Kid Friendly Stainless Steel Bottles

4 12 2008

With all the concern about BPA in reusable water bottles, WaterGeeks has a Kid Friendly Stainless Steel Bottle.  WaterGeeks also says of their choice of material …

According to U.S. Department of Public Health and Human Services, the adverse health effects from nickel are highly dependent on the degree of exposure. Many health experts are now recommending to use stainless steel cookware low in nickel content.

Because of this, we decided to use stainless steel #201 (typically called 18/0) and not stainless steel #304 (typically called 18/8) when is comes to our water bottles in order to have the lowest nickel content possible and still have food grade. This 12oz bottles comes in 3 great colors and has an ergonomic design making it easy for children to hold. And best of all, the sippy adaptor turns this bottle into a sippy cup for infants.

watergeeks1
- available in 3 colors: stainless, blue, pink
- made with unlined, 18/0, food grade stainless steel
- wide mouth for ice cubes and easy cleaning
- ergonomic, curved design
- lightweight, easy to carry
- non-leaching and BPA-FREE
- fits most cup holders
- comes standard with a pop-up sport cap
- sippy adaptor also available





Kid’s Recycling Zone online

13 08 2008





Take the Green Family Pledge!

24 07 2008

Download the GREEN FAMILY PLEDGE from the American Camp Association:

CampParents.org is a comprehensive camp resource for families—offering expert advice from camp professionals on camp selection, readiness, child and youth development, and issues of importance to families. CampParents.org helps you find the right camp for every child.




Parents owe their children a connection to the earth

23 07 2008

For more ideas about reconnecting children with nature check out Hooked on Nature





10 ideas to teach your children about nature

23 07 2008

Getting your children in touch with nature benefits their physical, mental and emotional development as well as provides a fun outlet for the whole family. Here are some Family Fun Ideas to Get Green! from the American Camp Association.

image from flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/ligayac/188760284/

  1. Encourage your kids to be “nature sleuths” and help them develop their own detective kit with magnifying glass, paper, and pencil to record interesting things they see in the backyard (e.g., insects, birds, leaves, spider webs, etc.).
  2. Have a sound-pollution free day at home and unplug! No radios, televisions, CDs, computer games, iPods, etc.
  3. Plant a garden of flowers and/or vegetables in your yard together as a family.
  4. Put up window bird feeders so you and your children can easily watch the variety of birds that will visit.
  5. Take your kids on a field trip to the local nature center and participate in an environmental education program together.
  6. Participate as a family in local clean-up projects, like Adopt-A-Highway, park, or stream cleaning.
  7. Complain about the weather less; appreciate the outdoors more.
  8. Put out weather instruments; thermometer, barometer, rain gauge, etc., in your yard and monitor them together as a family.
  9. Catch run-off water from your roof in a rain barrel to water flowers in your garden, teaching your children the value of water conservation.
  10. Put up signs to remind family members to turn off lights to conserve energy.
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Why do children need “free play”?

17 07 2008

This is from a post at the Children & Nature Network

Author Advocates Free Play in USA Today

USA Today – June 27, 2008
By Nanci Hellmich

God Gave Us Pics!
Image from Pixdaus: God Gave Us Pics!

Make-believe is more than child’s play. It’s crucial to the development of creativity, empathy, learning and problem-solving, but it’s being squeezed out of the lives of many children, says psychologist Susan Linn. In her new book, The Case for Make Believe: Saving Play in a Commercialized World (The New Press, $24.95), Linn says parents must limit their children’s screen time and give them simple tools that encourage creative play. USA TODAY talks to her about the building blocks of make-believe.

Q: Why is play essential to children’s mental health and creativity?

A: Children use make-believe to conquer their fears and explore their hopes and dreams. It’s in play that they get to initiate action instead of just constantly reacting. It’s a safe haven for honest self-expression.

Q: How have you seen children use play to express themselves?

