It’s a jungle out there
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Danette Goulet
COSTA MESA -- Screeches and squeals rang out as more than 50 students
hung, swung and slid on the brand-new playground equipment at Wilson
Elementary School on Tuesday.
After four years of school-sponsored jog-a-thons and candy sales to raise
money for the tremendous colorful structure, students finally reaped the
benefits.
“It looks like a little ant farm,” said Wilson Principal Pam Coughlin.
The new jungle gym-like structure has four slides, curving monkey bars, a
straight track ride, a spiral climber and several other funky features.
The indisputable favorite with the fifth-graders was the straight track
ride, where students hang on a bar attached to a wire and pulley system
and fly across -- sort of like James Bond on a mission.
Until now, the children had to play on unidentifiable steel structures
more closely resembling abstract art than playground equipment.
Coughlin described the old equipment as knee-high monkey bars with a
wooden bench underneath and waist-high poles placed sporadically around
the blacktop.
“We didn’t have much fun stuff to play on before,” said 10-year-old Dalia
Vallejo. “It was kind of boring.”
It was the first day since Coughlin arrived at Wilson two years ago that
there wasn’t a line at the swings, she said.
“We had to count to 100 [swings] before,” said Jazmin Rodriguez, a
fifth-grade student. “Now we have to count to 50.”
Anticipation had been building during the last few years as children were
urged to do their best at fund-raising so the school could afford to
build the new playground.
Each year, Coughlin said they managed to tuck away about $6,000 from the
fall candy sale and the spring jog-a-thon.
“The district helped pay for the excavation and layed down the wood
chips,” Coughlin said. “If they hadn’t helped, it would have been a few
more years in coming.”
Coughlin, who was as excited and eager as the children, set up a play
schedule to allow each grade an introductory 20-minute play period prior
to recess Tuesday.
“You have to start at people’s base needs,” she said. “For these kids,
it’s a place to play. So I felt it was really important to get a
playground.”
Extra supervision will be set up for the first few weeks to ensure that
over-excited children don’t hurt themselves or others.
The next projects at Wilson will be a kindergarten playground and adding
more pieces onto the new playground as money is raised, Coughlin said.
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