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"They tend to retain the information better because they're actually touching and feeling and tasting the lessons," Kenny says. One of the key lessons taught here however is not for the kids, but for the parents. To be in this school, parents must know how to appropriately dress their children for all kinds of weather. That's particularly important in this part of Washington, where rain is nearly constant in the winter and showers and sun alternate seemingly minute to minute in the spring. So, even in May, kids arrive with rain pants, rain coats, mitten, and gloves. If the weather heats up, the layers come off. Mom Meghan Magonegil says she wasn't sure at first whether an all-outdoor school would work. "Once we got here, I would pick Finn up and he'd be wet and muddy and smiling and happy and I knew it was perfect," she says of her son. Since the school opened, only once have the students sought refuge in a small cabin because of the weather, Kenny says proudly. That day, the snow was too deep to walk around. On a recent schoolday in May, the kids asked questions about leaves and bugs. They already knew which of these leaves were edible. They climbed trees and ran around the property. At one point, they decided to play music and, later in the day, to make cakes out of mud. In 4-year-old Lorelei Fitterer's opinion, being outdoors is great, especially when it snows. "Because I get to paint the snow and stick leaves in it, and I used to even taste it. It was so funny," she says. ___ Online:
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