, Angie; congrats, Charlotte; congrats, Molly & Christopher; and a heartfelt ‘cheers’ from us to you, HMI at 15! — Alexa “Bo” Holleran (alexa.holleran@gmail.com) RMS III It was so great to see Phoebe Chadwick-Rivinus and Stephen Fantone at the 15-Year Anniversary and going-away party for Molly and Christopher. Emily Garai is living in Atlanta and is now licensed as a psychologist in Georgia, and she started her own private practice in June. She also got engaged to her partner, Erin Rakestraw, in early September and they are planning a wedding in Massachusetts for September 2014. Lindsay O'Steen got her doctorate in 2011 and is working full time as a physical therapist in Maryland. She spends her free time volunteering for the fire department in Clarksville and finished her training as an EMT, fire fighter and public safety diver this past year. She will be celebrating her second wedding anniversary to her wife Brooke Robbins in October. Finally, Dave Barahona and his wife (Denaye) are expecting a little boy in December! Super sleuthing on Facebook also revealed that Zoie Watson Saunders recently welcomed a new baby boy into her family as well. RMS III please email me with updates any time! I hope all of you are well. — Samantha E. Wilson (samantha.e.wilson@gmail.com) RMS V Clara McDowell Gordon is finishing up her first year of the Physician Assistant Program at Tuft’s Medical School and reports that she is surrounded by intense, mind-bogglingly awesome people. Dan Schieffelin just finished up a year in Antarctica seeing the southern lights, watching penguins, riding his fat-bike and working on the Joint New Zealand/American Search and Rescue Team (JSART). He now plans to spend 6-8 weeks riding said fat-bike around New Zealand. Meghan McDonald Michael lives in Dallas with her husband and is finishing up her last year of anesthesia residency. Catherine Smith is still in CO, working in the outdoor industry and serving as a Trustee on the HMI Board. She loved seeing Maggie, Yasmine, and Lilli at the 15-Year Anniversary! Other big news: she became a parent to a hilarious little red headed daughter, Tobin, in December of last year. Tarquin Alexander Thornton-Close is in San Francisco and just got promoted to Fitness Manager at 24 Hour Fitness, and thus is the head of the training department at one of the bigger gyms in the city. Aside from that, he’s been training for some natural bodybuilding competitions for the past six months (hilarious experience). Ashley Albright Green left Vancouver Island a couple of months ago, following her hubby to the “Energetic City” (aka Fort St. John). It’s a boom town (Oil, Hydro, Wind – you name it) with typical boom townness. She’s been exploring the surrounding wilderness, but is a bit nervous about the -40 temps in the winter. Jeremy Loeb lives in Sacramento and does some design and marketing work at a local engineering firm while working (slowly) towards an Engineering degree. He is also getting hitched in Maine next month (and juggling all the fun logistics of planning a long-distance wedding), getting into road biking and triathlons, gardening, teleskiing in Tahoe and playing with his dog, Tucker. Rosalie Osborn is teaching 8th grade Special Education at a Quaker school in Brooklyn. Last summer she rented a cabin in Vermont and studied the environmental history of Appalachia in Asheville, NC. She returned home this summer to an extremely surprising marriage proposal from her boyfriend of almost 7 years, so rocking a sweet diamond ring is basically all she does now. Yasmine Kohli Fordham just finished her degree in Sustainable Development. She has been organizing a lot of events for work, including a major conference for Tides and the Nonprofit Centers Network at the Colorado Convention Center in Denver. She also came out for HMI’s 15-Year. Katie Reynolds is hiking the Pacific Crest Trail. By the time this goes to press she hopes to have finished her epic journey in British Columbia and be taking a West Coast Victory Tour before heading back east to continue grad school. Samuel Huntington lives in Brooklyn and manages an electronics recycling warehouse where the public can bring their unwanted and broken electronics to be refurbished, reused, or at least recycled in an environmentally sensitive manner. Basically, he’s WALL-E. I, Amy Mahnken, still live in New Orleans where I will be getting married in less than three weeks. If anyone would like to come visit the New Orleans area (and you really should) let me know and I’ll teach you the best way to eat a beignet (it’s not difficult but, as with all things, practice makes perfect). — Amy Mahnken (amymahnken@gmail.com). RMS VII RMS VII had a fantastic turnout at the 15Year Anniversary! Carissa Look, Erik Levy, Aimee Wessel, Marion Pierce, Rebecca Flint D’Elia, Whitney Leonard, Jaime van Pelt, Shelley Goerdt (Brunjak), and myself (Sam Timberg) turned up at 10,200’ to celebrate HMI’s past by sending Molly, Christopher, Porter, and Jack off in style while toasting a future that promises another 15 years and beyond of incredible experiences and lifelong friendships! As always, RMS 7 has big things going on! Meeya Sakura is expecting her fourth son (her second)! Meeya says, “We will now be a happy family of 6 not to forget the only other girl, Jade our doggie.” Shelley got married, changed her last name to Goerdt, started school again (go to Youtube and watch the amazing “Lakewood High School Lip Dub 2013 - Roar” that Shelley’s students worked on!), and she is working on a masters for curriculum development! Jacque Hastings is making a move to the Big Apple from Grand Cayman! She also travelled in Copenhagen recently and says “it’s beautiful, super forward thinking about eco and social responsibility and has great pedestrian areas, history, and food.” Speaking of moving to NYC, Rebecca and her husband Paul have traded the Colorado mountains for the big tall buildings of NYC. She will be pursuing an M.Ed. in Counseling. Erik celebrated his birthday in Las Vegas in August where he bonded with 5 Europeans over great conversation about, life, the universe, and futball until 8AM. In other big news, Erik and his wife just purchased their first home and Erik has taken a job with a law firm in Minnesota where he represents a growing number of small businesses by helping them grow and anticipate challenges. Sam James has been working as the sales manager for Simms Fishing Products, a Bozeman MT based fishing apparel company. The job is the perfect blend of professional challenge and personal pleasure (aka he gets fish all the time). Amanda Dooley has lived in Switzerland for two years now working as a freelance editor/writer and as a nanny. She is working towards a Masters in professional writing and had a great time catching up with Carrie Sessions, who