Spring Update 2023

Hello to our Friends of the Learning Trail!

We have been busy this year and can't believe that it is already Spring.  Here is an update on all that's been happening at TLT.

Firstly, we were fortunate to find a new preschool teacher, Nicole Jara, a native of Chile who has been in this country working with toddlers in a Montessori program.  She has family residing in The Nature Trail. Additionally, we hired Kenia Duque Delucio, a resident of the Nature Trail and former student with our program.  This  team has created such a fun and beautiful learning environment for our youngest students. We have 12 children currently enrolled.

Seen in the photos below, the preschoolers are enjoying a visit from the dentist explaining how to take good care of our teeth.

Our volunteers continue to amaze us with their dedication, warmth and commitment to supporting our students. We are so grateful to both our regular tutors and the substitutes who fill in for them when necessary. We currently have 33 students enrolled in the after-school tutoring program.  Thank you, volunteers!

Once again this year, we have been fortunate to receive funding from a variety of sources--the United Way of Chatham County, the Women of Fearrington, Galloway Ridge, and Chatham County.  Our largest source of funds, however, is the  community around us through individual donations. By supporting our work, you are changing lives and helping to  build a stronger community. 

We were so happy to be able to reinstitute our Parent Program. Working with  El Centro Hispano, we offer classes for parents once per month to discuss topics such as child development, parenting techniques, and how to support your child's education. For those evenings, we  provide dinner and babysitting to make access easier. We also partner with Chatham Literacy to host English classes and provide babysitting for those sessions, as well. 

We  hope that you have enjoyed these highlights of our work at The Learning Trail. We look forward to closing the year with enrichment events for students on days when school is not in session and year-end projects and programs for parents and students.  We appreciate your support.

Best wishes to all!

P. S. Please visit our facebook page by following the link below.

Latest news from The Learning Trail August 2022

Hello to the friends of The Learning Trail!

We thought that you might like an update on our activities as we complete one school year and head into another. The Learning Trail enrolled 10 preschoolers and 29 students this past year.  That was  made possible by the 28 full-time tutors who volunteered their time to work with our elementary students after school and our two staff members who led our preschool in the mornings.  Lots of fun summer books and learning materials were sent home with all of our students.

Our kindergarteners performed for their parents and the 3rd graders at the end of the school year.  They showcased their progress in letters, sounds, songs, and even a little choreography.  Nicely done!

This summer, The Learning Trail launched a new Enrichment Program.  Five events were planned:  a cooking day, a story and craft day, a trip to the Chatham Library, a science day, and a trip to the NC Botanical Gardens. Featured above, is a slime-making project as part of our science day.  Volunteers and students alike enjoyed the fun and novel experiences.  We plan to build further on this concept in the future. 

We are sad to say goodbye to our preschool teacher, Mandy Monroe and her aide, Tania Jimenez.  They have been wonderful teachers and guides to our preschoolers for 2 years, during the most difficult Covid periods. They have both decided to move on with their careers. We wish them well. We are now interviewing for their replacements. We would welcome any referrals or suggestions that any of our friends might offer. 

We continue to be fortunate to have the support of our primary grantors.  The United Way and Chatham County grants help cover the salary of our lead preschool teacher, Galloway Ridge helps cover the cost of our Preschool Aide, and the Women of Fearrington fund our Literacy Program. These are all essential parts of our programs and we are most grateful. 

This spring we formed a partnership with Chatham Literacy to offer English classes to Learning Trail parents. Other Nature Trail residents have also joined us.  We provide the facilities, snacks and babysitting, and Chatham Literacy provides the tutors, all of whom have been trained in teaching literacy skills.  Classes have been in session since mid-May and are still going strong.  We have a dedicated group of adults who are making good progress.

We were delighted to award Eladio Delucio the Carol Tomason Legacy scholarship.  Eladio had been a student at The Learning Trail in his younger days and has now graduated from high school and looks forward to continuing his education at NC State.  We are all very proud of his accomplishments and look forward to following his career. Eladio is shown here with Suzanne Morris, former TLT president, who administers the scholarship program. 

