“It’s not that close to my memory right now.”
Kathy St. Peters had been trying to remember a word or an anecdote as the group worked on a collaborative poem. “That’s OK!” said Heidi Ricks, the dementia program coordinator at FamilyMeans, in the organization’s caregiving and aging section.
Community Connection: Nature Memories is a partnership between FamilyMeans, which is based in Stillwater, and the Belwin Conservancy. The two organizations join hands for the month of July in Afton. Each week, people with early-stage dementia gathered to reminisce and be immersed in the enigmas of nature.
The age of participants has ranged from 56 to 89 — a multigenerational community that laughs “about the fact that we can’t remember something,” Ricks said. “We’re like, ‘Well, I don’t remember it, either.’”
It’s a chance for the participants to “go back in their brains and grab hold of something that was really important to them. For the short time they’re with us, and depending on the stage of the disease they are at, they can hang onto that a little bit longer,” said Lynette Anderson, Belwin’s interpretive naturalist and restoration specialist.
Nature Memories fights the stigma that claims individuals with memory loss “can’t learn,” Ricks said. It also offers a weekly time of respite for caregivers, who can entrust their “care receivers” to the folks at FamilyMeans and Belwin.
On July 16, participants of Nature Memories enjoyed a ride on a tractor-pulled wagon dubbed the Bison Buggy. Anderson served as driver and guide. Everyone watched a herd of 27 female bison roaming the conservancy’s 150 acres of tallgrass prairie. Belwin partnered with Wisconsin-based Northstar Bison, which got the animals from Saskatchewan.
Anderson explained the bison’s Minnesota history and the traits of the prairie. (In the 19th century, the U.S. Army slaughtered bison to starve Native Americans.)