was in Geneva for an internship with the UN Environmental Program. Carrie is in grad school at University of Washington where she is getting a dual degree in public administration and environmental policy. Whitney Leonard had an absolute blast at the 15Year Anniversary. From Leadville, she headed to Montana for the summer, where she interned for the Indian Law Resource Center. Whitney is back on the East Coast for her second year of Law School at Yale and somehow still finds time to enjoy some bluegrass music, go running in the woods, and to go biking with Emily Kaufman – who just moved to New Haven! Jamie and her husband Mike bought a house in DC and Jamie has transitioned her job from HR to IT and loves the new role. They are headed to Mexico in November for some Scuba diving and long runs around Isla Mujeres. Jenn Raines just returned to Boulder (where luckily her house is only slightly damp from the recent flood) from three weeks in Greece with her boyfriend’s family, which was gorgeous and relaxing. On top of being the Marketing Coordinator for a luxury Asian tour operator, Asia Transpacific Journeys, Jenn just graduated from 2 years of study at Bauman College as a holistic Nutritional Consultant and is going to start freelance writing soon. Carissa recently graduated from Georgetown with a Master’s in International Affairs and spends time running around the National Zoo. Aimee is likely moving to Paris for a job at the Pasteur Institute. She gave a talk at a science conference in Switzerland last month and will be defending her dissertation November 11th (after which she is planning a celebration trip to El Salvador!). Marion had seven “unschooled” teenagers living with her this summer as interns for her partner’s program at The High Desert Center for Sustainable Studies. Marion is also training for a marathon, teaching at an alternative school, and milking goats in her free time. As for me, Sam Timberg, I am off to travel in SE Asia with my girlfriend, Whitney, for the month of October before starting a new job in November. I will, along with one other guy, be starting a new wine importer, Meridian Prime, from the ground up. The wines will be from South Africa, France, and Argentina to start and I will be building our sales team, the portfolio, and travelling to see our partners all over the world! There was a big push during the 15-year Anniversary to set up a reunion in 2014. I’ll keep you posted! — Sam Timberg (SamTimberg@gmail.com) RMS IX I (Charlie Eichacker) find myself writing for a weekly paper in Burlington, Vermont, after studying journalism for one quick and dirty year in NYC. This past summer I interned for a weekly paper in Ellsworth, Maine, where I had the great pleasure of working alongside Izzy Weaver’s mother. Carolyn Loeb is getting lots of free meat and veggies as a farm apprentice in Rupert, VT. She lives in a cabin in the woods, throws pots, and plays in the White Mountains whenever possible. Further north, Molly Nowack has worked in a range of outdoor education roles. Now she lives in Burlington, working as a server and figuring out how to work on farms. She finds it “pretty bizarre to be in a city.” Liza Cohen is now in Boston, getting used to office life and reflecting on a great summer that whisked her out to Colorado, where she saw a mountain unicyclist. She also attended the wedding of Sophie Newbury Berglund. Also in Colorado, Bern Kenneally is just plugging away at her mechanical engineering PhD, “being a geek and writing lots of computer code.” Emily Chase still lives in the Pittsburg area, working in the finance department for a logistics company and spending lots of time taking care of her two-year-old dog. Across the pond, Phil Quinn is getting his MBA at the HULT International Business School. The program will be taking him to Sao Paulo at the 23 same time as the World Cup and to NYC next summer. Sam Garfield is as adrift as ever, working on a military transport ship based out of South Korea after getting his unlimited chief mates license this past summer. He also used the warmer months to make a nice slow sail down to Bermuda. — Charlie Eichacker (ceichacker@gmail.com) RMS XI We would love to include news from RMS XI. Please email Cameron, cdphillips@hminet.org, with any news or if you are interested in helping us as your class coordinator! RMS XIII Christina Clark had a great time representing RMS XIII at the 15Year Anniversary in June with Taylor Verderame, Erica Coren, Elizabeth Sinclaire and Phil Thurner. Otherwise, she still lives in Boston with her girlfriend and works as a social worker for a community service agency, handling adults with severe and persistent mental illness (which is stressful, but never boring!). The summer was filled with car camping, a wedding in Tahoe, and just being outside. Eva Luderowski’s life is back to normal after being displaced by Hurricane Sandy. She works as a lab manager in a Behavior Neuroscience lab at Rockefeller University, but looks forward to greener pastures (Med school?). This March, she visited a friend in Alaska, where she played with 2-week old sled dog puppies, snowshoed in Denali and saw the northern lights. Taylor got a new job at West Elm’s corporate office in Brooklyn, and is learning a lot about retail and interior design. She hangs out with Elizabeth and Erica as often as possible, and is training to qualify for next year’s marathon. Phil is doing a zillion different things in the video production industry, but nothing specifically exciting. He is happy to report that he survived the Boulder floods – none of his stuff was destroyed, although his basement got 2 feet of water. Next time he will be prepared with a floatation device. Eric Bernstein quit his job in Boulder and moved to DC for an internship at a security think-tank. After a humbling 4 months, he had a stroke of good fortune and joined a much more engaging Middle East think-tank, which is now focused on the Syrian 24 | HMI Fall 2013 Crisis. He sees Jo Yecies a couple of times a month, and just caught up with Nathan Brand, who is starting Med school at Mt. Sinai in NYC. Ben Wilkofsky interned with a consulting firm in India this summer, is set to graduate from Columbia in December, and already has a few job options on the table. Jo is working and going to school at American University in DC. She is now a supervisor in her billing office and will graduate with a Master of Science in Finance in May. This summer was spent on the road, visiting Colorado, Jackson Hole and Yellowstone – with Chicago and Oxford on the horizon. Erica is in NYC and recently transferred jobs to advertising at Women’s Wear Daily. She had a great time at the 15-Year Anniversary in June (“the campus is really swanky now”), and is looking forward to getting together with folks in NYC soon! Sam