Three inches of water may not sound like a lot. When it comes in the form of a slow-moving rainstorm, however, it can become a soggy nightmare.
That was the scenario for the staff and animals at one year ago. A July storm stalled directly over the wolf sanctuary near Westcliffe and the rain just kept coming. No one was injured but the downpour damaged dozens of fences and gates on the large property.
Gates are crucial at Mission: Wolf. They help the staff move more than two dozen resident wolves among enclosures, safely introduce animals to each other, and keep visitors on the proper paths as they walk through the sanctuary.
鈥淲e鈥檝e been wanting to replace the gates, but it was going to be a five- to 10-year project,鈥 said executive director Mike Gaarde. 鈥淭hen Mother Nature said, 鈥楴o, you鈥檙e going to do it in a year.鈥欌
Maybe Mother Nature knew Vincent Siffring was nearby. Siffring, a graduate of PCC鈥檚 welding program who鈥檚 now an instructor, is a frequent visitor to the animal sanctuary. He already knew Gaarde and Kent Weber, the organization鈥檚 director and co-founder.
Siffring and faculty member James Jones are advisors for PCC鈥檚 SkillsUSA Welding Club. The club members happened to be looking for a new community service project so Siffring asked Weber, who also is a welder, if there was anything the students could do to help.
鈥淜ent鈥檚 eyes got real big,鈥 said Siffring. 鈥淗e said they really needed help with gates.鈥
鈥淥h, it was an immediate yes,鈥 said Gaarde. 鈥淲e always tell people be careful what you offer. We fix everything ourselves and make everything ourselves because we鈥檙e off the grid. All the infrastructure you see (at the refuge) has been built by volunteers 鈥 some by kids who鈥檝e never raised a hammer. We pretty much couldn鈥檛 operate without that help.鈥
With Weber supplying the materials, Siffring and his students got to work. Over the summer they鈥檝e spent their free time creating dozens of frames and gates.
鈥淧eople you鈥檇 normally not see hanging out together are all working and talking,鈥 said Siffring. 鈥淭hrow in welding and suddenly you鈥檝e got this common interest. They鈥檙e a lot more excited. They love that they鈥檙e doing something that鈥檚 going to be used, that has meaning.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 an opportunity to work in a group and do more welding and fabricating, to understand what we鈥檙e really doing,鈥 said Joshua Davis, 42, a first-year student. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 the whole point of coming to school 鈥 to learn something new.鈥
The welding club has about 20 members; roughly half of them are high school students taking concurrent enrollment classes through PCC. Club president Rylan Ciruli graduated from 杏吧性世界 County High School in May and has two more semesters left in the program. The 19-year-old already has a welding job but when not working, he鈥檚 usually found in the PCC shop.
鈥淪eeing this project go from idea to prints to gates, it鈥檚 great,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e building something that鈥檚 going to be here for a very long time. It鈥檚 one of the cooler projects we鈥檝e come across.鈥
In addition to Ciruli and Davis, students Aurelio Barajas, Ryan Kent, Isabella Kilfoy-Saccomanno, Isaiah Marquez, Liz Martin, Jake Mayes, Emiliano Quintana, Brady Unger, Gabriel Vigil and Terrance Washington participated in the project.
Weber invited Siffring and the students to Mission: Wolf to see the impact of their work. In mid-July, the group got to visit and meet some of the resident wolves up close.
鈥淚t was incredible,鈥 said Davis. 鈥淭his project just keeps expanding with more learning.鈥
Gaarde and Weber also offered the students an opportunity to help install the gates when the time comes. Weber suggested the students create an enduring testament to their contribution by adding their initials to each gate they helped create.
鈥淲e owe a huge thank you to Vinny and the whole class,鈥 said Gaarde. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been an amazing opportunity, I hope, on both ends.鈥