April 11, 2013

  • Call of the Wild

    When I moved to Colorado, it was largely due to my love of the outdoors. After spending ten years on the prairie in weather that was usually unfit to be outdoors, I craved the outdoors and sunshine more than anything I can remember. I read Bill Bryson’s book, A Walk in the Woods, shortly after my divorce and knew I had to change my life to focus on the things I loved. 

    I grew up in the country, I was always outside. I would hike to remote areas and lay a blanket on a large rock overlooking a draw and read my days away. I would wait for glimpses of animals that didn’t know I was there, does with fawns coming to the creek at the bottom of the draw, raccoon, porcupines and even snakes were all treats – rewards for my stillness. I learned things like how to use witching sticks, how to use bow and arrow, what plants were NEVER to be used for wiping your tushie when you pee in the woods. 

    My kids were city kids. (If you can call anyplace in South Dakota a city). They didn’t get to fish, camp and hike as a way of life – those were just annoying things I drug them to do when they could be doing better things, like hanging out at the mall. They grew up with unlimited cable and internet, cell phones, facebook. Their extracurricular activities were gymnastics, cheer-leading, cross country running. They hung out at malls, drank lattes (I still don’t understand that, I am a black coffee girl myself), wore phony glasses and bright scarves. Dragging them outside was like pulling teeth, a cruel punishment from their mother. They had great counter points when I argued with them to come camping – “You said to be active, we participate in sports. You said to be smart, we read books. Where does getting dirty and being hot fit into our development?”. (Yes, they really talked that way – little snots!) Even moving them to CO where it’s still cool to be outdoorsy had little affect on them, they just hate being outside.

    I am determined to make a bigger impact on my niece, nephew, and grand baby than I did my kids, so I am finding ways to merge the technology world with the natural one. Geocaching may be my best shot here. With geocaching games, you have different scavenger hunts to find natural things. There is a treasure at the end of the hunt, and you can take the treasure as long as you leave something of equal value. This looks like wicked fun, and I plan to take my niece (8) on an adventure some weekend when it’s warm and dry. I am sure most of you know what Geocaching is, but if not, here is a link. 

    Another way I plan to use technology to manipulate the children to engage in nature is through blogging. Not typical blogging, like Xanga or WordPress, but more visual blogs such as Tumblr or even PinInterest – whatever is “cool” when they are old enough to engage them. We will take pictures of natural things (plants, animals, scenery) and write short, slightly educational blogs about them (Need to be tricky here, can’t let them know they are learning) and share them with their friends. The gratification they will receive from feedback, comments, etc may encourage them to want to keep updating and adding content. I am hopefully that I can use their need for instant feedback and praise as a tool to keep them interested, but I may be mistaken, I will keep you posted!

    People spend 90 percent of their lives indoors now. 90 percent. Fresh air, natural light, all the benefits that come from being outside are being artificially duplicated to our indoor environments so people don’t feel it’s important to be outside anymore. If people watch the National Geographic channel, why would they need to go outside and see real animals for themselves? When my kids were growing up, the terrible statistic was that kids were spending less than 4 hours a week outside. Today that number is 40 minutes a week. Why would kids go outside if we never do? We spend time in gyms, supermarkets, offices and spending less time gardening and spending time exercising outside. 

    Being in nature (nature as the non-human world, in this instance) engages imagination, stimulates your brain, makes people more engaged and more peaceful at the same time. The real world is not always the technology world. Watching a lion catch a deer on TV leaves little impact, but running across a deer corpse on the trail leaves a much more real, palpable experience. Watching fox babies on YouTube and running into a den of them are two entirely different experiences. An hour of fresh air a day (true fresh air, not filter systems that pumps fresh air into the vents) helps us sleep, helps our digestion, blood pressure, immune system and increases happiness. One hour can do all of that. Sunshine (please use sunscreen) is shown to do all that fresh air does in addition to fighting cancer, obesity, diabetes. Walking and hiking in the woods rarely feels like “working out” or exercise (even though it’s fantastic exercise), it feels like exploring, experiencing, enjoying an adventure of sorts. It’s stimulating all of our senses and often our bodies forget that they are working because we are taken in by the sights, smells and sounds that are different than our indoor environment. 

    Personally, I find being outdoors in a remote, natural environment humbling and awe inspiring. It’s nice to be in an environment that isn’t completely under my control. It’s peaceful to disengage from the beeps and flashing lights and ringing phones and submerge myself in the sounds not created by other people. I can think more clearly, my hope and optimism soars and I am less annoyed by the world when I return. But that’s just me. happy

     

    Here is a pic my daughter sent me of herself and my grand-daughter, Atlas, this morning :) I am not going to tell her of my scheming to get the baby outside yet, so don’t tattle on me!