Our students love to display their work.  We are glad that The Learning Trail provides so many opportunities for them to shine. Our sincere thanks to all of our donors and volunteers who make it possible. Enjoy the rest of the summer.  We will be back in touch once the new school year is underway.

Best wishes to all from The Learning Trail!

Summer Update from The Learning Trail

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Dear Friends of the Learning Trail,

Last year was like no other, as I am sure you will agree. We all faced a myriad of challenges in navigating our way through the pandemic. Nevertheless, we successfully opened our preschool and after-school tutoring (grades K - 4) and served 23 children who were happy to have in-person instruction with our dedicated volunteers at The Learning Trail. Their smiling faces (beneath the masks) and enthusiasm for our classwork made it all worthwhile. We look forward to returning to the classroom this fall.

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Three 3-year-olds enjoy the outdoors at The Learning Trail Preschool. Last year, we only accepted six preschoolers to limit our cohort size for greater safety during the pandemic. We expect to expand our class this fall.



Our new preschool teacher, Mandy Monroe, assisted by her aide, Tania Jimenez, introduced our preschoolers to songs, letters, stories, counting, and movement. Both teachers are bilingual, helping the children transition from Spanish to English as they prepare for kindergarten. Social and emotional development are also important and the classroom routines encourage respect, self-control, and expressing feelings with words. Both Mandy and Tania will be returning to The Learning Trail this fall.


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Kindergarteners enjoyed creating crafts based upon stories that were read and discussed. This was part of Learning Trail Literacy Project funded by our generous supporters, the Women of Fearrington. Teachers and students alike were inspired by the new books and learning materials that were purchased through this program. This grant has awarded again for the coming year and we are excited to continue it.

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Once again, we were fortunate to receive grants from the Chatham County and the United Way which help fund the salary for our preschool teacher. Research continues to support the importance of early childhood education. We also plan to resume our parent education classes which are an integral part of our program.

We wish to thank all those who made this past year possible, including the staff at the Nature Trail mobile home community, our liaison with the County and other non-profits, members of the County Health Department, and most importantly our committed volunteers who came back to the classroom before or just as soon as they were vaccinated. Although Covid-19 is still a serious concern, we will continue to use an abundance of caution in our screening and cleaning protocols. Also, it is our policy that all staff and volunteers be vaccinated.

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The new school year is just around the corner. Already we have begun planning our orientation program and forming teaching teams. We are always looking for volunteers who would enjoy working with our children who have faced many challenges, perhaps more than ever, and would benefit from instruction from another caring adult. For more information on how to volunteer, contact us or go to our website: www.thelearningtrail.org.

Wishing you all the best,
The Learning Trail

Updates from the Learning Trail

Dear Friends of The Learning Trail,

We hope that you are well. What a turbulent and challenging time we are experiencing!

We, at The Learning Trail, were very disappointed to cancel our Summer Camp due to the Covid-19 pandemic. And then disappointed again that we could not commence after-school tutoring as usual. Now, however, the County has returned students to school in a hybrid model, learning both in-person and virtually. Accordingly, we resumed our in-person tutoring program for grades K-4 in February 2021. That gave us time to observe and learn from the school’s experience in screening, social distancing, and modifying the curriculum, as needed.

In the meantime, we prepared the classrooms—cleaning and disinfecting, improving ventilation, rearranging furniture to promote social distancing, and setting up our own screening procedures to make sure that we can create a safe and healthy environment for students, staff, and volunteers.

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We are happy to share with you that we have hired a new preschool teacher, Ms. Mandy Monroe, who began teaching a small group of 3-year-olds starting in mid-November, assisted by one of our Nature Trail mothers, Griselda Vazquez. Due to the coronavirus, we will not call upon any of our devoted volunteers until the community health environment improves.

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The Learning Trail has been very fortunate to receive generous grants from several organizations. Chatham County and the United Way have provided funds to cover the salary of our Early Child Specialist and the Women of Fearrington are funding our new Learning Trail Literacy Project for Grades K-5. This project will feature fun reading experiences including book shares, book reviews, and books to take home to enjoy with the family. We hope to instill a lifelong love of reading.

