A gaggle of giggling pre-teens gathered in a clearing at the edge of the Cedar River just north of Austin on a green-tinged Friday morning in May.
With a light breeze moderating warm sunlight, the fourth- and fifth-grade students focused on exuberant Karlie Weaver, their Canoemobile guide for the coming hour. Alternately eager and timid, they revealed their hopes and worries with their questions.
"Will we see any water animals?" asked one girl.
Turtles, baby snakes and ducks were all possibilities, Weaver said with a nod.
"What happens if the canoe goes too fast?" asked a bespectacled boy.
Weaver assured him the power to control the canoe's pace was in his hands.
Another day of Canoemobile was underway — meaning accessible lessons and a lot of smiles.
Canoemobile — a program of St. Paul-based nonprofit Wilderness Inquiry (WI) — has offered underserved populations a fun, user-friendly gateway to public lands and waterways via hands-on experiences since 2010.