     

    Have any of you used geocaching with your kids? Do you have any other tips for me regarding how to make my indoors family go outside? 

     

     

Comments (42)

  • Park swings and merry-go-rounds are fun for kids. Feeding ducks gets them started on outdoor animals early. Every kid loves to see barnyard animals and kittens. My ex and the kids have filled their yard with farm animals (llama, sheep, goats, chickens, ducks, etc.) and so they have plenty of outdoor chores.

    Both their mom and I used to take them canoeing and swimming at the lake, which they enjoyed.

  • @Roadkill_Spatula - Great suggestions! Now I am on a search to find an outdoor petting zoo or farm festival to take the older kids to, thanks! I wish I lived in an area where I could have those types of animals, myself. (Not to mention the ambition to care for them all when the kids weren’t there to help me with the chores!)

  • Geocaching sounds like a lot of fun. That is something I have been meaning to get into myself but just don’t have the time! Wish I was still a kid! I don’t have anything by way of tips, I was sort of half way indoors/outdoors as a kid. Played a lot of outdoor sports, but my parents didn’t take us to do much outside other than that. My grandpa would take me camping and fishing and I have always enjoyed that. With all these survival shows on TV it might be fun to “practice” some of the things you would do in a survival situation? (Obviously the kids would need to be a little older). That’s what my partner and I do now for fun and outdoors time. We just practice skills like building a fire without starter and purifying water out at his parents’ property every once in a while. Fun and educational!

  • I think that sounds like a great idea!

  • I am one of those inside 90% of the time and at age 79 like my Toshiba Notebook, Mini-I-Pad ( I like mini-skirts better), and new I-Phone which I do not like.

    I used to camp in the California redwoods as a kid and use a pool where the streams kept the pool full.

    We love going to the beach and boardwalk, but we are not going into the woods anymore, except an occasional trip to Mt. Hermon, Ca.

    I admire your efforts. It really is better to spend more time outside.

    Wishing you a good weekend,
    frank

  • Hmmmm, don’t have any kids yet dear.  I think that getting kids used to the outdoors is a grand idea though.

  • Geocaching sounds like a great idea!  Most of my kids hate the idea of outdoors.  When we do force them, they bring the phones and text the whole time.  My youngest (6) is the opposite of them.  It’s a nightmare getting him to come inside!  Time to eat?  Too busy playing.  Time for bed?  Same thing.  It doesn’t matter if it’s nice, snowing or raining, he’ll be out there.  Only time he refuses to go outside is during a storm.

    Trying to get the kids outside is indeed a chore anymore.  Even though we live very close to 3 lakes (ok, they call them lakes here, but where I come from, they’re more like glorified ponds, but still).  We go camping, but use a pop-up camper, and they seem to like that.  Just make sure we always bring supplies for s’mores and they’re in!  We watch a lot of “Survivorman” so I may entice them with a Survivorman weekend.  Head out into the wilderness and bring nothing to see how it goes!  (There’s not much in the lines of true “wilderness” here in Jersey, so if something goes wrong, we’re close enough to civilization to get help lol)

  • @thegunslingergirl - That sounds like fun – maybe I could take them on a survivor-ish trip! (Again, don’t tell their moms) It could be a cross between survivor man and Dora the Explorer!

  • @Megabyyte - Thanks! I am pretty excited to try it!

  • @HUMOR_ME_NOW - Who doesn’t like mini skirts better? :) Have a great weekend yourself, Frank!

  • @olwd - Are you an indoors or outdoors girl?

  • @grim_truth - I was in Western PA, and there are cool places to feel like you’re in the wilderness there! (that’s all I’ve got for the east coast :) ) I wonder what the difference between your youngest and the older ones are? Isn’t it strange that we can have 3 kids and they all turn out differently, even though we did the same stuff? Parenting is hard shit!

    S’mores… That’s also a great incentive.  

  • I’m a little of both.  We love to bike ride, jog some, can’t do that much due to bad knee, swim and hike too.  No need to mention the “indoor” stuff here, right?

  • Good for you. I can see the need to unplug from time to time. Fresh air is always good. On a sunny day I like to go out and read a good book. Waiting for it to warm up and get some walking in at a nature preserve.