A: There was a little girl whose parents told her she was going to have a new sibling, so she slid off the couch, picked up a baby doll, whomped it on the floor a few times and hurled it across the room. Then she turned to her parents with a big grin and said cheerfully, “No more baby.” She couldn’t say, “I’m afraid I’m going to be replaced and you won’t love me anymore.’ She didn’t have the words to express the powerful feelings she was having, but she could play about it. She continued to play about babies through her mother’s entire pregnancy. She diapered her doll babies. She literally walked in her mom’s shoes and stuffed babies under her shirt to pretend to be pregnant. Children often play about what they are working on. For some children, that might be new babies, or sharing, or scary monsters. Others, with more challenging lives, may play about illness, death, loss or abuse.

Q: You write that studies show the time children spend in creative play has diminished over the years. Why?

A: Kids are spending about 40 hours a week engaged with electronic media after school. That’s time taken away from creative play. The combination of this screen time and all the toys based on TV shows and movies narrows children’s options for make-believe. So do these best-selling electronic toys where all you have to do is push a button, and the toy talks, walks and does back flips by itself. It’s like the toy is having most of the fun, but it’s not giving children a chance to be creative. When it comes to toys that encourage creative play, less is more. A good toy is 90% child and only 10% toy.

Q: What can parents do this summer to make sure their kids have an opportunity for creative play?

A: Make sure that children have unstructured time away from screen media and electronic toys. Take advantage of nice weather and get kids playing outside. Children actually play more creatively in nature. Play together as a family. Set up regular times when cellphones, computers, televisions, MP3 players are off and do something fun together — bake, play board games, do art projects or build with blocks. Fill the house with music — sing, dance, be silly. If your kids are going to camp or day care this summer, pick one that doesn’t rely on showing movies or watching television and that encourages a variety of activities, including unstructured playtime.

Q: Do adults remember the creative play from their childhoods?

A: People often tell me that their happiest memories are the times they spent in unstructured creative play by themselves or with friends. Don’t today’s children deserve a chance to play like that as well?

Continued.. Go to source page >>>





Ohio Arboretum offers nature play for kids

9 07 2008

The Holden Arboretum in Kirtland, Ohio has a new program encouraging kids and parents to get outdoors and soak up some nature. The program has some innovative approaches to engaging children in creative play while learning about nature. Holden’s four “Wonder Stations” include:

  1. Meadow Wonders. Roll down a hill, dig in the dirt, weave plants on a giant loom and see how grasshoppers jump. Meadow Wonders connects kids with the adventures many can find in their own back yards.
  2. Garden Wonders. This area features secret plant hideaways built by expert Holden craftsmen. Children will be able to climb in and out of these plant structures and really get inside nature. Also, they will be able to use a hand pump to water flowers and even design and become a giant human-sized butterfly.
  3. Water Wonders. At Holden’s Corning Lake, kids can try to catch a frog, sail a boat and see all of the amazing things that water can do. Although there is no swimming in Corning Lake, this is a structured and safe area where kids have the chance to get a little wet.
  4. Forest Wonders. Conquer the tree obstacle course, build a shelter with sticks or search under logs. This wondrous section brings children into the woods for an up-close look at nature’s natural bounty. Kids can even explore a cabin and see what’s new at Buckeye Bud’s Discovery Tower. There is something new for guests of all ages.

Go to Source Page at Children & Nature Network >>>

Go to Holden Arboretum’s Wild Child Wonders page >>>





No Child Left Inside Act moving forward

29 06 2008

From the Children&Nature Network:

The “No Child Left Inside” movement pushed by U.S. Rep. John Sarbanes ( D-Baltimore County, Maryland) took a significant step forward last week as members of the House Education and Labor Committee approved Wednesday the No Child Left Inside Act.

smell the flowersThe bill sends money to states to expand environmental and outdoor education programs. The states also will receive money to develop plans to make sure graduates are “environmentally literate.”  A companion bill in the Senate has not been voted on.  The push for more environmental education has its roots in the book “Last Child in the Woods,” in which author Richard Louv decries the lack of outdoor learning and play available to children today.

