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  • Junior Rangers Make a Big Impact at Bryce Canyon National Park
    by Kathleen Gonder
    Published - 07/24/12 - 03:25 PM | 1 1 comments | 4 4 recommendations | email to a friend | print
    Superintendent Jeff Bradybaugh shakes hands with Maria, Gina, and Lisa Sobinovsky upon earning their Bryce Canyon Junior Ranger badges.
    Superintendent Jeff Bradybaugh shakes hands with Maria, Gina, and Lisa Sobinovsky upon earning their Bryce Canyon Junior Ranger badges.
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    (Bryce, UT) - Three sisters from Martinsburg, West Virginia caused quite a stir recently when they came into the Bryce Canyon National Park Visitor Center. The girls turned the heads of visitors and staff as they marched up to the information desk wearing vests pinned with literally hundreds of Junior Ranger badges and patches.

    The Sobinovsky sisters have dedicated a large portion of their young lives to visiting national parks and participating in the Junior Ranger program. Maria, 12 has been at it the longest, and the Bryce Canyon Junior Ranger Badge she earned on June 4 brought her total to 304 badges. Her twin sisters, Gina and Lisa, 9 have each earned 220 badges. Maria’s vest weighs a whopping 8 pounds, while Gina’s and Lisa’s vests weigh in at an impressive 6 pounds each.

    When Superintendent Jeff Bradybaugh asked the girls which national park was their favorite, their reply was, “They’re ALL our favorite!”

    The park issues about 10,000 Junior Ranger badges each year to young visitors from nearly every continent. To earn a badge, Junior Rangers must attend an Interpretive Ranger program, complete a few activities in the Junior Ranger Booklet, and collect some litter in the park. “This summer we completed a Junior Ranger activity book targeting the 3 – 5 age group. Younger family members can now participate with their older siblings and they enjoy earning their own badge.

    The goal of the National Park Service Junior Ranger Program is to connect young people and their families to their national parks and cultivate future generations of park stewards. There are 397 National Park Service sites, and most of them have a Junior Ranger Program.
    Comments
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    Nancy Hieronymus
    |
    August 02, 2012
    Wish I had had a chance to be a Jr. Ranger when i was young. What a great thing for the future of Park Rangers, they are so important!
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