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We were delighted to award Kenia Delucio this year’s scholarship from the Carol Tomason Legacy Fund (shown here with Carol’s husband, Bruce). This goes to a high school graduate who previously attended the Learning Trail tutoring program, and shows dedication and determination to continue their education after graduation. She thanked TLT “for all the support in making one of my biggest dreams come true.” She enrolled in the Aveda Institute of Chapel Hill and will receive a certificate in Salon Business Management next summer, 2021.

We look forward to being able to serve all of our students and their families, as soon as we can safely return to full operation. Now more than ever, we need to provide the academic and social support that low-income families need to navigate these stressful times. In the meantime, we truly appreciate our friends and supporters who sustain us.

Wishing you all the best,

The Learning Trail

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Our Spring Update

Updates from the Learning trail

March, 2020

Welcome to the Learning Trail’s second newsletter.  We are more than half way through our year and want to bring you up to date on our activities.

Here are the headlines:

  • Many thanks for all the donations that made our preschoolers’ Christmas a very happy one.

  • We have a new logo (see above) that we feel better represents the Learning Trail story.

  • Welcome to 14 new tutors who have joined our ranks this year, allowing us to expand.

  • A new Board member, Karon Falaq Johnson, brings much valuable experience to the table.

  • Parenting Classes continue at the Learning Trail, facilitated by the Exchange Family Center.

  • Donors are finding new and meaningful ways to support our work.

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There were many happy preschoolers (and parents) this Christmas who received books, puzzles, educational games, hats and gloves, along with a play refrigerator and sand for the sandbox.           

Now in our 2nd year with professional Early Childhood Specialist, Meghan Friday, we continue to enhance the preschool space and learning materials serving ten 3- and 4-year-olds.  Volunteer Don Darmer shares his musical talents with the group regularly.

We have a new logo that we feel better represents The Learning Trail story.

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The new logo shows two figures, one large and one small, representing our tutors and our students, and in particular the one-on-one relationships that they share.  They are shown above a book, representing our academic activities and mission. The arc above the figures represents the Nature Trail community that we serve, as it is our home as well as theirs.

 

We are thrilled to welcome 14 new tutors to the Learning Trail team.  

As some of our tutors relocate or move on to other activities, we are always looking for new tutors to join us. This year, with the influx of 14 new tutors, we were able to expand our program to serve more Nature Trail students. They are:  Barbara Salamy, Barbara Robertson, Mary Wrighton, Bob McMillan; Kim Kitchens, Pat Luce, Lucy Leuchtenburg, Carol Madison, Kathy White, Sandy Bazley, Udo Koopman, Eric Kaplan, and Ellie Taylor, and Sammuel Dummer.

Shown here are three of our new tutors:

Pat Luce, Lucy Leuchtenburg, and Kathy White. All three are working with the 2nd graders at The Learning Trail.

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Karon Falaq Johnson is a valuable addition to The Learning Trail Board of Directors.

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Karon comes with a wealth of experience serving the Latino community through the Arc of Durham, El Futuro, and as an outpatient therapist, crisis manager, and social worker.  She is also a faculty member of UNC School of Social Work in the field education office.  She is fully bilingual and has a passion for serving the Spanish-speaking community.  She is particularly interested in facilitating parent engagement in the Nature Trail and the creation of a Parent Advisory Council.



Our parenting classes continue once per month at The Learning Trail.  Led by Amy Armstrong  with the Exchange Family Center, these sessions provide an opportunity for parents to share the challenges of raising young children, hearing of different parenting strategies, and learning new ways to support their children’s education. 

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Many thanks to those who remember the Learning Trail when designating options for charitable gifts.

We appreciate our supporters who have celebrated birthdays, book groups, and memorials by suggesting donations to The Learning Trail in lieu of gifts or other gestures.  This means so much to us and is a beautiful way to share our good fortune and concern for others, especially for children living so near to us. 

