Teen Scene

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Teen Scene FALL 2010

A publication by girls and for girls age 11 and older

Geeking out’s never been so cool! Fall 2010

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Teen Scene FALL 2010

CONTENTS 3 Connecting in cyberspace 4 Cookie sellers celebrate 6 Camp = summer of fun 8 Girls think geek 10 Discovering Hamp Hut 12 G irls going places 14 Hunger for travel Get published! If you are a Girl Scout age 11 or older, Teen Scene is the place to share your stories. This magazine is written by

Reach for the Peak camping competition Sept. 10-12 Join troops and groups of girls from across the state at Sky High Ranch for a weekend of fun and competition during the annual Reach for the Peak. Show off your campsite, cooking, first aid, knot-tying and lashing skills and more. Troops are awarded the Marmot, Big Horn Sheep, Eagle or Peak Award for their efforts. Juliettes are welcome to form teams or join others for the event. Adults are needed as judges. The $12 fee includes a patch and awards.

girls, for girls, so get in on the action

Learn more at www.girlscoutsofcolorado.org > Major Events > Reach for the Peak.

now! Teen Scene is published twice

Online membership registration coming soon!

yearly and mailed to all registered Girl Scouts ages 11 and older in Colorado. Girl voices must be heard! Write about your experiences on a destination or at camp. Why did you join Girl Scouts and why do you stick with it? Tell us about a community service project you worked on or an award or badge

Girl Scouts of Colorado is launching online membership registration this fall. Be sure to check our website at www.girlscoutsofcolorado.org > Join Us > Become a Member to learn how to renew your national membership online.

Be a media star and share your stories! We know older Girl Scouts have great stories to share and we want you to be a media star in your community. Share the experiences you’re gaining through Girl Scouts with your community. Learn more at www.girlscoutsofcolorado.org > News > Share your Girl Scout stories > Be a Girl Scout Newsmaker.

you earned.

Check out our new look, then send us your sketches

Send submissions to Kristin Hamm

Flipping through this edition of Teen Scene, you’ll notice a fresh look as the result of a nationwide rebranding of Girl Scouts. To enhance this updated design, we’d like to include your sketches and drawings in upcoming publications and other printed materials. You don’t have to be an artist. Even your doodles might make great graphics. We’re looking for black ink or pencil on paper; no colored drawings please. Send your sketches to Wendy Kent, art director, Girl Scouts of Colorado, 400 S. Broadway, Denver, CO 80209. If you have questions, email Wendy at wendy.kent@gscolorado.org.

at kristin.hamm@gscolorado.org. We want to grow the girl presence on our website, so don’t wait for the next Teen Scene, submit your story today and be featured at www.girlscoutsofcolorado.org!

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Girl Scout Gab

Teen Scene


Girl Scout connections in cyberspace Foray into virtual pathway proves successful My name is Cecily Begano, and I am an 8th grade student in Southern Colorado. I have a busy lifestyle because I am a cheerleader, I am in student council and now I also belong to the first Virtual Troop in Girl Scouts of Colorado! Our troop began in January 2010. Our troop leader is great because she has really good ideas for fun activities to help us earn badges online and always sends us surveys and polls to make sure that we have a lot of input on what our troop does. I love being a part of the Virtual Troop because I can connect safely with Girl Scouts in Colorado who live in different places. I have also made good friendships with girls I would have never met without this opportunity. In the Virtual Troop, we can chat with each other, learn about each other’s hobbies, favorite music, books and everything you would learn about if you were actually there in person.

I am excited to get the chance to meet my new friends in my troop for the first time in person at a campout! How thrilling it will be to actually meet my friends, who I have gotten to know, in person after these past few months! I am sure we will be up all night talking and having girl time. I also had the opportunity to attend the Geek Squad Summer Academy recently, and was that FUN! The Geek Squad Summer Academy taught me how to be safe on the Internet, how to build a computer, how to create music and how to shoot movies. All of this new information will help me to communicate in a more efficient and cool way when connecting with my new friends through the Virtual Troop! I can’t wait to experience future opportunities through Girl Scouts of Colorado and this new Virtual Troop!