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Blue Ridge Center offers self-guided bird trail

24 06 2008

The Blue Ridge Center for Environmental Stewardship offers self-guided birding trails and even offers naturalist packs that you can borrow for the excursion.  Each pack contains binoculars (suitable for children and adults), a field guide, trail map, suggested activities and sketching materials.  The “Center” highly recommends using their Daypack while strolling along the Birds of the Ridge Interpretive Trail. 

birdwatching

This is from their website:

Birds of the Ridge Trail

Here on the 900 acre Blue Ridge Center for Environmental Stewardship, open fields, deciduous forests, wetlands, ponds and rock outcrops are home to an amazing variety of bird life – at least 130 species – with more coming in all the time!

This outstanding setting provides a wonderful opportunity for people of all ages to learn about and observe birds.

The General Public including families, hikers, birders and anyone interested in enjoying our beautiful setting is invited to:

Stop by our office and check out a Birds of the Ridge Daypack.

Hit the Trail!

Follow 12 interpretive signs along our self-guided Birds of the Ridge Trail Loop.  Walk through tranquil woodlands, explore a meadow and observe a vibrant wetland habitat teaming with life. This is a great opportunity to learn about and observe birds in their native habitat. Visitors walking at a slow to moderate pace will need about 60 minutes to complete this trail.

Docent Led tours will be available THIS FALL. If you are an educator and are interesed in bringing your class or group to the center for a docent led tour on the Birds of a Feather Trail, please contact Shawna at sdewitt@blueridgecenter.org

DIRECTIONS:

The Blue Ridge Center is 2 miles from the Potomac River in northwest Loudoun County, Va., 18 miles from Leesburg, Va., 15 miles from Frederick, Md., and 5 miles from Harpers Ferry, W.Va. From Leesburg: Go west on U.S. 7, right on Rt. 9., then right on Rt. 671/Harpers Ferry Rd. Go 6 miles to the Blue Ridge Center entrance on the left, just past the Neersville Fire Station. From Frederick: Go south on U.S. 340. Cross the Potomac River and go left on Rt. 671/Harpers Ferry Rd. Go 2 miles to Blue Ridge Center entrance on right.

GOOGLE MAPS

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Kids in Green Star Schools strive for Zero Waste

16 06 2008

There is a program in Colorado called Eco-Cycle. According to their web site

“Eco-Cycle is one of the largest non-profit recyclers in the USA and has an international reputation as a pioneer and innovator in resource conservation.  We were created 30 years ago by everyday residents who had a passionate belief in conserving our natural resources. These Eco-Cycle volunteers brought recycling to town in 1976, making Boulder one of the first 20 communities in the U.S. to offer curbside recycling. We continue to be driven by these same passions and innovative actions.”

One of Eco-Cycle’s programs is the Green Star Schools Program

This looks like a wonderful program that reduces waste and teaches school children how to work toward Zero Waste through actions like recycling, reusing lunch bags and containers, and composting.  Here is the overview of the program.

Schools throughout Boulder County are partnering with Eco-Cycle to move toward Zero Waste through increased recycling, the implementation of composting, and special waste reduction activities. The project is part of Eco-Cycle’s award-winning School Recycling and Environmental Education Program. The Green Star Schools are the first in the nation to reduce waste in every aspect of school life. As a result of implementing the program, up to two-thirds of the discards from each of the Green Star Schools is kept out of landfills.

The program began with four schools in the spring of 2005. Currently, there are 5,100 students at 14 schools enrolled. Seven additional schools have already signed up to join the program during the 2007-08 and 2008-09 school years, and are eager to start working toward Zero Waste.