Our First Newsletter

A lot has been happening at The Learning Trail and we thought that our friends, neighbors, parents, volunteers, donors and grantors would like to hear about it.

Here are the headlines:

  • Hosted another 4-week summer camp with over 30 kids and 20 volunteers.

  • Beginning the 2nd year of Preschool with our Early Childhood Specialist, Meghan Friday.

  • Welcoming new volunteer tutors from Governors Club, Fearrington, Briar Chapel, and more.

  • Excited to receive generous grants from Chatham County and Chatham United Way.

  • Scholarship awards were granted to three HS graduates by the Carol Tomason Legacy Fund.

  • Just updated our website to include more photos, news and information.

    Much fun was had by children and volunteers at TLT’s summer enrichment camp.

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Every week our children and volunteers took a field trip to places such as the Botanical Gardens, the Museum of Life and Science, and Sweet Bee Theater.  This year’s theme was Mystery and Wonder.

Back at TLT, they worked on reading, math, science, writing and art to enhance their field experiences and keep their academic skills in tact over the summer.

We are so grateful for the generous grants from the Send-A-Kid-To-Camp Fund and the Women of Fearrington who make our summer enrichment camp possible.

Our preschool is ready for another year with Meghan Friday as teacher and Early Childhood Specialist, assisting in curriculum planning for Preschool- 2nd grade.

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Meghan comes to us with a strong background as a teacher of Spanish, reading intervention and English as a Second Language.  She has already established herself as a trusted teacher within the Nature Trail parent community.  Our 3- and 4-year-olds have learned their letters and sounds, colors, shapes, songs, and how to go to school and play with others. Through this program, they will be well-prepared for Kindergarten.

The Learning Trail has over 50 volunteers who help out at the Preschool or tutor Kindergarten through 8th graders once per week

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Great news of recent grants from Chatham County and United Way of Chatham County!

 
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This past June we were pleased to hear that we have received a generous grant from Chatham County for the first time, as well as from The United Way of Chatham County once again.  These funds are primarily directed to our Early Childhood Program.  Along with other grants from community foundations and individual donors, this generosity makes our work possible.  Many thanks to all of our grantors and donors!

Scholarship awards granted to three high school seniors, the first graduating class of the Learning Trail tutoring program.

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The Learning Trail has recently enhanced our website to include more news, photos and useful information.  Please visit us frequently at www.thelearningtrail.org.

Financial Information about The Learning Trail and a copy of its license are available from the State Solicitation Licensing Branch at 919-807-2214.  This license is not an endorsement by the State.

The Learning Trail
Chapel Hill, NC
www.thelearningtrail.org

The Learning Trail Featured in the Chatham News + Record

We were pleased to be featured in an article from the Chatham News and Record for the Week of 10/10/19.  Please enjoy reading it here below (somewhat abridged for clarity and brevity).

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Volunteer Ken Wilson, right, chats with Ethan Umana, left, and Kevin Duran while the kids work on puzzles during a day of The Learning Trail’s preschool program.

STAFF PHOTO BY ZACHARY HORNER

Posted Friday, October 11, 2019 7:00 am

By Zachary Horner

News + Record Staff

CHAPEL HILL — Monday, Sept. 16 started off like any Monday at any normal preschool.

The kids walked in, shepherded by their parents, and got to playing. There were art and puzzles and Play-Doh crafting and baby doll-caring. After a little bit, the teacher called the class to the carpet.

Meghan Friday, The Learning Trail’s preschool director, began to sing a song about the different fingers on your hand. The thumb, the pointer, so on. Then she reinforced some letters — A, B, C, and so on.

It was a normal day at The Learning Trail, which can only be described as a somewhat abnormal preschool.

See, The Learning Trail is located in the Nature Trail neighborhood, a trailer park right down the road from the entrance to Governor’s Club off of Farrington Road on the northeastern side of Chatham County. The Learning Trail only serves children living in Nature Trail……

Started with an idea

In 2007, Governor’s Club was home to a group of former educators, and if you know any teachers, they’ll tell you that you never really stop being a teacher.

