This is the moment everyone searches for when they look up “family beach pageant part 2 enature net awwc” on YouTube. After the walk, each family must give a 30-second speech about a specific wetland animal. They have to reference data they found earlier on eNature Net.

Example: A 7-year-old dressed as a Great Blue Heron doesn't just squawk—she announces, “Using eNature Net, I learned that herons need 3 inches of water to hunt. We must protect our wetlands from parking lot runoff. Vote for AWWC!”

The audience goes wild. This is not your grandmother's beauty pageant. This is eco-theater.

Get the app (or use the website). Spend a morning with your kids identifying shells, crabs, and birds. Make a bingo card.

eNature Net (enature.net) started in the early 2000s as a simple wildlife encyclopedia. Today, it is an interactive platform featuring:

For the Family Beach Pageant, eNature Net provides live dashboards projected on a giant beach screen. Families can see their species count ranking in real time. It’s like a video game, but for conservation.