The program also include a whole new way of doing lunch:

One of the most noticeable changes for students at Green Star Schools is their new way of handling lunch leftovers.  During the lunch hour, instead of dumping food scraps, plastic utensils and excess packaging into a trash can, kids use a special station where they deposit reusable service ware into hot, soapy water to be washed and reused; milk and juice containers into a recycling bin; and sandwich crusts, banana peels, other food leftovers, and non-recyclable paper such as napkins or paper towels into a compost bin.

Kids who bring lunch from home are encouraged to eliminate trash by bringing a waste-free lunch, replacing overly-packaged foods with Zero Waste alternatives such as cloth lunch bags, cloth napkins, reusable utensils, and reusable or recyclable drink and food containers. Students who opt to order food from the cafeteria menu are served lunch in reusable bowls and cups rather than polystyrene (a.k.a.“Styrofoam”) and eat with washable, reusable cutlery. By purchasing with Zero Waste in mind, the school staff has eliminated most disposables from Green Star Schools’ cafeterias.

<READ MORE>

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Alternative to DEET for children?

11 06 2008

Fairy Tales Hair Care for Children claims to have an all natural DEET-free insect repellent for children.  I hesitate to use products with DEET but they do work to repel insects.  If there is a safer way, especially for young children, I want to at least give it a try.

Mass Audubon says to protect yourself from mosquitos:

An insect repellent with DEET (N-N-diethyl-meta-toluamide) can be used on clothing and exposed skin. Deet should never be used on infants. For children the recommended concentration of DEET is no more than 10 to 15%; for adults the recommendation is 30%. Insect repellents in lotion, stick or cream form are best.


This is from the company’s web site.

Looking for a DEET free bug repellent? Try Rosemary Repel Spray! Rosemary Repel Spray is loaded with all natural oils of rosemary, citronella, tea tree and lavender – all great smelling fragrances that help repel bugs. Parents and children love this great smelling DEET free spray.

You can read more about the products at Feelgood Style.com

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No Child Left Inside to promote environmental education

10 06 2008
No Child Left Inside wants appreciation for outdoors to be second nature.  No Child Left Behind Act left environmental education out in the cold
By Lara Lutz

Unplugged, unstructured time in nature is hard to come by these days-especially for U.S. children with packed schedules and a knack for media multi-tasking.

Nature has also lost status in the academic world. Even teachers who value environmental education lack resources to explore topics that aren’t directly measured on yearly standardized achievement tests.

On Earth Day, members of Congress took to the great outdoors at the Patuxent Wildlife Research Center to hear testimony about the need to reverse this trend by passing the proposed “No Child Left Inside Act.”

If passed, the act would raise the status of environmental and outdoor education in public schools and back it with more federal funds. <MORE>

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Where is your Sacred Place?

6 06 2008

“Has some sight, some sound, some smell, some taste, some feeling out in nature ever literally stopped time and sent you back in time? Has something purely sensual in the natural world opened up a wormhole and transported you through space to someplace else?

I am sure that many of you reading this have had some physical-mental “sensory flashback,” as I am calling it, through the time machine of your sensual body. And although there are many reasons why environmentalists go green, I think that these sorts of experiences play a crucial role in making us sensitive to the wonders–and the fragility–of the Earth.”

Justin Van Kleeck published a nice three-part series on “Sacred Places” at sustainablog.  He talks about sacred places as those associated with a full sensory experience, often from childhood, that so touched our subconscious that it can be triggered to full memory by a sound, smell, or other sensory event.  Do nature lovers value the outdoors because we have this deep connection fostered in childhood?  He believes that is true (as does Richard Louv, author of Last Child in the Woods).

