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WOLF School Celebrates 37 Years of Transforming Outdoor Education

Anniversary Celebration Set for March 20–22, 2026, at Camp Monte Toyon

PRESS RELEASE APTOS, Calif., March 11, 2026 /PRNewswire/

The Web of Life Field (WOLF) School is proud to celebrate its 37th anniversary, marking more than three decades of immersive, field-based science education that has impacted generations of students across California.

WOLF School provides outdoor experiences that give students the opportunity to gain knowledge, awareness, and respect for their environment, their community, and themselves, creating lifelong learners and global stewards.

WOLF School provides outdoor experiences that give students the opportunity to gain knowledge, awareness, and respect for their environment, their community, and themselves, creating lifelong learners and global stewards.

Founded in 1989 by Aptos native Randy Widera, WOLF School began with a simple but powerful vision: to connect young people to the natural world through hands-on, outdoor learning experiences that awaken curiosity and stewardship. What started as a single program at Camp Monte Toyon has grown into a multi-campus organization serving more than 12,000 students annually through its four residential campuses and its coastal marine science initiative, Camp SEA Lab.

A Vision Rooted in Connection

Widera originally launched the program as Science and Environmental Adventures in Learning (SEAL School), inspired by his work in environmental education and mentors in the outdoor school movement. Early on, the program merged with United Camps, Conferences & Retreats (UCCR) becoming the WOLF School, a name reflecting the ecological "web of life" and the belief that students thrive when they understand their place within the interconnected systems of nature and community.

Reflecting on the milestone, Widera shared:

When I think back to those first days at Monte Toyon, I remember standing in the redwoods hoping that we could create something that mattered in children's lives. What I could never have imagined was the extraordinary community that would rise up around that vision.

WOLF School was never built by one person. It was built by passionate naturalists who poured their hearts into every lesson, by teachers who trusted us with their students, by staff who stayed up late comforting homesick kids, by kitchen teams who made camp feel like home, and by administrators and board members who believed in the long game.

For 37 years, it has been thousands of small, loving acts: a counselor remembering a child's name, a teacher encouraging a shy student to try, a staff member noticing when someone needed to be seen. These acts are what have made WOLF School what it is. I feel nothing but gratitude. Watching students step into the forest uncertain and leave confident, connected, and proud has been one of the deepest joys of my life. The real legacy of WOLF School belongs to the people who showed up, week by week and year after year, to make it possible.

Leadership, Growth, and the Sea

For the past 25 years, WOLF School has been led by Director Heather Butler, who succeeded Widera and guided the organization through significant growth, innovation, and resilience.

"WOLF School has always been about more than outdoor education," Butler said. "It's about helping students feel seen, capable, and connected to nature, to each other, and to themselves. Over the last quarter century, we've expanded our programs while staying grounded in the core belief that belonging is the foundation of learning."

In 2020, Butler oversaw the formal merger of WOLF School with Camp SEA Lab, bringing together forest and marine science education under a single unified vision.

Camp SEA Lab's roots stretch back to 1997, when a group of local teachers, scientists, and resource managers from marine science and education organizations around Monterey Bay came together to address a need for stronger marine science education in local schools. They developed a plan for a residential marine science program that would capitalize on the region's unique natural and institutional resources.

Supported by broad-based community advocacy and seed funding from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation, California Sea Grant, and the California Coastal Commission, Camp SEA Lab launched its first one-week pilot camp in the summer of 2000. Built on collaboration and regional partnership, the marine science program quickly became a respected leader in hands-on marine science education.

The 2020 merger strengthened both organizations, expanding access for students by creating a seamless educational arc from redwood forest ecosystems to the living laboratory of Monterey Bay.

37th Anniversary Celebration

To honor this milestone, WOLF School will host a 37th Anniversary Celebration March 20–22, 2026, at Camp Monte Toyon, where the program first began. The weekend will bring together alumni, educators, former staff, families, and community partners to celebrate the school's legacy and future.

