(UPBEAT MUSIC)
Amelle: Hi, I鈥檓 Amelle.
Daniel: And I鈥檓 Daniel.
And today we鈥檝e come to a National Park in the Peak District to meet Matt, who is a park ranger.
Matt: Hi, Change Champs. It鈥檚 so exciting to see you here. I鈥檝e been a National Park Ranger for almost five years now, and I never get bored of spending all my time outside in this awesome place.
Should we take a look around?
Kids: Yeah.
Matt: Come on, then.
So why do you think people come to a National Park like this then?
Daniel: To play.
Matt: To play? Yeah, that鈥檚 a great thing to do here.
Amelle: Well, probably, maybe, like, maybe like for picnics and stuff.
Matt: Totally, We love a picnic, yeah. Now one of the things I love about a National Park, is that it鈥檚 a great place to see loads of nature and wildlife.
All these hills and trees and birds and everything, but we鈥檝e also got loads of really cool man-made features too. Like we鈥檝e got a big reservoir here and over there behind us, that鈥檚 the pumping house where they clean all the water and send it off to be your drinking water in the city.
And down here behind us, we got the reservoir outflow, which takes all the water away. So there鈥檚 loads of really cool things to see.Should we go have a look?
Amelle: Yeah.
Matt: Come on, then.
Amelle: What鈥檚 a reservoir?
Matt: A reservoir, it鈥檚 like a big lake, isn鈥檛 it? Great big bowl of water. But it isn鈥檛 natural, it鈥檚 been made by people to store all the rain that falls here to keep for drinking water.
You know, you guys are asking some great questions.
I think it鈥檚 time for a mission.
Amelle: Your mission is to identify as many human and physical geographical features as possible and draw them onto a map.
Daniel: Like a pirate map.
Matt: Right, let鈥檚 go and start making our map. Okay, so for this mission, you鈥檙e going to need to look at human and physical features in this place, all around us.
So human features are things that people have built like that great big wall or the houses or roads, things like that. And physical features are things that weren鈥檛 put here by people. They鈥檙e there because that鈥檚 the way the land is. So the hills, the trees, things like that.
So on our map, we鈥檙e going to draw loads and loads of little pictures to show where things are.
Amelle: I see walls and trees.
Daniel: I can see hills in the distance.
Matt: It鈥檚 really, really important that we have what鈥檚 called a key to show us what all those different pictures mean. It鈥檚 a bit like a secret code. Okay.
Amelle: There were so many things created by nature here, but also so many things created by us humans.
Matt: So the big wires that go all the way along there, do you think they鈥檙e natural, do you think they grew up out of the ground?
Daniel: No. They were man-made.
Matt: A man-made feature, aren鈥檛 they?
Oh, Change Champs, you鈥檝e done an amazing job. That鈥檚 a fantastic map. There鈥檚 one last thing we need to do. And that鈥檚 to put X marks the spot to show exactly where we are in your awesome map. Okay.
Amelle: So we鈥檙e about there.
Matt: Well-done team, what an epic effort. You鈥檝e really learned so much about the human and physical features that you can see in a National Park. But you can find human and physical features around you anywhere, even in your local park.
Okay, I think we need to pack up and get going, don鈥檛 we?
Daniel: We have really enjoyed learning from Matt, and I鈥檓 going to make a map next time I go to my local park.