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Interesting idea from out West - use landscape photography to get kids into nature….

June 12, 2008 – 7:07 am

Kids’ photography, lizards ‘n’ surfin’ music
Staff Reports June 10, 2008

guitar playing
Submitted photo, Deane Stanton plays them all.
SUPERIOR - Professional photographers Mark Skalny and Maggie Leef will offer a class in landscape and nature photography for kids age 9 to 16 from 8:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Boyce Thompson Arboretum.
The class is part of the national Leave No Child Inside effort to get kids outside enjoying nature and help them become better photographers. Beginners are urged to attend.

Spaces are limited and pre-payment is required. Enrollment is $10 for members and $17.50 for non-members. Phone 520-689-2723 to make reservations.

A “Learn Your Lizards Guided Walk” also will begin at 8:30 a.m. Saturday.

Usual arboretum hours are from 6 a.m. until 3 p.m., but one Saturday a month during the summer the hours are extended until 8 p.m. A special admission of $5 is offered on these days after 3 p.m. Music begins at 5:30 p.m. and lasts until 7:30 p.m. Bring a picnic basket and use the charcoal grills.

Deane Stanton will bring his instrumental surf guitar music to the second Summer Solstice Music Evening on June 21, playing surfin’ hits of the 60’s originally recorded by the Beach Boys and Ventures.

Boyce Thompson Arboretum is located 3 miles west of Superior on U.S. 60, about 30 minute northeast of Florence via Arizona 79 and U.S. 60. Summer hours are 6 am to 3 p.m. - 8 p.m. on June 21. Call 520-689-2723 or go to www.btarboretum.org for additional dates or more information.

More local coverage of a member group!

June 12, 2008 – 7:05 am

http://www.dispatch.com/live/content/life/stories/2008/06/11/1_CAMP_WYANDOT_ART_06-11-08_D1_9IAF1Q4.html?sid=101

council fire

Bette Jenks of Columbus holds the attention of the Council Fire at Camp Wyandot.

TIMOTHY E. BLACK | FOR THE DISPATCH

MILESTONES
At 80, camp still endearing
Wednesday, June 11, 2008 3:02 AM
By Jill Laster
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

Bette Jenks of Columbus holds the attention of the Council Fire at Camp Wyandot.
ROCKBRIDGE, Ohio — In 1928, when Camp Wyandot opened, young visitors didn’t have the luxury of running water, electricity or television.

Not much has changed in 80 years.

“You feel like you’re going home because everything is like when you were a kid: the nature, the dining hall, the lake — everything. It’s all the same,” said Grace Simpson, who first attended the camp in 1943.

Although guests these days are able to shower there, modern amenities remain few at the site — on 110 acres in the Hocking Hills.

Camp Wyandot, after all, was designed as a summer getaway for learning and enjoying the great outdoors.

“It was heavenly lying there at night, looking at the stars,” recalled Simpson, 76, of Columbus. “Sleeping outside was some of the greatest times in my life.”

For other former campers, too, the attraction — owned by Camp Fire USA — has provided memories to spare.

About 125 alumni and their children, along with current staff members, gathered Saturday to swap stories during a daylong party to celebrate the camp’s milestone year.

Around the traditional Council Fire, the visitors recounted old times — from building a swimming pool in 1951 to hiking last summer.

“It really touched my heart,” said Ally Morrow, 83, of Delaware, who first attended Camp Wyandot in 1935 and returned as a counselor. “Camping has meant so much to so many people over the years.”

Started as an attraction for girls only, the camp charged $5 a person for a week of swimming, fishing and hiking. The sole buildings on the property then: a farmhouse, barn and chicken coop.

Although owned by the Camp Fire Girls at the time, the site welcomed all girls from elementary-school to high-school age. In the early years, campers and counselors slept outside each night. The ground was hard, but everyone would take empty mattress casings to the farmhouse and stuff them with straw for bedding.

Through camp visits in the 1940s, Simpson and Morrow began a lifelong friendship. The two attended the party together, with Morrow recalling how, during the Depression and World War II, the camp provided a haven of sorts from the world’s troubles.

“Camp went on even as the war went on,” she said. “Camp was always a constant.”

By the 1950s and ’60s, cabins and a swimming pool were added to the grounds, even as the programs remained pretty much the same: swimming in the morning and evening; sewing, plant identification and other such activities during the day.

Karla Davis, who camped and worked at Wyandot for a combined 40 years until 2006, recalled at least one tradition being dropped for safety’s sake: the torch-lined path to the Council Fire, a week-ending ritual in which costumed counselors perform a history of the camp and campers share what they learned.

“It was solemn; it was beautiful,” said Davis, 49, of Grove City.

“When you’re younger, it’s just awesome sitting on the logs with this huge fire and everyone in costume.”

Probably the most significant change in the camp, though, occurred in 1977, when boys were admitted for the first time.

Initially, caretaker Chuck Woodrum said, there was hesitation.