A special highlight of the celebration will be the debut of Bertram J. Chatham's new book, Art of the Welcome: A Practical Guide to Helping Kids Feel Safe, Seen, and at Home at Camp. Chatham's work on the power of intentional welcoming has long inspired WOLF School's approach to building community and belonging.

In Chapter 1, Chatham writes:

"Every child who arrives at camp is carrying an entire universe inside them. Dreams and fears in equal measure."

The philosophy described in Art of the Welcome reflects a value that has been embedded in WOLF School since its early years - that the first moments of arrival can shape a child's entire experience of growth, confidence, and belonging.

A Legacy of Impact

Over 37 years, WOLF School has served hundreds of thousands of students — many of whom now send their own children to experience the same transformative week in the redwoods or along the coast. Teachers consistently report increases in student engagement, collaboration, and environmental literacy following participation.

As WOLF School looks toward the future, its mission remains as vital as ever: to nurture scientific curiosity, resilience, and stewardship in the next generation.

For more information about WOLF School programs or to donate to support building respect, appreciation, and stewardship within the web of life, visit www.wolfschool.org.

Media Contact: 
Name: Heather Butler
Title: Director WOLF School
Mobile: 831/431-0669
Email: hbutler@wolfschool.org

SOURCE WOLF School

What's Up Wolf School?

What's Up Wolf School?

We have big announcements for school aged kids near Aptos and Livermore! This week the Web of Life (WOLF) Field School is busy preparing for our new Outdoor Learning In-Person Program starting at the end of August at both Monte Toyon Camp and Camp Arroyo. We are excited to invite small, socially distant, consistent groups of 12 or fewer students to experience our outdoor classroom.

WOLF School is Adapting and Changing!

Just like our natural world, WOLF School is making some long term changes and adapting to its new circumstances. Here's a brief update for those who want to see how the school, the naturalist teachers, and our admin staff are faring. We miss you, and look forward to seeing you at a program or online as soon as it is safe and possible! 

WOLF Office Moved
The WOLF School moved its administrative office in Aptos last week (May 31) as a result of the covid-19 shelter in place. Without schools and students to serve, we have gone into hibernation until we can get our kids and naturalists back to learning science in the woods, at the seashore, and in the mountains. 

We are grateful for the opportunity to move some of our administration back to our Monte Toyon home site in Aptos, where our office was located from 1998-2012. We love Monte Toyon! Some admin staff will work from home offices until further notice.

Latest News
Most naturalist teachers and program directors were furloughed in March when schools closed, but when UCCR/WOLF received the 8 week Small Business Loan, many were able to return to work and have been doing a great job of developing curriculum, editing our media, creating virtual lessons, and helping get everything ready for when schools reopen and kids can return to outdoor science school. Outdoor science school reopening is our highest priority.

Summer Day Camps
Next week, WOLF School will pilot virtual (online) specialty summer camps, with the intent to keep bringing our mission of "Building respect, appreciation, and stewardship within the web of life" to kids even while sheltering in place. Our summer camp goal, based on current county health and CDC regulations, is to start day camp (in real life, not just virtual) at Monte Toyon in early July, although this may change. We may follow up with additional programs at Camp Arroyo, our site in Livermore, CA. Plans continue to evolve.

WOLF Science Camp Next Year
We are in contact with our attending school teachers who remain strongly committed to getting their students back to camp and learning science, leadership, and connecting to the web of life. The state of education and the world has everyone unsure how school will proceed, so we are waiting and planning the best ways to support our classroom teachers and their students so they can come to camp. 

Current Projects
Aside from delivering summer day camp to kids, our priority now is to fundraise for program support and to address future student needs. We are also committed to updating our safety protocols, curriculum, and program expectations so that when students return to WOLF, they will get the best possible outdoor education experience. We will continue to work on this until our students come back.

Thank YOU!
If you have skills, time, or funds you would like to share, please get in contact with Heather, the WOLF School Director to talk about your interests.