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Leave no child inside this summer

Friday, July 25, 2008

For many families, the arrival of summer brings the return of cherished traditions such as picnics in local parks, hanging out at the pool, camping and hiking.

As hard as it is to believe, in a region with so much natural beauty, many kids never experience the outdoors.

According to the National Parks Service, in 2006 one million fewer people visited our parks. That's 14.5 million fewer than in 1999.

Many studies and books, such as Richard Louv's "Last Child in the Woods," show that an increasing number of children spend little or no time playing outside.

In the greater Seattle region, there are many ways to get kids involved in the outdoors this summer-and many are free, inexpensive or offer financial assistance.

Here are some tips from the Highline YMCA on how to encourage more outdoor play and fewer hours in front of the TV this summer:

Day camp, resident camp and leadership development programs from the Highline YMCA and its sister branches offer kids and teens a chance to participate in fun, age-appropriate outdoor activities, including hiking, swimming and outdoor games.

Middle-school girls and boys can also participate in the YMCA's YBOYS or PCAL programs, which provide a unique environment in which to build leadership and outdoor skills. Financial assistance is available to the extent possible for all YMCA programs. Visit www.seattleymca.org or www.highlineymca.org.

Seattle Inner City Outings provides opportunities for Seattle-area youth to experience the outdoors and is coordinated by the local Sierra Club. Volunteers work through selected schools and agencies to reach kids ages eight to 20 from diverse ethnic and cultural backgrounds. Visit http://ico.sierraclub.org/seattle.

The Highline area is full of fun outdoor experiences.

Marine View Park and Eagle Landing Park have trails that offer beach access. Taking an afternoon stroll through a farmers market in Burien, SeaTac or Des Moines is an easy way to interest kids in fresh fruit and vegetables.

Mark Twain once wrote, "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things that you didn't do than by the ones you did do.

"So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover."

This wise man knew that the child who experiences the outdoor world, who has a chance to see and do new things, is the child with a head start in life.

As summer arrives, seize the chance to give the gift of an outdoor experience to a child close to you.

Shelly Skaro is Senior Program Director at the Highline YMCA. A new 48,000-square-foot YMCA is being planned for the Highline/SeaTac area, with a groundbreaking scheduled for this summer. For more information on the project, or current programs at the YMCA, visit www.highlineymca.org or call 206-244-5880.


Please share your point of view on this story. Comments posted with First and Last names will be considered for publication in the print edition. You may request that your name not be published. You may also send your comment directly to the editor at hteditor@robinsonnews.com.


Mike Vandeman Ph.D. wrote on Sep 17, 2008 8:22 PM:

" I must have hit the nail on the head, to cause these guys to LIE like that. I just wonder what nail it was? They talk like mountain bikers, who are extremely defensive, because they know there's no way that they can defend their selfish, destructive sport. "

Brian Fellows wrote on Sep 9, 2008 10:19 PM:

" I strongly disagree. Mike Vandeman prides himself on "receiving 3 A's in Physics" in college, and while he may have not ever taken one single course in biology, ecology, ethology, or any type of wildlife resource study, he gets a gold star for effort!

Mike takes the very conventional approach that humans should abandon all use of land, including the production of plants for clothing and food. This outstanding, constructive attitude, honed by years of follow-up on his dissertation research (the psychology of preference for ethnic foods - yes I am serious), has earned Mr. - nay - Dr. Vandeman a spot in the lexicon - nay - halycon of conservation. "

Ron Mullins wrote on Jul 26, 2008 9:57 AM:

" Ignore Michael J. Vandeman, PhD, he's a fake environmentalist with a psychological problem. Just google his name and see what I mean. He wants us to stop using fossil fuels while he flies all over the world giving lectures. He's a hypocrite of the highest order. "

Mike Vandeman Ph.D. wrote on Jul 22, 2008 5:32 PM:

" Last Child in the Woods
Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder,
by Richard Louv
Michael J. Vandeman, Ph.D.
November 16, 2006

In this eloquent and comprehensive work, Louv makes a convincing case for ensuring that children (and adults) maintain access to pristine natural areas, and even, when those are not available, any bit of nature that we can preserve, such as vacant lots. I agree with him 100%. Just as we never really outgrow our need for our parents (and grandparents, brothers, sisters, uncles, aunts, cousins, etc.), humanity has never outgrown, and can never outgrow, our need for the companionship and mutual benefits of other species.