“They knew about this community and they saw a need for after-school tutoring,” says Suzanne Morris, current president of The Learning Trail’s board of directors. “So in the fall of 2007, six tutors and six third-graders started here.”

Morris wasn’t here when The Learning Trail started, but the 33-year vet of special education got plugged into the program in 2011. By then, the number of tutors had grown beyond 25 and the student population expanded beyond third grade.

Anyone who is somewhat intimately familiar with the program will tell you about Carol Tomason. She became the de-facto director of The Learning Trail after the original leader moved to Maine. In 2011, Tomason and Morris and another individual started an after-school tutoring program for middle schoolers.

People like Carol Tomason helped make the program what it is today, but this story of community service is marred by sadness. Last fall, four years after Tomason spearheaded a drive to make The Learning Trail an official nonprofit, she was killed in Washington, D.C.

“We had just initiated a strategic plan, to develop a strategic plan for the next couple years going forward,” Morris said. “She was here the day we started that plan, and she went away for the weekend to Washington — that’s where one of her daughters lives and her grandchildren. She was up in D.C. and was walking across a street and was hit by a truck, and she didn’t survive her injuries.

“We had Carol’s vision. She had been with us at the beginning of this planning. So we moved forward. Here we are.”

Where we are now is a far cry from that early day of six kids and six tutors.

The Learning Trail now serves kids from preschool to eighth grade. Forty-eight students come to the pair of buildings for after-school tutoring, and Meghan Friday has 10 kids in her preschool class. Between 50-60 tutors will show up ….. to help Friday or tutor kids after school.

Finding a niche

…….. The program takes up a couple of buildings near the entrance to Nature Trail. After following a driveway to the entrance circle, you park your car on the right side, where you see three small buildings. The middle one is the Nature Trail’s managing office, but the one on the left and the right serve as classrooms for the kids.

The classrooms look like any normal classroom. There’s white boards and desks and chairs and various educational charts lining the walls. There’s carpets and bathrooms everything that goes with a school, plopped into this mobile home neighborhood.

Most if not all of the residents of Nature Trail are Latino, which meant the program needed a bilingual teacher when they hired a preschool director for the first time prior to the 2018-2019 school year. Meghan Friday had worked in public schools for many years and even taught at a Spanish-speaking elementary school in Washington, D.C. After moving to Durham with her family, she began looking for jobs and met with Morris and Tomason.

“When I met with them and heard about their mission and heard what they were doing, I was like, ‘Yep, I’m in,’” she said. “I felt the mission was amazing and they were so passionate.”

The preschool children come in Monday through Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon. Friday usually has one or two volunteer assistants for the day, sometimes focusing on specifics like art or even yoga.

“At that age developmentally, they’re trying to figure out how to play on their own, play with their friends, get along with their friends,” Friday said. “And then we have a big focus on teaching them English because most of them come in knowing very little English.”

Providing some help

The volunteers make a significant difference in the life of the school, Friday says. On this particular Monday, Christine Duprez Young is doing some painting with the kids, and Ken Wilson is helping a couple children with puzzles. Ask any elementary school teacher — 10 students is a lot to handle on your own, so having an extra pair of hands or two is significant.

The dedication of the volunteers was surprising and impressive to Carla Murray, who is now in her fifth year as principal of nearby North Chatham Elementary, where Nature Trail kindergarten through 5th graders attend. When she arrived at the school in 2014, Tomason came to meet with her.

“From that very first meeting to right now, it has been an awesome support system,” Murray said. “For not even just tutoring, also for families and community. They fully embrace the families and that community-school partnership is beautiful.”

The volunteer support was a different experience for Friday as well.

“Sometimes when you’re in a public school, it’s really hard to get things done,” she said. “Here, somebody will have an idea and the next week we’ll be doing it. A lot of the people are senior citizens and they’ve had these great careers and they have all these great talents that they’re able to bring in and do in a fresh new way with 3- and 4-year-olds. A lot of the kids were just entering kindergarten never having gone to school before. Now they’re gardening and doing yoga and doing art. It’s pretty special.”