Cecily is 13 years old and attends Trinidad Middle School in Trinidad as an 8th grader. She has been a Girl Scout for nine years. She earned her Girl Scout Bronze Award with a project focusing on bullying prevention and earned her Silver Award with a project focused on animal welfare. She also enjoys making videos, singing, choreographing dance routines, traveling, talking on the phone and spending time with her family, friends and her dog. 3


Something to

CELEBRATE Selling more than 750 packages of cookies is no easy task and the Girl Scouts who reached this milestone had the chance to celebrate their success at top-seller events around the state in June. In all, 376 girls passed the 750-plus package mark and many of them sold many more packages of cookies. On June 5, about 40 top sellers in the Pikes Peak region enjoyed an event at the Flying W Ranch. Also on June 5, in Durango, 10 top sellers enjoyed dinner and a show at Bar-D. Another Top Seller Event took place at the Candlelight Dinner Theater at Johnson’s Corner on June 6. The popular cookie dinner returned to the Denver area on June 12 and welcomed a crowd of 125 girls and their guests to the Marriott Denver Tech Center. Girl Scouts on the Western Slope held a camping weekend for top sellers at the Colorado National Monument June 11-12. On June 29, four top sellers joined 11 others from the Sterling area and participated in a Ropes Course event at Northeastern Junior College.

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Top-sellers share the secrets of their cookie success What is your name? Falynne Weinke Where are you from? Grand Junction How many packages of cookies did you sell? 2,758 What do you like about selling cookies? Earning money for my troop so that we can go on trips. If you were a Girl Scout Cookie, what would you be and why? A Tagalog. The Tagalog is a classic, layers contributing to and compressed to an interesting whole. What is the funniest or coolest thing that’s happened to you while selling cookies? The funniest thing was the man that picked up a box of Thin Mints and said “I’m glad to see they still come in a single serve package.” I don’t understand how someone could eat a whole box in one sitting but based on customer comments it must happen a lot. Dressing up in cookie cases at one of our booth sales was also very fun (and sold quite a few cookies).

What is your name? Kaete Erickson Where are you from? Fruita How many packages cookies did you sell? 3,546 What do you like about selling cookies? Seeing the people. Getting excited about selling cookies. Eating cookies!

How were you able to sell a lot of cookies? My mom and I walked door to door from early in the morning until evening during presales (we rang thousands of door bells) and then I spent over 100 hours at booth sales. Lots of hard work! Did you have any unique selling techniques? Yes. Each year I develop what my mom calls an “elevator talk” to catch the attention of a prospective customer and try and interest them in the new cookie of the year. This year’s was “Our new cookie this year is the Thank You Berry Munch. It has dried cranberries and white chocolate chips. It is a GREAT coffee and tea cookie!” What have you been able to do through Girl Scouts with your proceeds from cookies? Individually I’ve gone to several camps this summer (and more to come) and my troop will be leaving on trips soon to Glenwood Springs and Great Sand Dunes and Arches National Parks. Anything else you’d like to share about your 2010 cookie sale? I earned $335 in Cookie Credits and I am very proud of being able to send myself to camp.

How were you able to sell a lot of cookies? I’ve been selling cookies for 7 years and I have a route and several people I sell to every year. They know who I am and I love to talk to each customer and get to know them. I also attended a whole lot of booth sales.

If you were a Girl Scout Cookie, what would you be and why? I would be the Trefoil because I don’t care for trefoils so much and I wouldn’t like to be eaten.

What have you been able to do through Girl Scouts with your proceeds from cookies? My troop does a lot of things throughout the year like camping and sleepovers and stargazing. I use the Cookie Credits that I earn to go to Colorado Springs Wild Nights trip, quilting, Twilight and several more programs that the council puts on.

What is the funniest or coolest thing that’s happened to you while selling cookies? The coolest thing is when a customer buys a box of cookies and gives the cookies to me.

Anything else you’d like to share about your 2010 cookie sale? I would like for every girl to have a chance to sell Girl Scout Cookies and be in Girl Scouts because it’s fun!