Finkelstein is still performing in the circus and is currently working on a new “straps” act. After recovering from elbow surgery in Germany, he spent time with his girlfriend in Brussels, and is now on tour in the US with a company called Cirque Mechanics. KassiE Garfield works at an awesome manual orthopedic physical therapy clinic in Portland, ME. This summer she sailed to Bermuda with her brother in 20 ft. swells and 45 knot winds. Last weekend she randomly saw the one and only Frances Chase! Elizabeth Sinclaire is doing a Post-Bacc at Columbia and thinking about becoming a Nurse Practitioner or an Occupational Therapist. She also had a great time at the 15-Year Anniversary and looks forward to seeing everyone that couldn’t make it soon. Reunion in NYC in January? — Elizabeth Sinclaire (e.sinclaire@gmail.com) RMS XV Sam Barber works for Ben Edmund at Portland’s finest microbrewery: Breakside. They put their heads together to create the most delicious beer ever brewed for the 15-Year Anniversary: the Jack & Porter. Liz Ceperly is in her 2nd year of a Geology Masters program in Buffalo, NY. She studied the Brooks Range in Alaska and camped out there on a frozen lake taking sediment cores of the lakebed. Lucia Cowles lives in Chapel Hill, NC and works in a bookstore/bar. She just ran a marathon and can no longer walk up stairs. Kristin DeLuca works for a high-end Italian menswear company in NYC and just moved to Brooklyn. She and I would love to hang out with any XVers who come to the city! Patti Echeverria is in LA making digital things, training to become a pro surfer, and meditating a lot. Rich Freund lives in Santiago, Chile and will be there for another year. He teaches Business English and tramps all over the Andes. Paul-Bob Stapell lives in Denver and loves it. He currently works for Fedex Express but will soon be transitioning into full-time "geotechnical project management.” Charlotte Friedman is a grad student at USC in LA, getting a Masters in Social Work. She interns at a locked-in mental institute in Compton, working with schizophrenic patients. Lindsay Guerin and Hannah Orcutt both live in Jackson, WY and spend as much time outdoors as possible. Currently, Lindsay is spending a month in Thailand. Hannah teaches at a nonprofit child care/special education/Head Start center in town. Mark Hammes is a tree-climbing arborist in D.C. He’s been building a cabin (mostly on his own!) on his farm in Floyd, VA, and it’s almost ready to take on the winter! Lacey Huber works at her family’s winery in Leesburg, VA (Stone Tower Winery). They’ve just finished harvesting for their 2013 vintage, which promises to be a stellar year. Peter Kernan has the best job of them all. He works as Math Faculty at HMI and is the proud owner of a house in Leadville. Ali LePage recently moved to Florida and really enjoys her job as a paralegal. She is getting married next June! James McKenna never forgot how fun our HMI cook crews were. He prepares delicious meals as a line cook in a San Francisco restaurant. Neil Ritterpush also lives in San Francisco and spends a good deal of his time climbing. Keller Morrison is the ultimate ski bum: he lives in Dillon, CO and works as a ski instructor at Keystone. However, he’s a smart ski bum, and will soon start tutoring Biology at CMC. Clara Rubin-Crump is in a Marine Affairs Ph.D. program at the University of Rhode Island. In her free time she works as a volunteer firefighter and EMT. O’Mara Taylor still lives in Philadelphia, working for an environmental consulting firm. She has also been enjoying volunteering with an HIV/Hep C testing organization. Julia Van Den Bergh lives in Morristown, NJ as a pharmaceutical analyst. She climbs all the time (this is a theme in our semester) and just finished her first triathlon. And as for me, Ray McGaughey, I still love my job: New York City tour guide via walking/bike/bus/food. A major highlight of the past year was making it out to HMI for the 15-Year Anniversary and seeing so many familiar faces. Stay in touch! — Ray McGaughey (ray.mcgaughey@gmail.com) RMS XVII Peter Wilson recently relocated to Boston for a teacher residency program. In only a year, Peter will be a teacher. Before relocating to Boston, he had been living in Denver. He spent the summer leading a backpacking trip in Alberta. Molly Dougherty, like Peter, is also teaching. In August, she started as a film teacher in Silver Spring, Maryland. Molly loves teaching, and is very happy to be back in the DC area. Auri East and Jack Fields were both apprentices at HMI last year (Auri for Semester XXIX, Jack for Semester XXX). Auri worked as a raft guide in Durango this summer, and is currently biking home to Florida. Jack is wandering the West, making occasional stops to climb. Claire Maggiotto lives in Boston, working as a research assistant studying sudden infant death syndrome. She was recently accepted to medical school and will be heading there next August. Claire also reported that John Harwood just graduated from Bates; Gordon Matthewson is living in a treehouse; and Reid Pierce is finishing up his senior year at Colorado College. — Allison Guzy (allisonguz@gmail.com) and Claire Maggiotto (cmaggiotto@gmail.com) RMS XIX Carrie Cecil is working as an archaeologist in Bismarck, North Dakota. Her plan is to continue working for the next year before heading to grad school to get her Master’s degree in Archaeology and Cultural Resource Management. Addie Davis graduated from the University of Wisconsin-Madison with a degree in History and African Studies. After spending the summer coaching sailing in New York, Addie moved to Washington, D.C. to participate in the White House Internship Program. Emily Faxon graduated from CC with a degree in Anthropology. She now works for Lululemon Athletica as an educator/pant folding guru in Denver and takes classes for occupational therapy prerequisites and graduate school. Chelsea Deick just moved to NYC to start a PhD program in Cellular, Molecular, and Biomedical Sciences at Columbia University. Lydia English graduated in June and jumped right into a yearlong internship with the Chicago Botanic Gardens. She spent the summer in rural Minnesota, looking for the elusive narrow leaf purple cone flower (Echinacea angustifolia) as part of research on habitat fragmentation in tall grass prairie. Sam McBride is studying at the Corning Museum of Glass to become a lampworker/ hot glass artist. She graduated from Eckered College and will probably be moving to the northeast quite soon. — Emily Faxon (emilyfaxon513@gmail.com) RMS XXI Will Potter is studying at Middlebury and worked for Twitter this summer. TJ Callahan is at school in Troy, NY and will graduate in the spring with a Bachelor's in Computer Science and a Minor in music. Over the summer he worked on an open