That volunteerism extends beyond Governor’s Club residents. Morris said many other community groups have stepped in to volunteer and provide help of various kinds. Two years ago, the Women of Fearrington gave The Learning Trail a grant for a garden, which has been used during the program’s summer camp and is regularly accessed by the preschool. Other funding comes and has come at various times from groups like the United Way of Chatham County, the Triangle Community Foundation, Chatham County, and Charitable Fund of Galloway Ridge.

Some new opportunities

Morris said one of the goals of The Learning Trail is not just to educate the kids, but to broaden their horizons and their parents’ horizons.

“So much of the research on getting kids reading and ready for school is all about early childhood education,” she said. “The children that live here live in an environment where Spanish is pretty much the main language. Parents are both working or the mother is at home. Maybe they have one car. Their world is very narrow. The children’s experiences are very narrow. So knowing the research and knowing what this population experiences, starting school already behind, we felt like that’s where we want to put a lot of our emphasis.”

And the parents get an education too. One of the program’s grants is used for that purpose in particular. For eight or nine meetings a year, The Learning Trail hosts different speakers for parents, ranging from nurses to literacy specialists to immigration lawyers to yoga instructors. Parents have even gone on field trips with their preschoolers to the Chatham Community Library in Pittsboro and the farm at Fearrington Village……

It became part of the program’s mission to provide more than just education to the kids, Morris said. It may have started as a tutoring program, but became so much more.

And people outside the neighborhood say they see the effect. Murray said she’s had students come up to her at school and talk about a birthday gift they got from a volunteer. The Learning Trail, in her view, provides a conduit to education that school sometimes can’t be for various reasons.

“The work that they do is amazing because families will reach out to them,” she said. “It’s those relationships that they’re building that I think the kids respond so well to. We’ve had parents say, ‘Can you please get us a spot there?’”

Tristen Perlberg, the principal at Margaret B. Pollard Middle School, where Nature Trail 6th-8th graders attend, said The Learning Trail is “at the top” in terms of community support for his school.

“It just shows that people are invested,” Perlberg said. “They understand that everybody, whether you’re a student at this school or a parent or a community member, they’re a vital part of what makes this school successful. We’re just fortunate that they realize that and give back.”

Learning Trail tutors regularly discuss their students’ progress at their regular schools and get to know what skills kids need help on, like math facts, multiplication, sight words and reading skills. Middle school students have some of that, but they mostly spend the time working on homework with help from volunteers.

Doing more than now

Morris said she’s excited about what kids have been able to do after The Learning Trail. Some have begun participating in the Advancement via Individual Determination, or AVID, programs at their high schools. To help those kids out, Learning Trail created the Carol Tomason Memorial Scholarship Fund. Applicants must have been in The Learning Trail for at least two years, plan to go to college or community college and write an essay. Multiple kids qualified for the scholarship this year.

“It couldn’t be more appropriate to what Carol was all about,” Morris said.

They would love to expand the program, but the classrooms are already pretty full, so there’s a waiting list.

In August, ahead of the school year starting, Morris walks around the two rooms for the kindergarten through third grade after school programs, straightening chairs, just making sure everything is set for the upcoming year. She gives additional kudos to the owners of Nature Trail, who is giving the facilities to The Learning Trail rent-free.

“We’re very fortunate,” she says. “Otherwise we wouldn’t have a program.”

The summer camp, the after-school help, the preschool program — it’s all part of what is frankly a neighborhood reaching down the road just a bit…, seeking to make a difference. For Friday, who came from the often-bureaucratic and sometimes slow-moving world of public education, it’s a night-and-day difference.

“For me, it’s kind of a magical place where somebody has an idea and next thing we know, we’re doing it,” Friday said. “It just seems like everything falls in place and always a new volunteer will show up with a great idea and kids will get a great experience. It’s just nice to have people who really care about the community and share that with kids.”

Reporter Zachary Horner can be reached at zhorner@chathamnr.com or on Twitter at @ZachHornerCNR.