Admissions Home Page
Search Powered by Google
Admissions Home Page
Pomona People
 
Text Size ControlsDecrease Text SizeIncrease Text SizePrinter FriendlyPrint this pageEmail ThisEmail this page   Share This Share This Content
Menu ControlsExpand All MenusCollapse All Menus

Read About More Pomona People


 


On his first trip to Joshua Tree National Park as a Pomona College student, Bryant Cannon wound up with 250 tiny cholla cactus barbs in his arm after he made a wrong move playing Frisbee in the desert. But the park didn’t just draw a touch of blood – it drew Cannon back again and again. He had visited “J-Tree,” as Pomona students call it, a dozen times by the end of his sophomore year.

Growing up in Alabama, Cannon loved the outdoors. But the trails back home were relatively flat and the scenery universally green. At Pomona College, Cannon could explore California’s scenic extremes, from the searing beauty of Death Valley to piney snow packed peaks in the Sierras to misty cliffs along the northern “lost coast.”

A neuroscience major, Cannon has managed to combine Pomona’s intense academics with outdoor adventure by adding a second major in Environmental Analysis, in which Southern California’s deserts and mountains often serve as a classroom. Back on campus, he lingered after class for long talks, going on for hours with Geology and Environmental Analysis Professor Rick Hazlett. You can do that at a place like Pomona.

”I’ve been encouraged by everyone at just about every bend or twist in the road,” says Cannon. “Those kinds of personal relationship have, more than anything else, allowed me to do whatever I wanted to do.”

By his junior year, Cannon was helping other students get back to nature by becoming the leader of On The Loose, the longstanding outdoors club that serves all of the Claremont Colleges. He gained valuable experience managing a $40,000 budget and helping to stage some 400 trips every year. But his favorite moments, of course, came out in the wilderness.

Socials barriers melt away as student gather around a dancing campfire or watch the sun rise over the desert. A sure sign of a successful trip: On the long drive home from a spring-break trek to the slot canyons of Southern Utah, students were so unplugged from their usually wired world that nobody thought to ask for their cell phones –safely locked away in the glove box – until they were within 30 minutes of campus. And Cannon finds the friendships forged in the outdoors carry over to life on campus. His goal is to convince every student to spend at least one night outdoors once a year. “It changes people’s perspective on what’s important,” he says."