Fall 2010

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e bly th l, a b o r al sp P IC” i cribe them E “ , p des cam ad, cribe can’t even and D s e m d o M I to Dear d use zing things l u o c I a he g in t words so many am a e t h t g n l yi Of al e’ve done lly pla ally one a i c W e p . ne n, es . Norm e, but it u g f n i best o are a few. y p l b m bl wa edi re desira ed to, s incr t part is s ’ n t e i but he v l e l bes ? We uppos n, or e g s u h n f i t s e ’ e t o t b b i u can u an o o e o y c r t d o d n e f n e a o e e n b na Ever b ver without ver in a ca ppens way back i lling the d e l e a o l w h pu pu g Ho ping being tippin urse, o e water. expect tip e c r h ’ t f u o n O he r. sy n’t ially w s sinking a er the wate c would e p s und is. E th it. tart r s e y o l b l e w l a o l had y e i n l r otal ually nd st he ca t t t a c s n y ’ a e t a i h e after or w the w , but g day w l n d l s i r e a v a n a h p d e u le can be t on W osed to be stand nd u n i b k , c y r p a ired, a e ba p t n i u s l g s e l a a o e m n re re ca wer ly i We we er about th . ential lanned. We t s u s o e t really come p. Af ime is t all as p t e e t ’ e w n l e d s g i m n d ki a em So, selors ’t go let th re thin nswered. n n e u e d w i o w d c e o w r a s It e ou tired ut and but no one te. The not some! r but e o r u e o e w h m o r o n n rs c o a unselo till hadn’t nselors’ do ansom ng all our about o r c a r u d s u n ri wo rs the co pty beds a e had to b ck our we kne r counselo n o d m w e ou to pa cooks, and knock w we saw e d d e e a h p W hours p . e W he dna leave windo sfree. d we know t een ki i cks b n n I d should through the a t i h a ut bri d s p m r e e l o d h l t a t t e g h i Lookin t our couns food, rescue nd tents. L say it e o h o g t t d t a a s n e h s a g d said t Needle here our e and pplies get the foo . m u y o s r r c t a h g got t and ng to e had to c o , e l f overni w f o u n t s us, so e s w h p g W l t t n i e h . a k h g e h i a t e t n t fr s n’ r over of ou e container up to Innis could make a t d s n e a t t o h and h not of t in pr e way f car g s l h t m u t o n o o g e l t h l t t t al bo ya he oa f fun; in the ible to carr e-corded t od, pitch t o one of s y d l n a o r e o r o f g l o n u s he ng was h were b ire, cook t ampout wa For one thi s r o l f c e . to he couns o light the ed it ves. T t l n e a s t w r u we we had ntirely by o e way h t y e l t r shelte g went exac hin everyt 6

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the tents had s takes so we sp ent some time ch blowing away in asing the tents the wind, before that were we put our pack them. We also s and sleeping forgot to get bags into toilet paper and go back and get tw in e s o them. The only two of us had places that wer to had lots of tree e fl a t enough to pit roots in them, ch tents so we had lots backs at night. of roots stickin There were a fe g into our w minor catastr being dropped ophes like someo in the fire, and ne’s dessert someone’s band the end, we had a na ca tc hing on fire. Bu a great time. t, in We spend most of our time out and about doin we do have CIT g fun and craz and WIT trainin y things; g also. It’s rea learn about ho lly interesting w to be the bes and we get to t counselor po we had to order ssible. We had 15 items in a li one activity whe st from greate re would be fairly st to least imp easy except ther o rt ance. This e was a twist; our forehead. A each of us had ll the different a label on labels said eith me,” “obey me,” er “laugh at me, “pity me,” “igno ” “agree with re me” or “smile to treat each o on me.” We were ther according all supposed to what was on interesting to s our forehead. It ee what it did was really to our group’s dynamics. This is easily th e MOST fun I have ever had a t camp. I have to go now! Love, Your daughter

The group of Counselorsin-Training and Wranglersin-Training attending a session at Sky High Ranch in late June penned this letter together. They have been Girl Scouts all their lives and they call Sky High Ranch their home. They all aspire to be camp counselors some day to share the positive experiences they’ve enjoyed!

Fall 2010

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Girls think

GEEK Summer Academy gives Girl Scouts new passion for technology

Eighty eager girls, ages 11 to 14, filled several rooms at The University of Denver for a week at the end of June. The girls — all Girl Scouts — took high-tech summer camp to a whole new level. They built computers, shot and edited videos, created original tunes and blew off steam with high-tech recreational pursuits such as digital scavenger hunts, Wii games, Dance Off and Band Hero competitions. The energy was palpable as they shouted out answers and challenged their instructors. The first-ever Geek Squad Summer Academy in Denver gave Girl Scouts a chance to raise their technology IQ, spark their creative passions and do something big with their summer vacation.