source android app to help people with diabetes get used to tracking their carbs and blood sugar, and he had a great time at the Anniversary in June! Mackenzie Gurrola is at Colorado State University, living with two HMI alumni (Caitlin Kuczko, RMS XXIII and Jacob Bryant, RMS XXV). A recent trip include a family outing to Cancun and an amazing return to Leadville for the 15-Year Anniversary! Ben Breckenridge is a senior at St. Lawrence with Merrill Clerkin, Becca Doll and Claire Munson. Ben is graduating in December and headed to Rome to work for an apartment rental business. Merrill worked for American Councils for International Education in Washington, DC this summer and plans to use her Asian Studies and Education degrees in order to return back to China to mold young minds in the classroom. Brendan Buckland is a senior at GW and is writing a senior thesis on the historical memory of resource conflict and its effects on the national imagination in the case of Bolivia and Chile. On top of that, he’s interning at the Amazon Conservation Association in Dupont Circle. Mo Yang graduated from college and spent her summer in China. She hopes to go to Detroit and make a difference in the real estate market there. Carter McFarland worked on a twenty person Type 2 Initial Attack hand crew for the wildland fire season. He will graduate in the spring from the University of Montana with a BA in Sociology and an option in Criminology. Andrew McCue just the HMI fund On average, 40% of HMI students receive financial aid which makes their participation in an HMI Semester, Summer Term, or High Peaks Adventure possible. Each and every year, the HMI Fund provides dollars to help make an HMI experience available to every student excited about and deserving of a unique and transformational educational experience. Every contribution, small or large, makes a difference in providing financial aid and in supporting the talented faculty that make our programs run. Thank you all for your generosity and your faith in the mission and vision of HMI. 25 Leah's Recipe Black Bean Soup (adapted from the Moosewood Cookbook) 2 Tbsp olive oil 2 yellow onions, chopped 4 garlic cloves, minced 1 stalk celery, diced 2 sweet potatoes, diced 1 tsp salt 1/3 cup tomato sauce 2 tsp paprika 1 tsp turmeric 1 tsp basil dash of cinnamon dash of cayenne 1 bay leaf 4 cups water 1 can black beans 2 cups kale, torn or cut into bite size strips In a medium stockpot, sauté onions, garlic, and celery in olive oil over medium heat until onions are translucent. Add sweet potatoes and salt, and continue to cook for 4-5 minutes. Stir in remaining ingredients. Bring to a boil, and then reduce heat to simmer for 25 minutes, or until sweet potatoes are tender. Remove bay leaf, and serve warm. 26 | HMI Fall 2013 returned to the University of Vermont after spending a year in Paris. He is very happy to be playing squash and ultimate Frisbee, all while writing his senior thesis on French intellectuals under the Occupation. William Thacker is pursuing a life of music and law at the University of Tennessee. He hopes to be a lawyer for musicians, or a lawyer for environmental policies. He just went on his first run in over two years after a terrible injury to his left leg resulting in paralysis of his left foot. Olivia Fantini is a Women’s and Gender Studies major at Carleton College, about to start a senior thesis researching means of teaching sexual violence prevention to high school boys. She also works at the Gender and Sexuality Center on campus, captains one of the women's Frisbee teams, writes slam poetry, and picked up the ukulele this year! Tom Conover is at The University of the South: Sewanee with Emily Blau. He spent the summer as a restoration ecologist for a land-trust devoted to preserving the native landscape, and was personally responsible for the maintenance and restoration of two preserves totaling over 300 acres. Geoff Long is majoring in Software Engineering and minoring in Technological Entrepreneurship at McGill University in Montreal. A couple of weeks ago he climbed Mount Kilimanjaro, and soaked up the guide company’s “five star camping” option (especially in light of the taxing effects of altitude change). Sylvia Parol is finishing up her double major in Professional Writing and Management with Creative Design at Worcester Polytechnic Institute. She recently discovered that she would like to make a career out of her music hobby! Rebecca Smith became an aunt to the most adorable niece, studied abroad in Thailand and worked at HMI during the summer. She is focused on enjoying senior year and finding a job after graduating from CC. — Ian Tullis (iansladetullis@gmail.com) RMS XXIII Graham Landy spent last summer training for and competing in the Red Bull Youth America's Cup in which he represented the United States. He's glad to be back at school studying history. Seldy Gray finished a wonderful summer working at Good Morning America and is now in London studying Television Production and interning with the BBC. She hopes to spend next semester in Madrid studying Spanish. Rachel Whaley spent the summer working at an elementary school in Chicago and is excited to spend her fall quarter in Paris, learning French and exploring the city! Tyler Gump is interning at a children's autism center and taking graduate Psych courses in Westborough, Massachusetts. If he survives the internship, he'll hopefully return to Hamilton College in the spring and win a NESCAC lacrosse championship. Merrin Meltzer is back at the University of Delaware for her junior year after spending last year traveling in India and working at a domestic violence shelter in Guatemala. Caitlin Kuczko is attending Colorado State University where she is assisting in a pilot study of laboratory animal enrichment at CSU, and living with HMIers Mackenzie (XXI) and Jacob (XXV). This summer she interned in Philadelphia at Penn Vet Working Dog Center where she trained detection dogs. Cassie Ali is living in Tasmania, Australia. She has been traveling around the mainland, playing with wallabies and going to classes at the University of Tasmania. She will return in December to finish her junior year in Denver. Nicolette Kril is at the University of Pittsburgh double majoring in Anthropology and Finance. She spent the summer in Manhattan interning at Barclays Wealth and Investment Management for their Financial Crimes team. Arianna Vierczhalek is in Denver studying mechanical engineering. She spent the summer in a lab looking at MRI's and backpacking and such. Eliza Green is studying Chemistry and playing lacrosse at Carleton. She spent her summer (first one without a major hiking trip) doing research at Carleton. Chris Chang lives in Quito, Ecuador studying ecology and biology in various ecosystems around the