Each year Nature Walk volunteers engage with an estimated 250,000 visitors, most of them younger children, role modeling the idea that caring about conservation is cool
Wally Hlavac, a conservation biology major at the University of Minnesota, spent his summer traipsing across Madagascar, doing field surveys of the island’s birds, butterflies, and lemurs. He credits his time as a Como Nature Walk volunteer with helping him take the first step.
Hlavac was a summer camper at Como several years ago when he encountered his first Nature Walk volunteer, one of 50-some teens recruited each spring and summer to help bring Como’s animal and plant collections a little closer to Como’s nearly two million annual visitors. “I think he came in to show us a rabbit, and I decided that was something I really wanted to do, too,” says Hlavac, who applied and was accepted into the selective program when he was in ninth grade.
Through Nature Walk, teens are provided training on a variety of Como’s conservation themes, from the rainforest and reptiles, to beneficial bugs and plants, that they go on to share with Como visitors at interpretive stations arrayed around Como’s grounds. “It was the first time in my life that I got to teach people about conservation and concepts that I’m really passionate about,” Hlavac says.
The program, which includes professional development training, also pushed him to develop greater confidence and public speaking skills. “I was a really awkward kid, but being able to go to Como and talk to people, and answer their questions was really great for me,” he says. “It motivated me to try hard, and get Como visitors engaged, because those encounters felt really good.” Each year, in fact, Nature Walk volunteers engage with an estimated 250,000 visitors, most of them younger children, role modeling the idea that caring about conservation is cool.
After a pause during the pandemic, Como’s Nature Walk program was back at full power this summer, with a full complement of teen volunteers on campus sharing their insights on the smallest insects and the tallest giraffes. While not every teen will go on to pursue careers in conservation, Hlavac says there’s no doubt the experience helped him recognize that protecting the natural world could be his calling.
“I think the overall curriculum of Nature Walk really does inspire a love for natural science in any capacity, and learning more about animals and plants and being able to share that with people was really exciting,” he says. “I know it really cemented conservation in my mind as something I want to continue doing.”
This year, your support for Como Friends made it possible to invest in Como’s Nature Walk program with the hiring of Maddie Becker to fill a new assistant role.“Working with Nature Walk has been a fantastic experience. The kids have worked hard this summer, and it’s been so uplifting to help foster an environment where they’ve not only been so welcoming and enthusiastic with the guests that visit their carts, but also in their relationships with each other. Each day they express so much joy for life and the natural world that I am left with nothing but immense hope for our future.”