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I enjoyed doing videos. We are shooting small videos and will make it into something big at the end. Now I know how to make a movie.

I thought this would be difficult as I had never done it before. But it’s easy. Jamie Suto, 13, of Fort Collins

Cecily Begano, 13, of Trinidad

I liked doing the hands-on things like seeing the parts inside a computer, making my own music, videos and photos. I can now help my dad. He is big into computers. I will now understand what he is doing and maybe help him build a computer. Naomi Morgan, 12, of Aurora

My creation is a mix of pop and country. Maybe I can write songs for TV or something like that one day? Liz Schmidt, 12, of Parker

Fall 2010

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Hamp Hut

a Colorado gem

Garden of the Gods provides backdrop for spectacular fun Cadette Troop 1001 had a blast spending the weekend at Hamp Hut in the Garden of the Gods in Colorado Springs on Feb. 5-7. The 11 sixth-graders from Wheat Ridge did lots of hiking through the beautiful Garden of the Gods and took a special tour of the Cave of the Winds. The girls planned and prepared all their meals and kept the adult leaders very entertained. They recommend a stay at Hamp Hut for other Colorado troops...it was really cool!

“I had a gre at time sta ying at Ham We danced p Hut. We a all night an ll had a GR d hung out. EAT time t Thanks for here. letting us s tay!� -Kaitly n Rice

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“Hamp Hut was so great! The backyard was so beautiful. We went to Cave of the Winds and took a tour. That was my favorite part of my visit to Garden of the Gods. Thank you for letting us stay at Hamp Hut.” -Simone LeBaron “I really enjo extreme yed spending th e weeke ly nd cool beca fun. I would rec ommend at Hamp Hut! use we Playing o lear to and visit utside w there ag ned responsibilit anyone that the as y visit th ain. Than y and te ere. It w k you.” amwork . I would Leah Do as nnelly love to g o

derful cal trip with won gi a m a s a w s od e Garden of the G to learn about th n fu nd a g “Our trip to the in ir sp owe d. It was very in back!” -Sarah L go to ve lo scenery all aroun ld ou w lot of fun and I rocks. It was a

“I had a lot of fun! I loved the ‘backyard’ with the beautiful surroundings of rock formations. It was a great experience…a oncein-a-lifetime thing. I will always remember our trip to Hamp Hut.” -Lindsey Thorsheim

“I think that Hamp Hut in the Garden of the Gods, Colorado, was one of the most fun experiences I’ve ever had as a Girl Scout. All the trips I’ve ever been on could never compare to my trip to Hamp Hut. The Garden of the Gods had beautiful scenery. Cooking our own food and looking at amazing rock formations was awesome.” -Ashley Willmeng

The girls of Troop 1001 were 6th graders at Prospect Valley Elementary School in Wheat Ridge at the time of this trip. They’re now in middle school at Everitt and Manning middle schools. Fall 2010

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Girl Scout alumna trains for Foreign Service

Jessie Mosnik was a Girl Scout in Northern Colorado for 15 years, and in that time attended a destination at Penn State and planned many events for fellow Girl Scouts. She became a lifetime member of Girl Scouts of the USA, and has volunteered as a delegate to the 2005 National Council Session in Atlanta and a volunteer trainer. Her Foreign Service training was in progress at the time this publication went to press. Watch for updates on the website and in future editions of Teen Scene.

In the last year or so since I graduated college, I’ve traveled a lot, including spending a month in Spain learning to teach English. In February, I started a job at J.D. Power and Associates, using my degree for a computational linguistics job. It was really interesting to work in a field full of engineers, but my team was actually four females and only one male! The lifelong Girl Scout in me got a kick out of that, since I’m sure, in this field especially, that hasn’t always been the case! As much as I’ve enjoyed the last few months, I just heard back from the State Department about a job I applied for last year. I have been accepted as a Foreign Service Office Management Specialist, and my training begins in late June (yes, this year!). I can’t believe everything is happening so fast! I won’t find out where I will be assigned until three weeks into training, but I will most likely be overseas, anywhere we have an embassy or consulate, so that’s a lot of possibilities! I just want to thank everyone who was a role model to me in Girl Scouts throughout the years. I really think the leadership I learned through my years of Girl Scouting has made me the strong, courageous and ambitious woman I am today. Wherever I am posted, I hope to track down a Girl Scout/ Girl Guide troop somewhere in the area to keep volunteering, because I think it’s important. Also, I will be happy to be a pen pal to older girls, or any troops who might be learning about the area I will be in. I have a travel blog that I have started, with some of my latest adventures already documented, and I will be updating it with my experiences overseas. Feel free to pass on the link to whoever would be interested (I promise to keep it family/girl friendly). www.jessietravels.blogspot.com