country. This winter he will return to the University of Denver to continue working on his Environmental Science degree. Benjamin Schwartz is studying at The School of Business and Economics at Lehigh University working towards a major in Supply Chain Management and minor in Business Information Systems. He is in the Kappa Sigma fraternity with Robbie Hugin and Sam Horstmann (RMS XXIII). Alycia Martens is studying at Berkeley's Haas School of Business and recently joined the school's marketing case competition team. She's excited to study abroad in Berlin this spring. Megan Morrow spent the summer working for the Baltimore Electric Vehicle Initiative learning about electric vehicles in the city. She is now in Copenhagen studying Sustainability at the Danish Institute. Alanna Krowiak is at Connecticut College, where she is designing a major in Narrative Psychology and doubling with Philosophy. She LOVED the Anniversary! Nick Gannon is taking a break from double majors in Neuroscience and Arabic to study English at Trinity College Dublin this fall. He enjoyed his time in Leadville this summer, particularly hiking in the Sangre de Cristos and helping Molly move with Alanna and Ari. Caroline Leahy is living in Cambridge, MA and studying History and Science at Harvard. She spent the summer taking Organic Chemistry and is extremely happy to be done. Sachi Twine is studying at Yale, where she's an Environmental Studies major concentrating in Resource Use and Sustainability. Sachi interns with Urban Resources Initiative, a nonprofit that plants street trees and promotes urban forestry. She is also prepping to study architecture at the Danish Institute in Copenhagen this spring. Sally Caruso is at Middlebury College studying Studio Art and Geography. This summer she had a residency at the San Francisco Art Institute and had her first gallery show. Ben Capelin is at Colorado College, still deciding whether to major in Environmental Science, Philosophy, English, or Sociology. He is currently studying Existentialism in Paris and thinking about the importance of old people in a young person's life, whether or not to talk more, and how to buy a motorcycle. Nick Flynn is studying Development Economics and Spanish in Buenos Aires, Argentina. He enjoys the empanadas, dulce de leche and an occasional copa de Malbec. Abby Barnstone is at Pitzer, majoring in Psychology. She is also working in the admissions office, teaching slam poetry to 18year old incarcerated men, and is the president of Pitzer Promotions (aka the Pitzer swag club). Lara White is enjoying NC State in Raleigh where she is majoring in Political Science and minoring in Environmental Science. She is also interning with the Court of Appeals in downtown Raleigh. Lane Peterson is currently in Munich, Germany, where she is studying German language for the year. Jules Heckbert is studying Mechanical Engineering at the Rochester Institute of Technology. He recently joined the SAE Baja racing team and has been tutoring engineering courses with the New York Higher Education Opportunity Program. Alex Trautman is majoring in Computer Science at Carleton College. He spent the summer in SW Colorado, and he hopes to win a Frisbee national championship at the end of the year. He is currently trying to woo a National Geographic photographer and find an internship in extreme sport photography. — Alex Trautman (trautmaa@carleton.edu) RMS XXV Alex Potter worked for a moving company in the Boston area this summer and spent weekends hiking in the Adirondacks. He is looking forward to his second semester at Middlebury. Kat Geppert interned this summer in Georgetown at FairWinds Partners, a domain strategy-consulting firm. Kat is rooming with Elizabeth Benedict at Colorado College and just declared herself an Education major. She spends her free time practicing yoga, working at Taylor Elementary, and lifeguarding at the CC pool. Elizabeth spent the summer working at Camp Aloha in Fairlee, Vermont. Back at CC, she is taking a class abroad about the origins of Greek theater and will be living in Athens, Greece for a month. Mary Anne Bodnar spent her summer assistant teaching at a public school in NYC and participated in the Bates Dance Festival. Mary Anne is now back at Bates where she is a Math and Dance double major and an Arts and Leisure editor for the school paper. Hallie Skripak- Gordon worked at a dude ranch in Laramie, Wyoming this summer, riding horses and socializing with guests. She is thrilled to be back at Hamilton College so that she can resume her periodic dinner dates with fellow XXV friend, Louise Owens. Jamie Safran finished her first year at CC, where she helped develop the new rock climbing program and pioneered the first school sponsored ice climbing trip. She also got a job with a local climbing company as an ice and rock climbing guide, making her the only female ice guide with the company. She lived in Boston this summer, working at a local rock gym and doing hot yoga. Louise Owens took an EMT training course in New York City this summer and watched Netflix with Mary Anne Bodnar. She is very excited to return to Hamilton College, where she will be part of the Hamilton College EMS, a co-leader of the organization Challah for Hunger, and a regular stalker of Hallie Skripak-Gordon. Zoe Stoenner is at American University studying Public Communications and working 27 Emy Takinami and Talia Zisman (RMS XXV) ran the Mount Greylock Half Marathon together this summer as the deputy national communications coordinator for RHA. This past summer she interned at a leading fashion PR and production firm and traveled a lot. Nathan Schmidt is at Amherst, balancing his time between Science and Education courses. Nathan has unofficially adopted a nine-yearold little brother who he has the privilege of babysitting twice a week. His name is Ari and he's far smarter than Nathan. This summer Pete James worked on a cattle ranch outside of Bozeman, Montana and volunteered with a conservation trust, while fishing in his free time. At Middlebury, he is planning to major in English and is a member of the Middlebury Snow Bowl Ski Patrol. Ryan Campbell went on tour with his acapella group (The Spizzwinks) to Asia this summer (China, Hong Kong, Thailand and Myanmar). He also worked in SoCal as a Social Media and Communications intern at a Christian ministry for college students called Cru. Jack Duchin worked all summer leading canoe trips at a YMCA camp in Minnesota, including week-long trips to the Boundary Waters. Jack is now going to school in Montana and currently using his ski setup so he can hit rails all year round. Emy Takinami ran the Mt. Greylock half marathon with fellow RMS XXV alumni Talia Zisman this summer. Emy is at UVM for her second year, and is a Women and Gender Studies and Psychology double