smokey bear reading challenge
Only YOU can pick up a book: Smokey Bear Reading Challenge guides young readers to learn more about the environment, forestry and more
Smokey Bear, the iconic figure of wildfire prevention, is celebrating his 80th birthday on Aug. 9.
A central element of the celebration is the Smokey Bear Reading Challenge that runs through Nov. 28. It is aimed at youths age 4 through 10, though it is open to all ages.
The challenge promotes Smokey Bear鈥檚 familiar message 鈥 鈥淥nly YOU Can Prevent Wildfires鈥 鈥 as well as guides young readers to learn more about such issues as the environment, natural resources careers and forestry.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a rather broad field (of subjects),鈥 said Kelly McCabe, youth services coordinator for the State Library, which is partnering with the U.S. Forest Service to offer the challenge in New Mexico.
The website explains to parents and guardians that their youngsters may enroll in the challenge at participating public libraries.
Ask a librarian to get you started by downloading a printable challenge log in a digital tool kit.
The tool kit has access to a Smokey storybook, posters, bookmarks, stickers, coloring sheets and printable prizes. The challenge can also be run through the online Beanstack platform.
If your local library isn鈥檛 participating in the challenge, then you may use the Individual Enrollment Page on the related website, .
This website also has a link to the downloadable printed challenge log.
Both sites have links to fire prevention how-tos and to a highlighted Smokey鈥檚 Reading List.
The list contains 34 suggested books for readers. These are some of the books on Smokey鈥檚 list:
- 鈥淲hy Would Anyone Cut a Tree Down?鈥 by Roberta Burzynski. Some children are unaware that in order to reduce tree hazards, to protect other trees or to get wood, it is necessary to cut trees.
- 鈥淭he Hike鈥 by Alison Farrell. Three intrepid female explorers are in their local forest. They get lost and use maps to find their way out. En route, they draw sketches of wildlife, spot deer tracks and see a deer before it is startled and disappears.
- 鈥淟isten to the Language of the Trees: A Story of How Forests Communicate Underground鈥 by Tera Kelley. It is about the connection and communication that runs below the surface between trees in the forest.
- 鈥淏ecause of an Acorn鈥 by Lola M. Schaefer. Learn how every tree, flower, plant and animal are linked to one another in spiraling circles of life.
- 鈥淎 Home on the Prairie鈥 by David C. Lion. This book describes the main environmental features of the prairie and the types of animals living there, including rattlesnakes, burrowing owls and bison.
- 鈥淪mokejumpers One to Ten鈥 by Chris L. Demarest. Follow smokejumpers, highly-trained airborne firefighters, as they parachute into remote areas to stop wildland and forest fires, and save lives.
- 鈥淎ll About Wildfires: Discovering How They Spark, Burn, and Spread鈥 by Alessandra Potenza. The book includes a hands-on activity, a timeline, photographs and diagrams. And it explains how specially trained firefighters fight the flames.
- 鈥淣ational Geographic Kids: Wildfires鈥 by Kathy Furgang. Learn all about wildfires 鈥 how they happen, when they are dangerous and why controlled fires are important.
The website also retells Smokey Bear鈥檚 story. As a bear cub, he was spotted wandering alone near a fire line in the Capitan Mountains of southern New Mexico. The orphaned cub took refuge from the fire in a tree, his paws and hind legs badly burned. He was rescued and flown to Santa Fe for treatment and bandaging.
The story made national news. Smokey spent most of his life at the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. He is buried at Smokey Bear Historical Park in Capitan.
Smokey鈥檚 wildfire prevention message is still valid. Just last month, two devastating wildfires started in southern New Mexico, the South Fork Fire near Ruidoso, and the Salt Fire west of Mescalero. Two people were killed, more than 25,000 acres destroyed and some 1,000 structures burned in the fires that started June 17.