Davis Forest School

Davis Forest School

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We are a non-profit organization building community + connection through equitable land-based programming in Yolo, Sacramento, and Placer counties.

Photos from Davis Forest School's post 06/15/2026

We wrapped up our second year of Little Coyotes Forest Kinder last week with closing ceremonies for both our Davis and Sacramento cohorts.

At our Sacramento location, we held a river gratitude offering. Each child and adult brought a dried strawflower to the water, closed their eyes, remembered a moment they loved from their time at the river, and sent their flower downstream — “back to the wide ocean.”

This was also the first year we had parent participants on the ground with us, supporting our classes and becoming part of the learning community. As one parent participant shared:

“I had been moving through the motions of life without appreciating all of the beauty around me. Life can be chaotic and hectic, but forest school taught me that it doesn’t have to be.

This community has helped me heal my inner child. I’m incredibly grateful to have experienced this year as a parent participant. My inner child is finally awake and seen. This year has been such a gift.”

Watching children (and adults!) deepen their relationship with the natural world is one of the greatest gifts of this work. We look forward to starting again in September and welcome a new Folsom Lake cohort into the Little Coyotes community. ❤️

06/11/2026

We are proud to share that DFS has received a 2026 Grant from Swantz Family Foundation for our teen program, Dragonfly Teen Naturalists! Swantz Family Foundation has been an important part of our early years, and we are so grateful for the recognition and support of our work.

Photos from Davis Forest School's post 06/08/2026

Our summer camps start in a week!

Summer is when our community is at its fullest, with beloved returning staff, teen assistants, and educators from across the region helping create a deeply connected and joyful experience for children.

One of the things we’re most proud of is our participant-to-leadership pathway. Our teen Forest Mentors all began as participants in our programs. They have grown up alongside this community and now return as leaders, guiding younger children across the same landscapes that helped shape their own childhoods.

Before summer begins, we also continue our stewardship of the spaces that hold our programs. Together, we walk the trails, tend the spaces, and remove many bags of trash, caring for these places as they care for us.

This season is a reflection of years of relationships, growth, and care — for children, for community, and for the land. We can’t wait to welcome everyone back. 💜

Photos from Davis Forest School's post 06/01/2026

At the beginning of this school year, we asked our teens what they wanted more of.

Their answer was simple: challenge.

What we’ve learned alongside them is that young people are often capable of far more than we give them credit for. They want opportunities to discover their strengths, find their edges, contribute meaningfully, and be seen for what they can do.

This past weekend, a group of our teens gathered for a rites-of-passage camping trip as their final journey together this year. For 36 hours, each teen was invited to camp solo — like spokes extending from a central hearth — tending their own fire through day and night.

We gathered on a beautiful 60-acre property in Nevada City. Our stewardship commitment to the land was to help reduce accumulated fuel by tending and burning piles of debris throughout the weekend. Under the light of the blue moon, surrounded by oak and pine forest, we felt deeply connected to both the work and the place.

When the solo ended, families were there to welcome their teens back.

The experience was physically demanding, emotionally stretching, and deeply moving. It reminded us why rites of passage matter. In a culture that offers few meaningful thresholds into adulthood, young people are hungry for experiences that ask something of them, and that honor who they are becoming.

Growth asks us to put ourselves out there. To have courage. To risk something. To step beyond our comfort zone. To allow ourselves to be held by community while discovering our own strength.

We hope to continue creating opportunities for this kind of challenge, reflection, nature immersion, and reverence for youth. These experiences leave a lasting imprint, inviting young people to meet themselves in a new way.

May we continue to trust our youth.

And may we allow this work to change us, too.



Special thanks for Jason Spencer for hosting us this weekend, and to facilitators Natascha, Jenna, Kevin, and Ariana for helping make this weekend possible.

05/28/2026

2026-27 Enrollment for Little Coyotes Forest Kinder in the greater Sacramento area is open! 🐾

What if your child’s early school experiences could be full of:

🌳 Climbing trees and playing in mud, instead of having to sit still
🔥 Building fires on rainy days, instead of being stuck inside all day
🔎 Exploring and learning about their local riparian ecosystem, instead of being assigned busy work

…all while they grow in curiosity, resilience, and confidence through imaginative play and engaging guided activities? It’s possible!

Little Coyotes Forest Kinder is a land-based program for ages 3-6 that meets outdoors in nature year-round, rain or shine, with locations in:

📍 Davis
📍 Sacramento (William B. Pond)
📍 NEW: Folsom Lake (Granite Bay area)

☀️Interested in visiting one of our locations this summer and seeing Little Coyotes Forest Kinder in action? Visit our website to fill out our Tour Request Form and we will be in touch. Tours available on Tuesdays-Fridays from 9:30-11am. We look forward to meeting you!

Photos from Davis Forest School's post 05/25/2026

Here are some pages from Forest Mentor Becky’s nature journal. She only started nature journaling a few months ago and never considered herself an artist before this. Becky has been such an inspiration to both staff and children — a reminder that we can all start where we are, stay curious, and surprise ourselves along the way.

“Nature journaling has become one of my favorite nature connection routines because it helps me tune in to all the tiny details of the space around me and to tap in to the endless curiosities I have. I feel so much more connected to myself, the land, and the relationship between us when I have spent some time journaling.

I just want to validate that it can feel scary to start, but how powerful this routine can be!” — Becky

Photos from Davis Forest School's post 05/20/2026

We took our Dragonfly Teen Naturalists backpacking to Loch Leven Lakes this past weekend — four strenuous miles in, and four miles back out.

We had no bathrooms and no comforts beyond what we could carry on our backs. Our motto was, “If we forgot it, we didn’t need it.” We had each other and alpine lakes, tired legs, smoky clothes, stunning views, and a pasta dinner that took 2.5 hours to cook over coals and a campfire.

We are so proud of these teens, of how much they’ve grown and challenged themselves over the past few years. This trip is usually the culmination of our year together, but for some of us, it’s also the beginning of the next challenge: a rites of passage camping trip next weekend.

More soon.

05/07/2026

Today is Big Day of Giving! 🌹

Big Day of Giving is an annual fundraiser supporting nonprofits across the greater Sacramento region.

If you believe every child deserves equitable access to nature and land-based learning, we invite you to donate to DFS today.

Donations are open until 11:59pm tonight: https://www.bigdayofgiving.org/organization/Davis-Forest-School/

Thank you for helping us grow a connected, resilient community alongside so many inspiring nonprofits and community weavers. 💫

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Davis, CA
95616–95618