major, the director of the pottery program, and a research assistant in the Neuroscience department. Robby Kuster worked at Kingswood Camp through the summer and took classes at a local college. Now at Davidson, he is on the Ultimate Frisbee team and plays drums in the Jazz Band. Ally Roach is studying Finance at UCONN and 28 | HMI Fall 2013 is very involved in the business fraternity at her school, Delta Sigma Pi. She had an internship at a pension administration firm over the summer and missed XXV and HMI every day. Sarah-Strain Hunter spent her summer at Denison developing the university's Sustainability Fellows program, where fellows educate residents on sustainability in all of its facets. She is majoring in Political Science, minoring in Arabic, and hopefully spending next semester in Amman, Jordan! Hanna Dethlefs attended the 15-Year Anniversary in Leadville last summer. She also worked on a remote ranch and vineyard located in the Canyonlands of SE Utah. She is now at UPenn, rowing on the crew team and working at EMS. Laura Hansen is at UC Boulder, double majoring in Psychology and Sociology and is applying for research positions. Laura volunteers at the Boulder homeless shelter and hikes as much as possible in her free time. Toni Hall was just accepted into the Rubenstein School of the Environment and Natural Resources at UVM and continues to hike in her free time. Hallie (Woody) Woodberry spent her gap year studying History of Art and English at the Uppingham School in England. Woody is beginning her freshman year at Dartmouth and plans to major in Environmental Studies and then attend veterinary school. Lee Junkin spent his summer removing invasive plants from a pond in Wayland, MA and fishing on Cape Cod. Lee also did a nine day backpacking and fly fishing trip in Wyoming before returning to CC. Laura Messenger lived in Buenos Aires this summer doing an internship with an anti-human trafficking organization. Laura interviewed the families of girls who had gone missing recently and helped them find legal help or support groups. She also traveled to Patagonia to do some hiking and cross country skiing. Glenys Hunt waitressed in Baltimore and then spent the last week of summer road tripping through the Carolinas, Tennessee and Kentucky. She is taking classes for her Anthropology major, DJing for Grinnell's radio station and riding at a local barn. at St. Lawrence University. Bryan was a camp counselor this summer, and Katie joined the outing club and plans to hike 4 peaks for the 31st Annual Peak Weekend. They can’t wait for Isabella Caliandro to join them next year! Isabella and Arielle GordonRowe are taking a gap year spending this semester in France and Italy. They are doing the Tour du Mont Blanc and then living in Chamonix. In the spring, Isabella plans to hike the AT and Arielle will be skiing in Jackson Hole. Ben Buckles and Kelsey Hoekstra are having a great time at Middlebury. Ben has picked up Portuguese, plans to study abroad in Brazil Junior year, and joined the mountain club! Kelsey is going to do crew and lifeguard at Middlebury. Celeste Murtha is playing lacrosse for Colby College and loves it. This summer she worked as a camp counselor and at a bakery. India Bushnell worked as a surf instructor for little kids this summer and is at Bennington College in Vermont. Aaron Cass Boyes is at the University of Denver studying Mechanical Engineering. He is also considering joining the Cycling club, which does competitive road and mountain biking. Justin Gump is attending Union. He hasn’t gone on a single hike since HMI. Alessandra Laurent started school in Paris. Cody Smith attends St. John’s College in Santa Fe, and is learning Ancient Greek. He’s gone on a couple of night hikes in the hills of Santa Fe. Gavin Arnold is currently in Voss, Norway at Folk High School, where he is doing a program that focuses on sports and outdoor life. Next year he will be going to Skidmore. Natasha Hampton worked at an advertising company in Boston this summer and has officially moved back to England! She feels so lucky to have friends — Kat Geppert (katherine.geppert@coloradocollege.edu) RMS XXVII Anna Weiss is at Oberlin and is taking a fencing class. Kinori Rosnow and Gil Young are also attending Oberlin. Bryan Bohaty and Katie Eaton are Mary Loomis, Sam Fox, and Scott Berkley (not pictured; RMS XXVI) got together in Vermont in September from all over the world. She is attending University of East Anglia and studying English Literature. Arianna Carley and Jake Bazillian are attending University of Michigan. Arianna spent the summer in Spain, and Jake hopes to visit fellow Semester XXVIIers at Colorado College this winter. Lukey Walden, Kuba Chandler, Andrew Allison-Godfrey and Dylan Kingsbury are all doing a NOLS Semester in the Himalayas this fall. Lukey and Andrew will attend Colorado College as Winter Starts, Dylan will start at Middlebury as a Feb, and Kuba will continue his gap year and start at Colorado College in 2014. Leslie Dinkin, Colleen Orr, Andrew Obernesser and Andrew Meyer all attend Colorado College! They have met many HMI alums here. Colleen plays lacrosse for CC and she and Andrew O. joined the Outdoor Recreation Club and are in the same class this block. Leslie hangs out in the ceramics studio and Andrew M. is enjoying his class, ‘Searching for Islamic Order’. They can’t wait for Andrew A-G, Lukey and Kuba to get here! — Colleen Orr (colleencameronorr@gmail.com) RMS XXIX Sara Wolf worked at Camp Tawonga in Yosemite this summer, and is now tap dancing and hiking in the Adirondacks. Christian Lehner went to HMI’s 15-Year Anniversary, and then traveled in Nicaragua for 5 weeks. He spent the rest of the summer washing dishes, and has recently begun taking MMA classes. Michael Harmon went on a two week road trip to Colorado with a couple of his buddies! He also is working on a Kickstarter with his brother, raising money to make a film about ‘the outdoor experience’. Mary Crockett is attending the Alaska Pacific University Early Honors program, and is majoring in outdoor studies! HMI gave her confidence to start college at 17 and help her understand what she wanted out of life. Karina Wohlhieter taught math at an inner-city middle school this summer, and is playing field hockey and running the Outdoor Club at Taft. Lela Gannon went on a three-week long NOLS rock climbing course in the Winds this summer, and is now a member of her school’s varsity cheer team. She is also the submissions editor of her school’s literary magazine. After HMI, Becca Surprenant spent three weeks exploring India. Back at Miss Porter’s, she is now the head of the Community Service Club, a Senior Editor for the Yearbook, and is leading trips for the Outdoor Program. Chelsea Cohn worked at J Crew this summer, and spent the rest of