  • I know when I spent time in Boulder, Golden, and Longmont, I found it hard to return home.  It was so beautiful out there.

  • mom or Grand-mission mom… whichever you least prefer ;) :P what’s wrong with the outdoors versus the indoors?  nothing.  which is better?  neither really but as the life vampire inside is a bit less vitamin d and thus insulin sensitivity thus fair less junk food eventually boo.  but has it ever occured to you it must be a win?  inside I can win ms pacman or be outside with all my flaws?….losing.  win ma’am  win.  I’m a tad confused what geocaching is and I wikied it and read the holy @saintvi on the subjects  but because you want an outdoors win… a few for those of us that lose in the outdoors some
    I believe it’s in connections…james burke where in it is shown that how we firt found measurements for the speed of light.  its a pinwheel and a prism  perhaps some light would help too :D   what I’m after here is stuff one can hold for themselves and behold.
    so math in that way is about as pleasant to smell as a fart in church?…chemistry.  it takes 4 gallons plus a pint of vinegar at 5% acid strength to neutralize the effect of 1 lbs of calcium carbide.  you may wish to look that one up and refresh yours and my stoichiometry on cac2 plus h20 line c2h5oh plus caoh  which means simply the stuff that lights on fire acetylene is all fun but the by product calcium hydroxide mustn’t be left to kill all the fish!  there are rules to lighting lakes on fire. a dont get caught it’s probably illegal and b caught or not caught neutralize the leftovers it’s good manners.
    silly cybins are for the biology jnuts they may become… it is a pedestrian activity mushrooming..  but denver’s botanic gardens has one of the best libraries/seed catalogues of this area it’s worth looking up what we can get in nature…and determine relatively edible for safety’s sake  mud wars will likely occur this is universally fun  and involves a hosing down so laundry isn’t a reason for early suicide later.
    all of this sound schoolie? of course but perhaps you’d look up a crystal radio  this can be as simple as an aligator clip or two and wires where in you wrap wire around a toilet tissue tube and catch republican crack pot am. sorry but it that or sports usually but one can still dx or distance listen to see if mary frances fence can bring in south dakota or elpaso if your up on the spannish..wait sorry that’d be ciudad juarez.

    there is a bit of huff and puff involved but any idiot can learn the philosophy of cadence on a bike.  some folk may need more specialized equipment than  others or an out right friend due to physical vagueries requiring vicarious experience!  but cadence this is where 65-75 pdeal strokes a minute is with gearing you’re best friend in the world to get somewhere not entire ly shagged out.
    sketching kiting all this can be wins rather than losses and you have into the wind.com  nearby you anyways lucky devil

    but whats wrong with a trip to the rocket park after hitting up the organic market and organic bakery your town has harvest veg bread carb free look for ezekiel49 bread and get only x slice of cheeses and you’re even teaching them how to make a day on the kind of money they may at first make…life skills within good health choices.  shh there’s a picnic involved.

    pets and boulder falls for instance it isn’t any fun till they’re doing something they know is frowned on witch is offlease happy pets.  honor it it is also a rebelious win and a good splashing afternoon.

    but if you’ve hear nothing, the outting aren’t about the where but the why, try to make them a win but perhaps wait til 18 for the silly cyben seach alongs eh? :D

  • @olwd - Indoors is good too :)

  • @Zoz36 - Don’t you live in the south? I have a hard time remembering where everybody lives.. Do you live in a really urban area?

  • You know it!!!!

  • @godfatherofgreenbay - It’s hard to leave here, if outdoors is your thing, anyway. WI is pretty, too. Minnesota is really green.. You also live in a pretty area.

  • @starmanjones - I read this twice, and have to admit that even though I didn’t understand all of what you said, it did leave me feeling hungry!

  • @BoulderChristina - Live about thirty minutes from Cleveland OH. A semi small town. Freeways all around. Am a city boy at heart.