One point Van Kleeck makes is that sacred places don’t have to be spectacular wilderness landscapes to inspire wonder.  There are plenty of opportunities in our everyday surroundings that can spawn a love of nature.  Van Kleeck writes:

Nature is everywhere: from a lone tree in a highway median to a flowerpot on your windowsill. Just put up a bird feeder, one of the ones you can stick to your window, and even an apartment in the middle of a megalopolis can become a “wild” place. Or plant a few irises; those little beauties are awe inspiring in their divine, delicate sublimity. Or go out and do some weeding in your flowerbeds, preferably without gloves; what you wash out from under your fingernails and scrub off the knees of your pants consists of nearly the same stuff lying under the leaves in the middle of a faraway forest. Or plant a sunflower seed in a cup of soil, water it, set it in the sunlight, and voila: the cosmic mystery of the life-force unfolds before your eyes, revealing the wonder of a seed.

Nature is everywhere: in the breeze rushing in and messing up your desk when you open your window, in the sunlight that gets your car’s insides all hot and stuffy, in the rain that turns rush-hour traffic into a parking lot, in the bird poop that you have to clean off your hood (or maybe even your head)….

Consequently, and luckily for us, the sacred natural places can be found, enjoyed, and revered without going to the top of a mountain or the bottom of the sea or the shadowy depths of the woods. If we compartmentalize Nature to those faraway places, the places where humanity is not at all, then we risk missing the sanctity and holiness of where we are and the Nature that is always with us. We risk missing how nature is and always can be our way to experience Nature.

One thing is certain.  To plant the seed of concern for our environment in a young mind, our children need to be connected to nature through memorable sensory events.  This is one more important reason to protect our natural resources and the flora and fauna that inhabit the landscape.  Van Kleeck writes:

How can we ensure that our children and those beyond have places that they can hold sacred? Obviously, on a general level we have to continue (increase!) efforts to preserve species, habitats, resources, and overall biological diversity. That goes without saying. I want focus here on how we can ensure that our children will be sensitive to nature–that every future generation can be a Generation W (Wild) filled with lots and lots of little green men and women.

Read the full article at sustainablog: Part One, Part Two, and Part Three

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GO OUTSIDE AND PLAY!

5 06 2008

GO OUTSIDE AND PLAY!

I heard this often as a child and was encouraged to spend times outdoors rather than in front of the TV.  When I was growing up we didn’t even have computers and video games as distractions so we played baseball, wiffleball, football, basketball, kick-the-can, and other games.  We built tree houses, forts from old building materials, climbed trees, and attempted to dam up the local stream. Today is different. According to a new report released by the National Wildlife Federation

...recent research shows that children are spending half as much time outside as they did 20 years ago. Today’s kids spend six and a half hours a day “plugged into” electronic media. In his 2005 book, Last Child in the Woods, Richard Louv described this American trend. He gave this alarming problem a powerful name. Today’s kids suffer from a “nature deficit.”

There are many contributors to nature deficit. Often parents’ fear of strangers keeps kids indoors. Some parents worry about bug bites, bee stings, and poison ivy. Many children simply do not have an “outside” to play in because of the lack of playgrounds, parks, and open space. Others cannot get to a safe outside area because of busy roads and intersections. Liability concerns have limited traditional outdoor play activities like climbing trees and building forts. Video games and other electronics lure kids inside. In some communities, kids are so overscheduled that they just do not have time to play unless it is through an organized sport.

National Wildlife Federation (NWF) is committed to connecting children to nature. Children should have access to and time for play in nature. A right for unstructured play. A right to create and explore. A right to experience the sense of wonder of being outside. <GET THE REPORT HERE>

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Summer Camp at Rust Nature Sanctuary

3 06 2008

You can download a catalog of Audubon Naturalist Society’s summer camp offerings at Rust Sanctuary in Leesburg at this <link>





Virginia Museum Receives Children and Nature Grant

29 05 2008

“This is a unique concept,” said Harvest Foundation Program Officer John Estes. “The program and the partnerships that will be developed by the VMNH will be one of a growing number of efforts around the country that have a common aim of getting children and adults off the sofa and into exploring, learning about and appreciating the local natural resources.”

