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Non-profit
PO Box 267, Dixon, NM 87527
Grant Received County Amount
Outdoor Equity Fund 2021 Rio Arriba County $2,775
Outdoor Equity Fund 2022 Rio Arriba County $5,000
Outdoor Equity Fund 2020 Rio Arriba County $2,000
Total Grants Awarded $9,775

We provide a safe outdoor and indoor (when needed) space for children to learn and recreate in a rural area with no afterschool childcare services for families. Much of school time is spent indoors working in classrooms or on computers. The After School Program gives Dixon/Embudo children a chance to get outside and play together after school. First, 15-20 minutes are spent on the school playground. Then, after a walking transfer to the service site (which this year will be either the Presbytarian Mission or the new building by the library-depending on the speed at which construction of the new building reaches completion–on the library and library orchard grounds), children engage in organized activities as detailed below. 2. Provide opportunities for children to learn about local culture, specifically agricultural and land stewardship practices. The After School Program follows a seasonal curriculum which begins with the close of the growing season, harvest, and seed collection for the following year and then progresses to planning, preparing, and planting before school closes for the following summer. Emphasis is given to locally grown foods, native plants, and heritage seed preservation. 3. Provide opportunities for children to enjoy their community’s environment through creative and scientific activities, sports, gardening, and organized or unstructured play. Program leaders lead children into the community for a variety of purposes, bringing them new perspectives on their home environment. Adjacent to the library are Bureau of Land Management lands with hiking and biking trails, a dry river bed where fossils and rocks can be gathered, a baseball diamond, and dramatic landscapes to be explored and enjoyed. To the other side, behind the schools, runs the rio Embudo, which is surrounded by its own rich environment and localized wildlife. The library grounds themselves house a community garden, a pollinator garden, fruit trees, an open field, and an acequia.