  • @BoulderChristina - just ideas to get you to make the outdoors a win for indoorsey types.  .  if they don’t dig exploration for it’s own sake, spoon feed them science and math as already in nature.
    for instance nothing will make them hate your guts faster than to whoop out a BIBLE and read how the earth was created in six days and then to be fair the line where a thousand years is as a day to god….nope you’re jumping the gun here, now pick up  alexander von humboldt’s 1901-1904 journey to south america where in it is discuss that the early evidence of geology…oh no colorado hasn’t any oh no, it’s granite and feildspar mainly  shows the earth in an observation to be 500 million years old.  this isn’t to piss on anyone’s faith but to get your youngsters questioning what is actually there in front of them.  a word or two of caution on being sensitive to other’s beliefs may also be in order ;)   again its a win not for science or god I can care less at this point I have my own beliefs but teaching others to swallow common sense might bea fun  trip outdoors and thus a win not a wait for the biting insect to poop on the pparade and wipe my tookus with poison ivy tp.  loss in the outdoors.  buckhorn exchange for the rattler steaks if you wanna be daring  we all know nature has a few fangs. 

    what I’m after is you seeing why people hate the outdoors as it’s physical.. it can be fun and sedintary :D   rather tasty too.  teach them the value of hey you got 7 bucks two people no car and macdonald’s or equivalent is somehow beyond the budget?  tea, great bread and cheese condiment packs free a ziplock of ice in  for the mayo if they’d like to avoid flaming diarrhea…again a loss in the outdoor and leads to wiping with poison ivy tp :D   a good lesson to teach, cheap fun and doable on poor children/early young adults’ means  teaching ingenuity and acheivement versus awww we cant do nothing we’re broke and there aint nothing to do.

  • Free Fishing Weekends!  It makes it like an event, almost like it’s organized, which modern chilluns go along with just because that’s how the indoctrination institutions condition them. (First weekend in June, BTW.) I did most of my kid raising in the mountains anyway, so it wasn’t a big trick to get ‘em out. The grandkids are city kids, but coming here is an adventure so it’s easier to get them moving. Also, there’s no television so boredom drives them to engagement.

    Ya could just move out to the boonies so going to Grandma and Grandpa’s house is an eagerly anticipated wilderness adventure. Course that would bring yard work into the equation…

  • I love the idea of getting kids outside! Even if I just sit out on the back step, watching the birds in the fountain and feeling the warmth of the sun, I feel a little better. When we hike (only on vacations unfortunately) I sleep so much better at night! Colorado is beautiful. If I lived there, I would be outside all the time.

  • I know I do but when I was out there was when I was living/attending school in Little House on the Prairie country so everything was flat and straight.

  • I adore geocaching! I’m planning a vacation to tour the northwest – Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, and Wyoming (not in that order). That will mean I have only 4 more states that I haven’t geocached in! Have fun!

  • there’s a whole xanga group that does that geocaching thing…  i have to go play a board game with my kids…  it’s cold and rainy here…  more later…


  • I am all for getting kids outside!!!

    I am the person in my family that pulls kids away from the TV, the computer, the hand-held games…and gets them outside to take A Nature Scavenger Walk (make a list of things to “find” and then go look for them), or do sidewalk chalk, or make a mud puddle, or to raise a garden, or play “Follow the Leader”, or to feed birds, or paint the house with a bucket of water and a paintbrush, or wash the car, or take cookies to an elderly neighbor, or dance in the rain, or play outdoor games, or have a parade…dress up and play musical instruments as you walk down the sidewalk, or…etc.

    I have MORE, but I’ll stop now!
    HUGS!!!

  • In Los Angeles there are hiking groups and there are bicycle groups.

    Hikers can also birdwatch or go on nite hikes. On hot days hiking at night is preferable though having a nice light so you won’t trip over things is nice.

    I suppose tick bites and snake bites could be a hazard going outdoors. Sometimes people get scared of coyotes around in Los Angeles but it is the cougars and bears that definitely people should stay away from.

    Bike riding is a good activity if you are in above average shape. They have 100 mile rides that includes fix flat tire mechanics. You see more countryside when riding a bike.

    Sometimes there are also bike riding tours. They might have a sag wagon to carry equiptment and food for later. I suppose some people like to shop for nick nacks and that probably could also be arranged.

  • My kids and I have always exercised outside since they were little.    Our stair stepping machine has always been the stars left in the old home steds going up the side of hills.  My kids and grandkids all exercise outside and have all grown up running and playing in the woods.

    My energy comes from the ocean and my calmness and stress releif comes from sitting on a log by the pond watching the ripples of life.Good post.

  • I don’t have any advice other than start early, and get them to use their nature experiences for show-and-tell and paper writing in school.  they will be interesting to the other kids and will be the source of that kind of information for their classmates.  : )

    I’m glad you’re planning this.  it may be the best gift you could ever give them!

  • I think kids either want to be outside, or they don’t. They are born that way. I was an outside kid. I had to cave to my sister to play whatever she wanted to play just to get her outside. 

    That being said, I’d suggest you take the kids to do a bunch of outdoorsy stuff and see which they prefer and go from there.