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High expectations nurtured in Girl Scouting leads to computing award

Kirsten Lang, a member of Troop 876 and a sophomore at Overland High School in Aurora, was selected in June to receive a National Center for Women and Information Technology (NCWIT) Award for Aspirations in Computing. Kirsten is interested in robotics, computer software engineering and video game programming. She served as the Freshman Representative in Student Council and is working with her Girl Scout troop to earn the Silver Award by volunteering to organize the annual unit camping trip.

I have always held high expectations for myself, whether it is in sports or academics, and because of this, I have been successful at most of the things I attempt. Having high expectations for yourself isn’t something that can be achieved overnight; it is something that is taught and shown through the examples of others around you. I have had the privilege to be around people who have made a habit of holding high expectations, not only for themselves, but for me as well. I have met these people in my home, my schools and my extracurricular activities. One of the main activities that has given me a chance to learn about holding high expectations is Girl Scouts. I have been a member of the Girl Scouts since I was in kindergarten as a Daisy. The experiences and opportunities that this program has given me have helped me to grow as a girl and also as a leader. Every day we would say the Girl Scout Promise, promising to live by the Girl Scout Law and as a young girl I would often pride myself in my ability to keep my promises, so I learned the Girl Scout Law. The contents of the Girl Scout Law set a lot of expectations for a kindergartner, but as a Daisy I strived to live by it. Ever since then, committing to the Law has almost become second nature and, believe it or not, doing so has helped me succeed in many ways. Recently, I was given the honor of being an award recipient for the National Center of Women and Information Technology Award for Aspirations in Computing in Colorado. The award required submitting an online application which showed your experience in computing as well as your leadership skills. Being in Girl Scouts not only gave me a big leg up when it came to talking about how I am a leader in the community, but it also helped to prepare me for the application without me realizing it. As I had continued to hold myself to the high expectations of the Girl Scout Law, one of the things I did best was to use my resources wisely. As a result of using my resources wisely, I took advantage of a lot of computing and technological programs offered by my school and school district, which gave me the experience in computing that the awards committee was looking for. As I continue on through my high school career, actively seeking new things to try and succeed in, it will be important to continue holding high expectations for myself. I have many people to thank for helping me to learn about holding high expectations, like my parents and my teachers, and a lot of these people are people whose true names I never learned—they were the counselors at the Girl Scout camps that worked hard to make Girl Scouts an enjoyable learning experience. They helped to shape me into the type of person I am today, and for that I am grateful.

Fall 2010

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Mexico trip leaves troop hungry for more

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TRAVEL Fund-raising efforts serve up Big Apple for second course — India is next on menu By Alex Massey In 2006, our troop decided we would take a trip to the Girl Scout World Center, Our Cabaña, in Mexico in the summer of 2009. To afford the Mexico trip we spent months making jewelry every Sunday. We sold our jewelry whenever we had a chance. During cookie season we spent every weekend at booth sales and sold as many cookies as we possibly could. We also did gift wrapping multiple times and many other money-earning projects. All of our hard work paid off in the end when we finally attained our goal of earning enough money to go to Mexico. As a troop we decided we would like to spend some time in Mexico City in addition to our stay in Cuernavaca (the city where Our Cabaña is located), and when we finally got off the plane in Mexico City, we knew what we had worked for. The Ticalli house (the youth hostel recommended through WAGGGS) was phenomenal! It was our first destination and we slept in bunks, making friends with the manager and workers. We also met our first new friends there; another troop from New Mexico and our tour guides José Luis and Pablo. Our adventure began with visits to countless historical sites, many churches built back in the 1800s made from cement, wood, clay and boasting beautiful stained glass. The love from the Mexico City inhabitants was actually tangible; we felt it emotionally. During the rest of our stay