Virginia Museum Receives Children and Nature Grant

Martinsville Bulletin – May 15, 2008

The Virginia Museum of Natural History and The Harvest Foundation have announced a new initiative titled the Children and Nature Educational Network, in which nature will be used as an educational laboratory.

The Harvest Foundation has given the museum a three-year, $215,350 grant for the program that will offer children an interactive approach to outdoor learning and will complement what they learn in area schools.

<READ MORE>





Why Are Schools Designed Like Prisons?

23 05 2008
San Quentin State Prison

Image via Wikipedia

From the Children & Nature Network

New York Times – May 12, 2008
By Allison Arieff

School design, particularly public school design, is often lumped in with the design of other institutional structures like jails, civic centers and hospitals, to detrimental effect. My high school, for example, had the dubious distinction of having been designed by the architect responsible for San Quentin. (The convicts got the better building.) Schools fulfill a practical function, to be sure, but shouldn’t they be designed to inspire?

Throughout the United States, students are installed in institutional, even citadel-like environments early on: they arrive at school in cars or buses (where once they might have walked) and step directly into buildings, where they spend 8 hours in classrooms, interacting with the outdoors only in prescribed spaces and only for allotted amounts of time.

What amounts really to a sort of cubicle culture for kids is contributing to what author Richard Louv terms “nature deficit disorder” in his book “Last Child in the Woods.” In it, Louv describes the human costs of alienation from nature, among them “diminished use of the senses, attention difficulties, and higher rates of physical and emotional illnesses…nature deficit disorder can even change human behavior in cities, which could ultimately effect their design, since longstanding studies show a relationship between the absence, or inaccessibility, of parks and open space with high crime rates, depression, and other urban maladies.” A great quote from one of Louv’s thousands of interviews with children: “I like to play indoors better ‘cause that’s where all the electrical outlets are.” <MORE>





Kids need to get dirty

22 05 2008

Thanks to People and Nature Journal for this post:

Got dirt? “In South Carolina, a truckload of dirt is the same price as a video game!” reports Norman McGee, a father in that state who bought a small pickup-load of dirt for his daughter and friends.

BEYOND NATURE-DEFICIT DISORDER

It’s Time to Turn Consciousness into Action
By Richard Louv

Got dirt? “In South Carolina, a truckload of dirt is the same price as a video game!” reports Norman McGee, a father in that state who bought a small pickup-load of dirt for his daughter and friends.

McGee is turning consciousness into action. So is Liz Baird, who keeps a “wonder bowl” available for her children.

When Baird was a little girl she would fill her pockets with natural wonders–acorns, rocks, mushrooms. “My Mom got tired of washing clothes and finding these treasures in the bottom of the washer or disintegrated through the dryer,” Liz recalls. “So she came up with Liz’s Wonder Bowl, and the idea was that I could empty my pockets into the bowl. I could still enjoy my treasures, and try to find out what things were, and not cause trouble with the laundry.”

McGee and Baird are among the thousands of parents who have joined — and are leading — an international children and nature movement. Sometimes known as Leave No Child Inside, the effort is bringing together people from all walks of life, who are creating grassroots regional campaigns, state and national legislation, and changes in their own families to help children become happier, healthier and smarter.

An emerging body of scientific knowledge links nature time to longer attention spans, better cognitive functioning, reduction of stress, and strengthened family bonds. What better way to enhance parent-child attachment than to walk in the woods together, disengaging from distracting electronics, advertising, and peer pressure?

Howard Frumkin, director of the National Center for Environmental Health at Centers for Disease Control, recently describes the clear benefits of nature experiences to healthy child development, and to adult well-being.

“In the same way that protecting water and protecting air are strategies for promoting public health, protecting natural landscapes can be seen as a powerful form of preventive medicine,” he says. He believes that future research about the positive health effects of nature should be conducted in collaboration with architects, urban planners, park designers, and landscape architects. “Of course, there is still much we need to learn, such as what kinds of nature contact are most beneficial to health, how much contact is needed and how to measure that, and what groups of people benefit most. But we know enough to act.”