  • I’m an outdoor person too, my kids were outdoor people due to this…well after I drug their lazy’s butts out of bed anyway  We live in town, but we have three acres and it backs up to a real nice trout stream so our days were spent swimming  or floating around in an inner tube, looking for crawdads and periwinkles, and moving rocks around in the creek,working in the garden and mowing grass.  We’ve always had dogs and they helped with the dog chores.  In the winter instead of being put in time-out (I really think time-outs are stupid) or getting a good old fashioned whipping they had to pick-up pecans for x amount of time, I don’t know why but they thought that was the worse punishment in the world  The rest of the year if they got in trouble they scraped paint ( we have a real old house and have scraped the paint (about a million layers) off to the bare wood using this plan.  Anyway – they were all four really good kids the majority of the time.  And they all still like being outside.  We have two older grandchildren (19 and 21) who we didn’t get to be involved with when they were younger and they were house kids, but as they have gotten older and can drive themselves to the house they are learning the joys of being outside, at least I hope they are enjoying themselves.  Our youngest grandson (3) stays with my husband while his parents work and he’d rather be outside than anywhere – last week he was helping me wash dishes and right in the middle of the pots and pans he announced….it’s time to go outside…the sandbox is ready for me….

    Your daughter and grandbaby are beautiful…make mudpies, collect rocks, chase butterflies, look for rolly pollies, geocach, watch clouds and stars and the rain,…I love your plan!   p.s…you might teach them about the poison ivy and oak first 

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  • There are as many ways to be outside as there are landscapes.  My love of walking-based experiences is ho-hum to most of you, but the outdoors is not one-dimensional.  Geocaching, as you say- then fishing, birdwatching, kite-flying ( a natural on the High Plains), any outdoor team sport, rock-climbing, swimming.  The most important thing is to not hide from the world.

  • My son and DIL got into geocaching a couple of years ago and they love it.  I’m sure you will as well.  We went with them a few times and it is very enjoyable.

    Congratulations on the new grandbaby ~ what a wonderful way to enjoy life again.

    Re: your husband’s depression ~ I hope his doctor can help with that.  My husband recently had gall bladder surgery but  his “indigestion” issues continue.  We are worrying it could be his pancreas….and I’ve seen a huge change in his temperment.  He is almost consumed with making sure I am going to be ok ~ as if he has resigned himself to the worst possibilities.  We will know more after his appointment on 4/25/13 with a specialist.  He’s lost over 100 lbs in the past 2 years so whatever it is; it is a big deal.

  • These are great ideas. And you are one tricky aunt/ grandma. Hell, if I ever get to your neck of the woods, I’d love to go on a hike with you and your family and Salem, can’t forget her. Lol. You see, I was one of those kids too. I grew up in the ghetto. The only time I went to the great outdoors was the Boy Scouts. I remember one camping trip to Crystal Lake. It was cold and miserable. But good ol’ Mr. Brown had the greatest idea. He had a small parachute he brought with him. Rigged it up over some tree branches. And the next morning when we got up all cold and shivering, he was as comfy as could be in that warm shelter of his. Haha. 

  • I know grown women who are actually terrified at being alone in a remote location.  I’m talking Utah, not Alaska where there are actually animals that could kill you.  To my way of thinking there is nothing sweeter than being so far from civilization that you can hear your own pulse.  I think maybe we were born with that; you probably can’t instill it in kids who don’t feel it naturally.

  • Reading your post reminds me that I need to plan a hike with my grandson, who by the way ended up in ER from doing something called “Tablejumping”  when his Dad asked him what it was he said, google it Dad… Yes, if you google it you will find images of youngsters jumping on, off and over tables…..perhaps you can add this to your future plans for your offspring.  HaHa

  • When I was a kid, we used to go on long drives to special places for picnics — the mountains, wildflowers, distant beaches (my dad was a doctor, and we had to get out of town to escape the phone on his days off!). Some of those picnics are among my favorite memories, and probably led to my love of nature.

  • Seems like we (or some of us) spend our childhoods avoiding the things we have plenty of time to do only to wish we had the time to do the things we avoided doing in childhood when we’re grown. Boy, that was a mouthful! Anyway, perhaps you’ll at least have the pleasure of a few satisfying ‘I told you so’s.

    I don’t have a lot of tips. My six-year-old hates the woods and my fifteen-y-o, who has autism, hates anything that smacks of effort. Sigh.

    Geocaching sounds really fun!

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