her days competing in horse shows. She also hosted a three day Semester XXIX reunion at her house, and is currently involved in her school’s Young Democrats Club, World Issues Charity Club, and Admissions Club. Michaela Caplan worked at a nonprofit organic farm during the summer, and completed a WFR course in New Hampshire. She is now running cross country at school. Duncan Wheeler taught robotics and engineering design to middle schoolers over the summer, got his rescue diver certification, and hiked in the White Mountains. Elliott Wieler worked a genetic research lab this summer. He is now applying to the US Air Force Academy. Léne Epp recently returned from a six-week long backpacking trip through the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. Now she is taking a gap year in Switzerland working as an Au Pair and spending her free time exploring nearby countries. This summer, Sam Blair was one of five high school students in the US who was able to travel to Greenland with the National Science Foundation to do research on climate change. Anna Balderston worked on a CSA farm this summer, is running cross country and is Co-Student Body President back at Hotchkiss. Henry Fulghum spent a month in India, living in a Himalayan village farming and working on infrastructure issues. During this stay he learned Hindi, Ladakhi, and accomplished more than 140 hours of service. He is running cross country at his school, and is a Senior Leader working to make the freshman transition into high school easier, as well as the Co-Head of the Student Awareness Committee. Stay in touch, Semester XXIX! Would you prefer an electronic newsletter? We know that some individuals appreciate a hard-copy newsletter to read in today’s world of growing electronic communication, and we also know that some families receive a lot of mail and are wary of paper production and consumption. We respect either preference. Let us know if you would rather read our newsletter electronically and when the newsletter is published we will send you an email notification, with a link to where you can read it online. Email us at info@hminet.org, and make sure to include the email address where you would like to receive notification of our electronic newsletter. Thank you for helping us cut back on our mailings as well. The High Mountain Institute (HMI) is an academic and wilderness semester school for high school juniors, accredited by the Association of Colorado Independent — Henry Fulghum (mrparsley@gmail.com) Schools. We offer a 4-month long HMI Faculty Semester each fall and spring, a 6-week Stephen and Doe Hatfield’s family had a blast at the HMI Anniversary in June. Beyond that, they had a great summer of exploration in the Pacific NW with their daughters Hanna (6) and Thea (4) - including their first bona fide backpacking trip. They have enjoyed the sudden transition to fall, going for hikes and picking chanterelle mushrooms. Stephen and Doe will celebrate their 10th anniversary in October and are gearing up for the Bellingham Trail Marathon in traditional and outdoor education for Summer Term, and an Apprentice Program recent college graduates. We also offer a 2-week summer program for 7th & 8th graders, the High Peaks Adventure. Finally, HMI offers wilderness medicine courses, avalanche awareness training, and provides custom programs for select schools and programs. 29 Members of Semester XXX met up in NYC for brunch with former Dean of Students, Rebecca D’Elia in November. After teaching at HMI last year, Billy Corbett moved to Hanover, NH, got engaged, and started working as an admissions officer at Dartmouth. Julia Stifler thru-hiked the Pacific Crest Trail with Katie Reynolds. They started on the Mexican border and almost five months later reached Canada. They ate more ramen bombs than they can count, using their plastic orange spoons from the HMI gear room, of course. Kirk Phelps and his wife, Sharon, are farming in NH with their sons Forest (2) and Joelle (1). Sharon leads the missions ministry at their church, and Kirk continues to teach sailing and springboard diving at a nearby summer camp. Hans Estrin and Zoe Parker are adventuring and teaching in Kazakhstan. The Tien Shan mountains are huge and they can see them clearly from their 6th floor apartment in Almaty! They spend weekends exploring them, honing their picnic skills (people are really serious about picnics there), and practicing their Russian. Karen Prazar and her partner Cecilia were married during a fabulous weekend at Camp Huckins in Freedom, NH. In attendance were Katie Reynolds and Julia Stifler, who took a break from the PCT to come join them. Karen and Cecilia relocated to Dover, NH after a ten day drive across the country in a Subaru filled to the brim. Sara Russell works at the Watershed School teaching Anatomy/ Physiology, Physics, and Outdoor Skills. She 30 | HMI Spring 2013 is excited to teach a traveling Marine Biology and Conservation course in May, but in the meantime loves the Front Range and its ample opportunities for trail running, biking, and climbing all year long! Johanna Mickle is permanently back in the Kootenays near Nelson, British Columbia with her husband Jon, son Wiley and their dog George. They are homesteading their off-grid property and living in a yurt. Audrey Kruse is in her second year of graduate school in Flagstaff, AZ, studying invasive tamarisk trees. She has led some great backpacking adventures in the Grand Canyon and river trips on the San Juan in the last few months. Apprentices Kate (Botham) Hilton (IV) lives in Lyme, New Hampshire, with her husband Andy, 18-month old son Hans, and black Lab, Jethro. In July they enjoyed an visit from Doe Hatfield (IV) and her daughters, Hanna and Thea. Kate works as a Director of ReThink Health and coaches teams and organizations to develop leadership to transform the health of regional communities. Kate and Andy are excited to welcome a second son in March 2014. Lander Purvis Cooney (VIII) writes that her daughter Juniper Helen Cooney was born March 15th, 2013. She was sad to miss the Anniversary, but was busy figuring out her new life, fueled by toothless smiles, spit up, and lots of coffee. Steve Alexander (X) and his wife, Marianne, welcomed Arlo Owen Alexander into the world on April 21st. He is a bundle of joy and a great addition to the Alexander clan! Steve, Marianne, and Arlo are now in Jamaica for 3 months while Steve researches the human dimensions of marine conservation and management for his PhD, which is based in the University of Waterloo in Canada. Charles Brown (XII) returned to Indian Mountain School as the Director of Faculty, where he teaches, coaches, and works in a dorm. He will start his work on his Masters in Private School Leadership at The University of Pennsylvania in an executive