This past Thursday and Friday were the Jewish Holiday of Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish new year, and one of the most important of all the Jewish Holidays. Here at the Island School we recognized this important day by having a small “service” of our own. With much work and dedication from Justin Wedes, we were able to get apples bread and honey, a symbolic treat especially for the new year. The sweetness of the honey is to represent the sweetness we hope to bring to our new year, and the round shape of both the apples and the challah (bread) is to represent a new start and the beginning of the new year. In addition to this traditional treat we also incorporated the beauty of our surroundings here on Eleuthera, Bahamas by adding a sugar apple to menu. Our small recognition of Rosh Hashanah was not only attended by those of our community who are jewish, but many others who were just simply interested. Continue reading
Category Archives: Uncategorized
Cacique Update-September 11, 2010
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Caciques: Hammy and Lea
Following Island School tradition, we started the last morning of orientation with a two-mile run to High Rock with a surprise at the end. While all of us were exhausted from the run and baking from the sun, we were allowed to make the fifteen-foot jump off of High Rock. Although some students were nervous and others were comfortable with the jump, we all jumped together signifying the unity within our community. Feeling refreshed, Continue reading
Cacique Update-September 10, 2010
By Aly Boyce and Nate Smith
You can’t get much better than a nice morning bike ride. Winding through trees and bouncing over pot holes, the abbreviated student body, led by the trail blazer Matt Dawson, used this bike ride as a learning experience. Surrounding the school is an old resort that is now inhabited by a multitude of trees and exotic plants. With this bike ride under our belts, we are even closer in establishing our knowledge concerning the area which encompasses The Island School campus. Yet amongst all the smiling faces, something was missing: the second half of our Island School family. Arising from the thunder clouds was none other than our comrades, the kayakers. Continue reading
A Simple Question
“Why do things that are hard?”
A simple question.
Chris Maxey posed this question to our visiting guest, Chris Irwin, tonight. Chris was invited to speak to our young leaders this evening, addressing the topic of his choice. Irwin chose leadership. Irwin has led a distinguished career in the military, as an Navy Seal, cultivating the qualities of a leader. After briefly addressing his past and experience leading Continue reading
Cacique Update-September 9, 2010
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“Tunnel Rock” September 9, 2010
by Caciques Jackson Rafter and Sasha Whittle
For our second day of scuba, the campus was up early setting up their scuba gear, despite the sleep-in. After breakfast, each scuba group loaded the boats and took off quickly to finish the final required skills. The morning of skills felt long as we all anticipated the deeper and more adventurous dive. Each group raced back to the boathouse to switch out to their second tanks. Some of us struggled to complete 10 pushups with our tanks and gear on, punishment for leaving our tanks unsupervised. We cruised on our boats farther from the shore than usual, not being able to see the creatures that awaited us at the bottom. We grabbed the boats anchor line, many of us clenching with white knuckles nervous for our first Continue reading
New York Harbor School officially opens on Governors Island!
Yesterday was the first day of school for students at the New York Harbor School, which recently relocated from Bushwick, Brooklyn to Governors Island, just short a ferry ride from Manhattan. The Island School is a proud partner of NYHS; in recent years, we have hosted students for two weeks for SCUBA certifications and advised them on various sustainability projects, such as their recent addition of an aquaponics system. We’re looking forward to watching NYHS do great things at their new location!
Read more about the opening of NYHS on Governors Island in the New York Times, DNAInfo, Brooklyn Paper and Metro.
Cacique Update-September 8, 2010
“Breaking Boundaries and Blowing Bubbles”
by Caciques George Giannos and Hunter Foote
Today was a melancholy day at The Island School. After breakfast over a picturesque ocean view on the roof of the dining hall, the second troop of kayakers departed, leaving the campus like a ghost town. After already being separated for three days, seeing our Island School family disperse again was heartrending. However, those of us on campus were filled with anticipation to start SCUBA. We began our SCUBA Continue reading
Kayak 1 & 2 return home
Cacique Update-September 7, 2010
“A Different Kind of Homesickness”
Caciques: Daisy Spencer and Scott Endzel
“I was really homesick the last hour of being on the camp site, but as soon as my kayak hit the sand at school, I realized I was Island sick.”—Hunter Foote, K1 trip
Going in to our first week of official Island School life, it’s starting to get more exciting around campus. The first groups of scuba divers are now officially certified as of 3:30 this afternoon. During the scuba certification, Continue reading
Cacique Update-September 6, 2010
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Caciques: Sarah S. and Jack
Our first week at The Island School has come quickly to an end. As the students and faculty begin to know each other more, we are all realizing that not only is this our home for the next three months—it is also our family. Although many hearts on campus are longing for the comfort of their own family, the environment at The Island School creates a sense of community and connectedness that only a home like The Island School itself can provide. Tonight at the dinner circle we demonstrated just how much we support each other. As we stood in a tightly Continue reading