we went to the pyramids in Teotihuacan, which made me wonder about the possibility of extraterrestrial life. We went on a river ride, and found out the many uses for cactus, and went to the Hard Rock Café, and many more places, meeting tons of new friends along the way. After our three-day stay in Mexico City we took the journey to the World Center, better known to us as Our Cabaña. As we arrived at its big blue doors, volunteers greeted us from England, Vail, Kentucky, El Salvador, Canada and Scotland. The first day was mainly getting to know everyone and adjusting to the humidity. The Cabaña workers took us to more pyramids and to small towns full of silver shops. Street vendors selling trinkets to the tourists inundated us. By the end of our stay we had met three troops from the United States, “wrestled” with some large bugs, saw a scorpion and made some great friends for life. After our trip to Mexico we were hungry for more excitement, so we decided that in the spring of 2010, we would take yet another trip—this time to New York City! Once again we pushed our cookie and magazine sales and sold lots of jewelry. After about a year of hard work we had enough money for the Big Apple! We stayed in an apartment in Manhattan and took the subway everywhere. We went from our small apartment on 25th Street

all the way down to the Bronx, learning the ways of daily life in New York. It’s easy to realize that unless you do this daily grind regularly, it can be challenging and confusing! We went to the Guggenheim Art Museum, won free passes to see “How to Train Your Dragon in 3D,” saw a Broadway play called “Chicago,” went to The Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island, went to the top of both the Empire State Building and the Rockefeller Building and much more. The whole trip was a blast! We were not at all ready when the time came to leave our newfound love. Our troop learned about new cultures, and we saw there was more to life than just in our hometown. We experienced what most people don’t get to, including the intricacies of how the New York subways work and the idiosyncrasies of the people in New York. We grew to appreciate the easy-going manner of Mexico’s people and their hard work ethic. Our next trip will be to the World Center in India in the summer of 2012. Who knew through Girl Scouts this would all one day be possible to do? Alex Massey is a member of Girl Scout Senior Troop 1447 in Parker. She has been a Girl Scout for nine years. In addition to traveling the world with her troop, she enjoys cars, working out and hanging out with family and friends. Fall 2010

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Girl Scouts make their mark with Forever Green Girl Scouts across the state are making a mark on Colorado’s environment through the Girl Scouts Forever Green pilot project. The capstone event “Girl Scouts Go Dark” in April invited girls to educate their school communities about energy consumption during Lights Out lunches and other events. The girls took charge and, through these events and other Forever Green projects, nearly 7,000 people pledged to reduce their energy consumption and another 10,000 were educated about the environment. During Earth Week in April, troops set up informational booths, prepared skits and dances, organized classroom contests to reduce energy use, hung posters to encourage recycling, held an off-the-grid sleepover to stop global warming and more to drive home the point that this is our planet and we must care for it. One troop worked with their school for an entire Lights Out week!

Girls from Troop 2510 of Wheat Ridge perform during “Lights Out Lunch” at Prospect Valley Elementary School. Printed on recycled stock

Not all final reports are in yet, but so far you can see Girl Scouts made a huge impact: Lights were off for 912.5 hours, energy use decreased by 79,307 kWh, 6,591 people pledged to reduce their resource consumption, 10,080 people were educated about the environment, 486 new outdoor plants were planted and 1,322 square feet of new or improved outdoor green space was created. Read more about Forever Green and get involved at www.gsforevergreen.org

This publication is brought to you in part by contributions to the Family Campaign and your participation in product sales.

www.girlscoutsofcolorado.org Pueblo 21 Montebello Road Pueblo, CO 81001 T 719.543.4690 or 1.800.287.9252 F 719.543.4693

Durango 701 Camino del Rio, Suite 315 Durango, CO 81301 T 970.375.7913 F970.375.7916

Grand Junction 580 24 ½ Road Grand Junction, CO 81505 T 970.242.4461 or 1.800.288.0463 F 970.243.9066

Denver 400 S. Broadway Denver, CO 80209-0407 T 303.778.8774 or 1.866.827.7033 F 303.733.6345

Fort Collins 1600 Specht Point Road, Unit 105 Fort Collins, CO 80525 T 970.493.1844 or 1.888.801.1269 F 970.493.6838

Colorado Springs 3535 Parkmoor Village Drive Colorado Springs, CO 80917 T 719.597.8603 or 1.800.748.3343 F 719.597.5986

Girl Scouts of Colorado Service Centers Address Service Requested Girl Scouts of Colorado P.O. Box 9407 Denver, CO 80209-0407

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