program starting in July. He and his wife Lisa are expecting their first child in March! Elliot Schottland (XVII) is in medical school at Stony Brook University on Long Island. He hasn’t had much time for camping but still uses his headlamp from HMI to read before going to sleep every night. Eve Gasarch (XVII) is still plodding through the PhD process in Boulder, teaching Ecology and measuring alpine plants. She looks at plant community response to altered snow and nutrient (nitrogen and phosphorus) conditions both along a "natural" elevational gradient and as part of a long-term experimental manipulation. John Winston Cochran (XVIII) lives in Boise, Idaho. He finished his accelerated BSN program in the spring and got his first nursing job in downtown Boise on a Rehab unit. He has 3 days on, 4 days off, and lots to do in his free time! Lindsey Yost (XVIII) works for NOLS both in the field and as the Program Manager for NOLS Northeast (operating summers in the Adirondacks). This program was started up under the guidance of Ann Schorling, another HMI apprentice. Kate Braemer (XX) had a successful and safe first summer of directing a summer camp. She lives outside of Philly near her family with her husband and dog in a home with an open guest room! Oren Gersten (XXI) is in his third year of med school in Seattle. He has been exploring the Cascades in his free time and trying not to drink too much delicious Seattle Coffee. Harrison Buck (XXI) got married on September 21st. He and his wife, Mallory, recently moved to Providence, RI, where Mallory is getting her masters at RISD. Harrison still runs his business, BuckNaked Visual Works, doing video and photo work for a wide array of clients. He had great summer filming and traveling with The Infamous Stringdusters, and is now preparing for 5 weeks in NYC working on the set of an independent film. Ashton (Fink) Snyder (XXII) lives with her husband in NW Montana between Glacier NP and Banff in British Columbia. She works as a residential specialist for Chrysalis, a Therapeutic Boarding School. Her husband teaches math at the school and they look forward to a full winter of skiing at Whitefish Mountain and Fernie! Ashley Allen (XXII) got married this summer and in attendance was MaryClaire McGovern (XXII apprentice and current math faculty), Amy Tabakin (XXII apprentice), and Cooper and Carrie Mallozzi. She then moved to Vail to teach 4th grade at Vail Mountain School. Lucy Guarnera (XXIII) enjoys spending time with her baby, Sammy (Samuel Thomas, born 6/15/13), and just got a baby backpack so she can take him on the trail! Aunge Thomas (XXIII) was recently promoted to the Dean of Students for The Traveling School. She is still based in Bozeman, MT. Eliza O’Neil (XXV) is the Residential Life faculty at HMI. She enjoys hanging out with students and contemplates getting a puppy on a daily basis. Clare Smith (XXV) is in her second year of teaching at Stratton Mountain School, a winter sports academy for elite skiers and snowboarders. With plenty of skiing in the winter and hiking and biking the rest of the year, the Green Mountains of Vermont are a fine place to be, exploring the many trails with her new puppy, Penny. Kay Sherwood (XXVII) lives in McCall, Idaho and works as the Director of Admissions at the Alzar School. Amie Fleming (XXVIII) works for Greenbelt Alliance in San Francisco as their Development Coordinator. In her free time she began working for a nonprofit called the Outdoors Empowered Network, which helps groups in cities across the country offer outdoor leadership skill courses and gear libraries so kids can get outside. She has a great time exploring SF and backpacking in mountains nearby. Elle Emery (XXIX) lives in Denver and is working towards her Masters in Educational Psychology and completing her Colorado Teaching Licensure. She teaches middle school science as an intern in the Stanley British Primary Teacher Preparation Program. Auriona East (XXIX) had an awesome spring and summer raft guiding in Arizona and Colorado. After the rivers dried up, she and her older brother headed out on a two-month bicycle tour from Colorado to Florida. She’ll spend the winter there brushing up on her Arabic and getting ready to teach somewhere in the Arab World next fall. Josh Cherner (XXIX) is teaching at the East Bay School for Boys in Berkeley, CA. He's teaching 6th grade Math and Science...and PE. He misses life in Tahoe, but thoroughly enjoys being back in the Bay Area. Caroline Lowe (XXX) is at home in the Northeast subbing at local schools, studying for the GREs and thinking about grad school. At the end of this summer she road-tripped to Memphis, biked through TN, AR, and MS, and then drove back to CT from Mississippi. All told she’s been in 21 states plus Washington DC in the past 5 months. Catherine Klem (XXX) teaches math at The Island School, though she is having a difficult time giving up the attire of the wintry mountains. She continues to wear scarves and cardigans in the heat of The Bahamas and, luckily, her co-worker gifted her a neck fan to keep her cool. founders fund Thank you for supporting HMI and helping us grow the HMI Endowment! With your help, the Founders Fund exceeded our campaign goal to raise over $2 million and will continue to grow in years to come. We are grateful for the unhesitating support of many, and the affirmation that HMI is and will continue to be a unique and transformative educational experience. We, too, know that HMI has a vibrant future ahead, and we look forward to continuing to share our journey with you. 31 HIGH MOUNTAIN INSTITUTE Post Office Box 970 Leadville, CO 80461 TEL 719-486-8200 ADDRESS SERVICE REQUESTED HMI Program Calendar Register by calling 719-486-8200 x107 or by visiting www.hminet.org AIARE Avalanche Level II Avalanche Refresher HMI Summer Term January 2 – 5 $435/$515 (with lodging) January 11 $95 June 23 – August 3 $8,950* (financial aid available) AIARE Avalanche Level I Wilderness First Aid & CPR High Peaks Adventure January 3 – 5 $330/$390 (with lodging) April 7 – April 9 $285 (includes CPR & all lunches) June 29 – July 13 $3,375* (financial aid available) Wilderness First Responder Recert Wilderness First Responder Lake County Backpacking Trip January 3 – 5 $295/$355 with lodging May 28 – June 6 $710/$910 with lodging July 21 – July 27 (call for details) Update Your Information Please visit http://www.hminet.org/alumni/update, or email info@hminet.org, to: (1) Opt to receive this newsletter electronically; or (2) Update your address. Parents of alumni: If this newsletter is addressed to a son or daughter who no longer maintains a permanent address at your home, please provide us with their new address and email address. Please let us know if you or your child is using a new college e-mail address as well.