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Thursday, May 3, 2018

Students Write - Prof. Martin's Class: Ricky

You Can Lead A Horse to Water...
by Ricky Treadway
Pedernales Falls State Park

Since I was a small child, the outdoors soothed me. I could return home from a terrible day at school, drop my bags at the front porch and just disappear in the woods until just before dark. It was a place I could be myself and find peace and quiet amongst my usually hectic days. During our library visits in English, I would check out every book I could on the animals from my area. When I read all those, I would ask for more.
My quest for knowledge of the world around me couldn’t be sated enough as a child. When I look at where I am now, I am disappointed and taken aback at the blatant disregard for simple knowledge that lies quite literally at our fingertips. I found everything I needed to know in an Encyclopedia Britannica as a child where as now, both children and adults fail to learn even the basic information before word vomiting on a social media post or talking to their neighbor about what they saw on Fox News.
Educating others on the outside world around them has become a passion. Since moving to Texas in 2010, I’ve come to realize that despite the neighborhoods like mine (Spring Trails) being advertised as “Bringing you close to nature…” the residents don’t understand that you can’t pick what parts of nature you get to see. You can’t expect to live in a home that borders a creek or patch of trees to be barren of all wildlife except the occasional bird.
After witnessing this mentality throughout Spring Trails, I began to do something about it. I took it upon myself to post on Nextdoor, Facebook and other social media outlets about what you can find amongst our homes and yards here. I started educating people on what a Copperhead actually looks like and how to keep them out of your yard. Many of the neighbors still believed that mothballs worked without realizing that the EPA regulations specifically state that it’s illegal to place them outside in the open. It poisons animals, children and our groundwater, not to mention, it doesn’t deter snakes because they don’t smell the mothballs like we do.
After two years of offering classes and services to help people learn, I myself have learned a valuable lesson. The old adages, “You can lead a horse to water, but you can’t make it drink” and “Can’t teach an old dog new tricks” rings truer than ever when it comes to offering free education. Some people thrive off of grandpa’s old stories of being chased by a nest of Cottonmouth, Milk snakes drinking from a cow’s udder ,and Coachwhip snakes rolling themselves like a wheel to escape predators. They never stop to think about how outlandish they sound or how hard it is to actually prove any of those are real when the accurate information is right in your pocket.
  
Birthday party educational program

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