Taking Time to Learn About Your Own Community

Bison Days returns next week, which offers all McCook High School students two days to experience new hobbies, professions and skills. 

From the freshmen to the seniors, the students will be venturing out to local businesses to learn everything from baking donuts and cooking pasta to earning a boating license and mastering pickle ball - if pickle ball can ever really be mastered. 

Bison Days was developed several years ago after seeing the program in Cozad. And the Bison Days has turned into a wonderful annual event, which brings students out of the classroom and into the community. McCook Community Foundation Fund has chosen to grant toward the Bison Days every year since its inception because it is truly a unique program and brings young people and adults together in a fun, enriching setting.

Students get to see businesses up close and personal. They get to experience the area’s natural assets by fishing. They learn hobbies that they never knew or existed or that they could even do here.

On the flip side, business owners and other adult volunteers get to interact with students, which might not normally happen. 

After the first year of Bison Days, every one called it a success. Such a success in fact that many adults clamored to have a similar program, where they got to learn more about their community, to learn more about local businesses, to learn more about local opportunities. 

While there isn’t an Adult Bison Days just yet, there are plenty of other opportunities to learn about what is available in your community or about the history of your hometown.

Maybe it visiting a local museum. The High Plains Historical Museum is now open regular hours every day of the week. There have been many changes inside over the past year with many more planned in the near future. They are doing great things to share McCook’s history, so we can learn where we’ve been as we figure out where we are going. 

Buffalo Commons Storytelling and Music Festival traditionally includes a bus-tour with an interesting topic every year. This year the “bus tour” will be a walking tour around downtown McCook to learn about the different artistic endeavors which have developed recently. 

McCook’s 7th graders get to do a Heritage Walking Tour in the spring when it doesn’t snow, rain or get cancelled from Covid, which has happened the past three years. But when it does happen, these kids get to learn what made McCook grow, what made McCook what it is, who made McCook what it is today. They visit the Norris House, Nelson’s boyhood home, the 100-year-old Keystone, MNB Bank, the museum and probably their favorite stop, Sehnert’s Bakery. The other locations may be historically enriching but they can’t compete with a fresh doughnut.

There is McCook’s Heritage Square Walking Tour, which highlights all of the downtown historical locations. Brochures are available at the museum and the Keystone so you have a description to pursue along the walk. 

With new technology, plans are also underway to add video and audio recordings for each location, adding to the information available such interior tours when a site is closed or background on historical figures. 

And if nothing else, go out for a walk. But not just a stroll around the block but rather with an intentionality to really observe your surroundings. Studies have shown that people walk their neighborhoods with the purpose of learning are better connected to their community. These people know where the cracks are in the sidewalks. They know where businesses are located along the route. They know if their parks and playgrounds are being used. 

They want to know more about their community and use walking as a chance to observe and learn what already exists in their hometown, what needs fixed or what is already in place.

So if you really want to get to know your community, grab your spouse or grab a friend and go for a walk. 

And with all these nice days we have been experiencing lately, you don’t have weather as an excuse to not venture outside.

***

On a side note, you can thank me or curse me for this unseasonably nice weather we have experienced this winter. I personally like cross-country skiing, so I have been wishing for snow, which obviously we have not received lately. 

But there was guilt when I went cross-country skiing earlier this season during our lone significant snow but can’t take my husband with me for lack of size 14 ski boots and skis. 

So for his 50th birthday last month, I invested in a set of cross-country skis and boots for him. They are still gathering dust in our garage with nary a flake of snow to be found. So “your welcome” to all those warm-weather lovers. 

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Building Connections in McCook Matters June in McCook will be abuzz with fun events including a Youth Summit, hosted by McCook Community Foundation Fund. Our young people in Youth Change Reaction will host the first Nebraska Community Foundation gathering for youth, which will bring youth from across Nebraska to McCook. While still in the planning stages, our students identified that McCook is great because of connections . Our young people easily recognize how critical this factor is to people attraction, to people retention, and to improve their futures. What I miss most about my high school classroom is connections with students and colleagues. In education, I taught first, second, and sometimes third generations in families. My husband, Greg, and I are not McCook natives, but I eventually knew who was related to whom and usually where the parent(s) were employed. Going to the grocery store meant greetings from students and sometimes their family members. I officially retired from my high school classroom nine years ago in May. When you retire, the most-asked question becomes “What do you do with your time?” I try to maintain those connections and make new ones by belonging. For the past seven years, Sharon Bohling and I have volunteered to help plan and organize Bison Days for our high school students, which took place February 10 and 11. It would not happen without the financial support of McCook Community Foundation Fund, plus the McCook High School, local businesses, and the talented people of Southwest Nebraska who say “yes” when one of us reaches out to ask for the donation of time and talent. I would venture that they allow us to be on the Bison Days’ committee because we both have connections within our community—it’s certainly not our computer savvy. Connections can also solve a problem. Recently, I signed up to help a local family in crisis. My morning plan revolved around delivering my donation at a designated drop-off place. That didn’t work out. Fortunately, I still work with youth in various capacities, so I know that Keri Wilkinson works for Camy Bradley. Keri was an organizer for the family fundraiser, so I walked in Camy’s office hoping to find Keri. She was not there, so Camy and I visited briefly. She knew someone (who I did not know) who could possibly give me further direction. Only in a town with connections are you able to interrupt someone’s business, have her reach out for you using her connections , and offer to keep the donations for me until Keri’s return. Another great example of connecting can be found over coffee. Dee Friehe and I are longtime teacher friends. During a chance meeting at the grocery store a few weeks ago, she shared how she was there following a funeral service and was gathering supplies to deliver supper to the grieving family that night. She also updated me on her group of adults who meet for coffee on Thursdays at Ember’s, which varies from 8-28 depending on the day. She recognized the need for adults moving to McCook or folks just wanting to get out to make connections . Dee’s husband, Mark, also hosts his own group of men who are new(er) to McCook. She regaled me with stories of their Christmas party and other special gatherings. Wanting to call McCook your home is solidified by building connections . Ronda Graff has written about McCook Connects which matches a McCook person with someone new to the community of similar interests. I earned my McCook Connects’ T-shirt welcoming a young family with children. We have since spent many hot summer days sitting on bleachers together cheering on our 4-H horse kids while they show their horses. Warning: I connected them with a “free” new-to-them horse. Be careful connecting with me or you’ll probably own a horse. You do not have to be retired to connect in this community. Volunteering is a surefire way to meet people. McCook has many civic groups looking for new faces. Attend a church here; we have many welcoming congregations. Go to ball games or school concerts, attend concerts in the park, learn a new skill through the college, show up at a Third Thursday event or invite the neighbors for a BBQ. Take your youngsters to story hour or Move and Groove at the library. Go watch an event at the Kiplinger Arena. You can even take it a step further: Make a friend or call a friend and invite him/her to go with you. It is human connection that keeps us healthy and happy. If McCook Community Foundation Fund can help you connect in some meaningful way, please reach out for advice or support. *** While Pam Wolford may be retired, she is just as busy serving on the McCook Community Foundation Fund committee and started a new Learn and Return Scholarship with MCFF, while stepping up to grandparent whenever the call comes in.
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