But what strikes me most about this book is how Louv is able, in spite of 310 pages of text, to completely ignore the two most obvious problems with his thesis: (1) We want and need to have contact with other species, but neither we nor Louv bother to ask whether they want to have contact with us! In fact, most species of wildlife obviously do not like having humans around, and can thrive only if we leave them alone! Or they are able tolerate our presence, but only within certain limits. (2) We and Louv never ask what type of contact is appropriate! He includes fishing, hunting, building "forts", farming, ranching, and all other manner of recreation. Clearly, not all contact with nature leads to someone becoming an advocate and protector of wildlife. While one kid may see a beautiful area and decide to protect it, what's to stop another from seeing it and thinking of it as a great place to build a house or create a ski resort? Developers and industrialists must come from somewhere, and they no doubt played in the woods with the future environmentalists!

It is obvious, and not a particularly new idea, that we must experience wilderness in order to appreciate it. But it is equally true, though ("conveniently") never mentioned, that we need to stay out of nature, if the wildlife that live there are to survive. I discuss this issue thoroughly in the essay, "Wildlife Need Habitat Off-Limits to Humans!", at http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande/india3.

It should also be obvious (but apparently isn't) that how we interact with nature determines how we think about it and how we learn to treat it. Remember, children don't learn so much what we tell them, but they learn very well what they see us do. Fishing, building "forts", mountain biking, and even berry-picking teach us that nature exists for us to exploit. Luckily, my fort-building career was cut short by a bee-sting! As I was about to cut down a tree to lay a third layer of logs on my little log cabin in the woods, I took one swing at the trunk with my axe, and immediately got a painful sting (there must have been a bee-hive in the tree) and ran away as fast as I could.

On page 144 Louv quotes Rasheed Salahuddin: "Nature has been taken over by thugs who care absolutely nothing about it. We need to take nature back." Then he titles his next chapter "Where Will Future Stewards of Nature Come From?" Where indeed? While fishing may bring one into contact with natural beauty, that message can be eclipsed by the more salient one that the fish exist to pleasure and feed humans (even if we release them after we catch them). (My fishing career was also short-lived, perhaps because I spent most of the time either waiting for fish that never came, or untangling fishing line.) Mountain bikers claim that they are "nature-lovers" and are "just hikers on wheels". But if you watch one of their helmet-camera videos, it is easy to see that 99.44% of their attention must be devoted to controlling their bike, or they will crash. Children initiated into mountain biking may learn to identify a plant or two, but by far the strongest message they will receive is that the rough treatment of nature is acceptable. It's not!

On page 184 Louv recommends that kids carry cell phones. First of all, cell phones transmit on essentially the same frequency as a microwave oven, and are therefore hazardous to one's health - especially for children, whose skulls are still relatively thin. Second, there is nothing that will spoil one's experience of nature faster than something that reminds one of the city and the "civilized" world. The last thing one wants while enjoying nature is to be reminded of the world outside. Nothing will ruin a hike or a picnic faster than hearing a radio or the ring of a cell phone, or seeing a headset, cell phone, or mountain bike. I've been enjoying nature for over 60 years, and can't remember a single time when I felt a need for any of these items.

It's clear that we humans need to reduce our impacts on wildlife, if they, and hence we, are to survive. But it is repugnant and arguably inhumane to restrict human access to nature. Therefore, we need to practice minimal-impact recreation (i.e., hiking only), and leave our technology (if we need it at all!) at home. In other words, we need to decrease the quantity of contact with nature, and increase the quality.

References:

Ehrlich, Paul R. and Ehrlich, Anne H., Extinction: The Causes and Consequences of the Disappearances of Species. New York: Random House, 1981.

Errington, Paul L., A Question of Values. Ames, Iowa: Iowa State University Press, 1987.

Flannery, Tim, The Eternal Frontier -- An Ecological History of North America and Its Peoples. New York: Grove Press, 2001.

Foreman, Dave, Confessions of an Eco-Warrior. New York: Harmony Books, 1991.

Knight, Richard L. and Kevin J. Gutzwiller, eds. Wildlife and Recreationists. Covelo, California: Island Press, 1995.

Louv, Richard, Last Child in the Woods -- Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder. Chapel Hill, N.C.: Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill, 2005.

Noss, Reed F. and Allen Y. Cooperrider, Saving Nature's Legacy: Protecting and Restoring Biodiversity. Island Press, Covelo, California, 1994.

Stone, Christopher D., Should Trees Have Standing? Toward Legal Rights for Natural Objects. Los Altos, California: William Kaufmann, Inc., 1973.

Vandeman, Michael J., http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande, especially http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande/ecocity3, http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande/india3, http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande/sc8, and http://home.pacbell.net/mjvande/goodall.

Ward, Peter Douglas, The End of Evolution: On Mass Extinctions and the Preservation of Biodiversity. New York: Bantam Books, 1994.

"The Wildlands Project", Wild Earth. Richmond, Vermont: The Cenozoic Society, 1994.

Wilson, Edward O., The Future of Life. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2002. "

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