If you’re a parent who missed out on nature as a child, now’s your chance. Indeed, all the gifts of nature that come to children also come to the good adult who introduces a child to nature.

Young people are acting, too, by becoming natural leaders in the movement. For example, a seven-year-old girl in Virginia rounded up her friends and enrolled them in her own Girls Gone Wild in Nature Club. Together they organize backyard campouts and bug hunts.

In Mississippi, teenager Josh Morrison founded Geeks in the Woods (www.geeksinthewoods.org) for his friends and fellow geeks everywhere. He defines “geek” as a “gaming environmentally educated kid,” and says he and his friends — “tired of being labeled” tech addicts — can have their PlayStations and their outdoor time too: “We could be the generation that makes a U-turn back to . . . a balance between virtual reality and what sustains all life . . . nature.”

FIVE ACTIONS YOU CAN TAKE TODAY

1. Go for a family walk when the moon is full. There’s a whole new set of animals, sights and sounds out there. Listen to animals calling. Owls and bats are looking for prey. Watch for things glowing, like worms and fungus on trees. And look up at the stars.

2. Help your child discover a hidden universe. Find a scrap board and place it on bare dirt. Come back in a day or two, lift the board, and see how many species have found shelter there. Identify them with the help of a field guide. Return to this universe once a month, lift the board and discover who’s new.

3. Tell your children stories about your special childhood places in nature. Then help them find their own: leaves beneath a backyard willow, the bend of a creek, the meadow in the woods. Let it become their intimate connection with the natural world.

4. Revive old traditions. Collect lightning bugs at dusk, release them at dawn. Make a leaf collection. Keep a terrarium or aquarium. Go crawdadding–tie a piece of liver or bacon to a string, drop it into a creek or pond, wait until a crawdad tugs.

5. Invent your own nature game. One mother’s suggestion: “We help our kids pay attention during longer hikes by playing ‘find ten critters’ — mammals, birds, insects, reptiles, snails, and other creatures. Finding a critter can also mean discovering footprints, mole holes, and other signs that an animal has passed by or lives there.”  <MORE>





More for your kids at National Geographic Kids

16 05 2008





NJ high schoolers protest anti-bike-to-school action by principal

16 05 2008
Gillespie's cyclesImage by chdot via Flickr

Posted at treehugger

The students are members of an environmental club at their high school that had raised $2,000 and wanted to use the funds to donate a bike rack to the school. However, they were told that the school did not want to promote cycling due to safety concerns, and thus the gift was rejected. Ironically enough, the rejection came on Earth Day.

Fortunately, these enterprising high schoolers didn’t just sit on their heels. No, they came together and organized the following protest: “more than 50 students rode their bikes to school, commuting in pairs and groups. After studying up on state biking laws — and carrying copies with them — the students legally tethered their bikes in conspicuous clusters around lamp posts, trees and other poles dotting the circular drive in front of the school.” The students also delivered a letter to the principal. So what was his response?

Well, it wasn’t very positive. In a letter he wrote “In as much as the district provides courtesy busing to students who live within walking distance of the high school, because of the danger on Garretson Road, it does (not) make sense, in my opinion, to promote the riding of bicycles to school.” Really? So instead of encouraging youth to walk or bicycle, they should take the loud, dirty diesel buses that are provided for free (read that: subsidized by taxpayers)? Here’s an idea: why not re-design the streets around the school to make them safer for pedestrians and cyclists (shouldn’t the streets around a school be safe anyway?) and save the courtesy buses for those that live farther way from campus.

Oh, and maybe the school should re-consider its policy of providing a parking spot for every senior that drives, while not accepting a free bike rack that can cut down on the need for parking spaces. <MORE>