Discover the Wonder

An Environmental Education Adventure

NO SCREENS. Go Green! 

Keep Sedona Beautiful has initiated a new environmental education program aimed at introducing local students to the wonders of the natural world. Led by volunteer Adventure Guides, Discover the Wonder pairs an interactive classroom presentation with a self-guided, field-journal-in-hand exploration of the EcoHub Educational Garden. It’s a nature scavenger hunt! Created with award-winning Arizona science teacher Diane Kristoff — known to students as “Dino Diane” — the program inspires kids to disconnect from their screens, strap on their hiking boots, and discover the wonder of Sedona’s geology, native plants, wildlife, and Indigenous heritage of the place they call home.
 
Two hours at KSB turns Verde Valley students into rock detectives, time travelers, junior archaeologists, and the next generation of nature’s protectors. Field trips are free for schools — and they run on volunteers and donors like you.

Learning through adventure, right here in the Verde Valley

2 Hours per field trip – 1 hour in the garden, 1 in the classroom

$0 cost to schools, including the student field journals

48 students max per visit, exploring in small teams of 4–6

4 garden loops of native plants, rocks, and pollinator habitat  

     How a Field Trip Works

Half the class explores. Half the class time-travels. Then they switch.

In the Garden

A nature scavenger hunt

  • Teams of 4–6 students rotate through four garden loops with their own Dino Diane’s Field Journal, drawing and recording what they find.
  • Plant ID and interpretive signs guide them through xeriscaping, pollinators, native plants, and Indigenous uses of agave, yucca, and prickly pear.
  • An Adventure Guide travels with each small team, answering questions, pointing out cactus spines, and keeping the wonder going.

In the Classroom

300 million years in one hour

  • Students solve the mystery of why Sedona’s rocks are red, meet the real Dilophosaurus, and discover the ancient sea beneath their feet.
  • They learn how KSB transformed “honky-tonk, cluttered Sedona” in 1972, and what they can do to respect, protect, and enjoy nature!
  • It all wraps up with the high-energy Leave No Trace Game Show, where teams compete to master the 7 Principles.

Every student takes home a completed field journal, a free Dino Diane’s Adventures book, and a mission: an hour a day in nature, off screens.

What Students Learn

One garden, a whole curriculum

Teachers say the program connects naturally to science, history, reading, writing — even math. Topics include:

Sedona’s Geology

Why the rocks are red, how the Schnebly Hill Formation records ancient seas, dunes, and floodplains — and which dinosaurs really roamed Arizona.

Indigenous Use of Plants

How the Sinagua, Yavapai, and Apache turned agave into food, sandals, needle and thread — even chewing gum.

 

Water-smart Gardening

Xeriscaping principles, and how natural rainfall and native plants keep a desert garden thriving.

Pollinators & Wildlife

Why bees, bats, butterflies, and hummingbirds matter, and how to build a pollinator garden at home.

Leave No Trace

The 7 Principles for protecting trails, wildlife, cryptobiotic soil, and ancient sites — taught as a game show kids don’t forget.

 

Hiking Smarts

Lightning awareness, hiking courtesy, and trail safety from monsoons to rattlesnakes.

What Students Remembered Most

The inaugural session with Camp Verde Middle School brought 40 students to the EcoHub garden. Students arrived with limited familiarity with their natural surroundings — and left with expanded knowledge, enthusiasm, and a sense of wonder about their home landscape, many had never articulated before.

Afterward, we asked what stuck with them:

“Sedona was once a sea, and the rocks are red because of rust.” – Leana

“I liked the dinosaurs and how they roamed Arizona.” – Reagan

“That environmental sustainability means using nature responsibly.” – Joshua

“All of the cool plants outside and the diversity.” – Sierra

“I liked learning about the Arizona barrel cactus and the Fendler’s hedgehog.” – Kiara

“About the 7 Leave No Trace rules.” – Brien

Educators are Thrilled

The Discover the Wonder field trip “was perfect for our 6th graders, even the lower level readers and writers were engaged with the sturdy colored printed materials and they could follow along and do the sketches. I was a little worried that our 6th graders might lose interest quickly since ecology isn’t something they seemed all that interested in before the trip.  But the quality materials, as well as the small groups with an adult to guide them, really kept their interest and kept them engaged at each of the four loops.  They really enjoyed seeing the cool pollinating moth that looked like a hummingbird, as well as the somewhat elusive dinosaur footprint.” Eric Hansen – Camp Verde Middle School

“I would 100% recommend this program to other teachers. The students were engaged in learning about Sedona’s history. The fun continued with a game about how to be a steward of the outdoors using kinesthetic and collaborative learning. Then there is the garden! Knowledgeable and kind guides took students around to learn about native plants. Students learned their uses and how to look at them in a different way. This is one of the best field trips I have ever been on! It was well thought out and organized. We had a blast and learned so much!” – Arielle Engle – Cottonwood Community School

“Our 5th graders study botany, geology, and all about Arizona. [The program] fits across our curriculum perfectly.” – Amy Harris – Desert Star Community School, Cornville

 The Adventure Continues

Two ways to keep the wonder going – with your help

Volunteer as an Adventure Guide

Adventure Guides are the heart of every field trip. You’ll guide a small team of 4–6 young explorers through the garden loops — no teaching degree required, just curiosity and a love of nature.

  • Field trips run 2 hours; Adventure Guides arrive 30 minutes early
  • Guide one small group at a time — easy, personal, and fun
  • The field journal and garden signs do the heavy lifting; we’ll show you the rest

Email ksb@keepsedonabeautiful.org or call 928-282-4938 to join the Adventure Guide team.

For more information, click here.

Fund a field trip

These field trips are free for schools — and they run on the support of volunteers and donors like you.

  • Printed full-color field journals — every student keeps theirs
  • Covers busing so any Verde Valley school can attend, regardless of budget
  • Puts a Dino Diane’s Adventures book in every student’s hands
  • Sustains the program for years to come

Keep Sedona Beautiful is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit. Donations are tax-deductible.

Donate to Discover the Wonder