Living in the four-season climate of Canada, I really love and appreciate the hot summer weather! Life takes on a different pace; relaxation comes more naturally. With my community of Calgary, Alberta experiencing a heat wave, I am thinking about how my facilitation designs and activities change during hot weather. Here are a few ideas for facilitating during the lazy, hazy days of summer!
Place and space: It’s not -25C! Go outdoors for extended time. While I have taken groups on winter walks and talks, they are not as long or as relaxed as a summer outdoor conversation. Deliberately choose an outdoor venue. Hold the entire session outside. Use picnic tables as walls and flipchart stands. Plan a picnic to hold a discussion and decision session. Everyone gets a slice of watermelon when they reach a decision. Leave laptops, tablets, and cellphones inside.
Five Senses: Go outside and lead participants through a Five Senses exercise about a topic.
- Listen to sounds and pick one that creates optimism about the discussion topic. Does hearing a birdsong make you think happy thoughts? Why?
- Smell and talk about the different aromas and how each one invites different ideas about the topic. Is there a sweet smell? A sour smell? What positive and negative aspects about the topic do they help us identify?
- Touch nature – different leaves, trees, grasses and use them as an analogy for actions, e.g. this grass is shaded by a tree; therefore, what shades our thoughts and plans?
- Taste berries, herbs, any other non-poisonous plants you have never tasted. Make a dandelion salad. Talk about whether you feel brave and adventurous when you taste new food. Talk about how you may need to be brave and adventurous when making decisions and plans.
- See the big wide world and the tiny elements of nature. Contrast the smallest part of nature you see at your feet with the view stretching out to the horizon. Lift your eyes up to the hills. Talk about both the small details and the big glorious vision related to your topic.
The Artist: Hike to a beautiful location. Set up an easel for each participant. Give them paint or coloured chalk or markers and encourage them to draw the scenery. Then draw how the scenery relates to the topic under discussion. Share the paintings. Have the group create one large painting, incorporating their different perspectives of the scenery and the topic.
Quick Nature Breaks: If the session requires an indoor setting, encourage small outdoor breaks. Take a 30-minute walk and talk as a group. Talk 10 minute individual walks. Have each participant pick a flower and create a bouquet of beauty.
Play Games: Play games. Use a parachute. Hold three-legged races. Run an obstacle course. Hold a fun Olympics. Hold sack races. Do these as a small energizing break during the session.
Remember sunscreen!!!
My facilitation blog question: How do you facilitate during different weather seasons or patterns?