Junior Naturalists

Ages 6–8

Curious and energetic, Junior Naturalists dive deeper into the natural world with hands-on exploration and discovery. These 90-minute outdoor sessions help children build confidence in nature while learning how forests, water, and wildlife are all connected in northern Michigan.

Sessions run on Tuesdays in the Petoskey/Harbor Springs area.

Tree Week at McCune — June 30

Northern Michigan’s forests are made of layers — a whole stacked neighborhood of plants and animals from the canopy down to the forest floor. This week, Junior Naturalists learn to read the forest: who lives where, how the layers depend on each other, and what it takes to keep a woodland thriving.

Come find out what’s really going on inside the woods. Dress for a full morning outside.

Every stream and pond tells a story about the land around it. This week, Junior Naturalists follow the water, tracing where it comes from, where it’s going, and what it picks up along the way.

Come ready to get your feet wet and learn to read what the water is telling us. Bring shoes you’re okay getting muddy.

Summer is one of the best times to watch birds, with young ones just learning their way in the world and the air full of activity. This week, Junior Naturalists explore how different beak shapes and body parts help birds live in different places. What a bird needs tells you a lot about where it belongs.

Bring your curiosity and dress for a day in the field.

Bugs outnumber every other animal on earth, and in a Northern Michigan summer that’s easy to believe. This week, Junior Naturalists find out what they’re all actually doing out there: pollinating, decomposing, hunting, hiding. Once you start looking, the insect world is endlessly surprising.

Dress for tall grass and bring shoes you don’t mind getting muddy.

Location: Goodhart Robinson Rd

Plants can’t walk, but their seeds travel everywhere: by wind, by water, by animal, and by some very clever tricks. This week, Junior Naturalists explore how Northern Michigan’s plants spread across the landscape and what all those summer berries and fruits are really about. There’s a whole strategy hiding in every trailside thicket.

Come ready to get your hands on things and dress for a day on the trail.

Soil isn’t just dirt. It’s a living system packed with creatures and connections we’re only beginning to understand. This week, Junior Naturalists dig into the forest floor, explore how things decompose and become new again, and learn about the fungal threads that quietly connect trees underground. The forest is far more interconnected than it looks.

Dress for digging and wear shoes you’re comfortable getting muddy.

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