“When we first talked about having boys here, we just thought, ‘Oh, it’s all going to be different; everything’s going to change,’ ” said Woodrum, who has been with Wyandot for 41 years.

The transition was rocky, he said, because the girls were unaccustomed to having boys around. Today, though, boys make up about 40 percent of campers.

More recently, Camp Wyandot has struggled for survival.

Nancy Wardrell, 71, who attended in the 1940s, said that enrollment, following a national trend, reached record lows in the mid-1990s, allowing the camp to open for just one week during the summer.

Amid discussions that the camp might permanently close, former campers began spreading the word to fellow alumni.

After several meetings, alumni decided to staff the camp themselves as a money-saving move.

For every week spent as a counselor, volunteers could bring one of their children to the camp with them.

“There’s always an infusion of new people, but there’s also a heart that beats for generations,” Wardrell said.

Since 2003, when the camp again looked as if it might close, enrollment has increased steadily, said Amy Boyd, chief executive officer of Camp Fire USA Central Ohio Council.

The camp has cut from 10 to eight the number of sessions it offers, and the cost of a weeklong stay is now $350.

When Ally Morrow thinks of Wyandot, she remembers an old camp saying: “Friends who camp together will never again divide.”

Her best friends, she said, remain the women with whom she camped more than 60 years ago.

“It’s a life-expanding experience to be there for a week or two,” she said.

“Some of us have that experience for a lifetime.”

jlaster@dispatch.com

Copyright © 2008, The Columbus Dispatch

Dispatch story shows example of positive effect of nature

June 9, 2008 – 2:51 pm

(Admin note from Alice - I had a little to do with this story, but it was the Dispatch’s idea. I’m glad they did it! It features one of our members, The Salvation Army’s Greenwood Lake Camp and Retreat Center. PR for The Salvation Army is my full-time gig.)

City kids are naturals at camp
It’s first immersion in outdoors for some
Monday, June 9, 2008 3:10 AM
By Mary Beth Lane
THE COLUMBUS DISPATCH

photo of fish and girlCamp volunteer Batista Hones, 19, kisses a bass after being told that it is tradition to kiss the first fish you catch.

NEAL C. LAURON | DISPATCH

Camp volunteer Batista Hones, 19, kisses a bass after being told that it is tradition to kiss the first fish you catch.
Multimedia

* Watch and listen to the camp audio slide show

DELAWARE, Ohio — By the time their weekend wilderness camp concluded yesterday, 17 city kids had learned how to bait a hook, catch fish and use a bow and arrow.

They had spotted beavers and a little fawn and had learned how to start a campfire with dry wood and no matches.

For many in the group of young people from Columbus’ East Side, it was their first time camping overnight and sleeping in sleeping bags inside tents. And for some of the nine adults who chaperoned, it was their first camping trip, too.

The campers arrived Friday afternoon at 68-acre Greenwood Lake Camp and Retreat in Delaware, about 30 miles north of Columbus, and left yesterday afternoon. The Salvation Army in Greater Columbus has owned and operated the camp since 1926.

The young people, ages 9 to 17, attend the after-school program that the Salvation Army operates at 966 E. Main St. Now, they can count outdoor skills among their talents.

“This is my first time camping in the woods in a tent. It’s fun,” said 13-year-old Chrissy Nebbergall, who displayed her prowess with a bow and arrow yesterday by hitting the target’s bull’s-eye.

Nine-year-old Lauryn Boudreaux reeled in two bass and then released them back into the lake.

Salvation Army Maj. Frank Kirk, a former Marine, led the campers, along with Salvation Army Capt. Yuri Harrington and the volunteer chaperones who are soldiers — or church congregants — at the Salvation Army East Main Corps.

The young people worked in two squads, with members of each taking turns as the leader. The squads took turns washing the dishes, peeling potatoes and performing other chores around the campsite.

“We are creating leaders here,” Kirk said, “building self-confidence and widening their horizons.”

Some of the adults expanded their horizons, too.

“I have had so much fun, and I have injured myself,” said 30-year-old chaperone Tress Augustine, laughing.

“Bruises, allergic reactions, I stubbed a toe, lack of sleep, you name it. This is the first time, and it has been an awesome experience.”

At the Sunday worship service at the camp’s amphitheater overlooking the lake, the campers prayed and then shared the memories they will carry home with them.

Learning to fetch logs in the woods for the campfire. Sleeping outdoors. Eating good meals of hamburgers, hot dogs, chicken gumbo and scrambled eggs and pancakes. Getting dirty and getting bug bites. Swimming.

Alexis Simpkins, 14, told the Salvation Army leaders that she saw God during the wilderness weekend, visible in “all the things he created.”

When the service ended, it was time to strike the tents and eat one more campfire-cooked meal before going home to Columbus.

The Salvation Army also offers a weeklong wilderness camp, Kirk told the campers. Anyone interested? Nearly everyone in the group raised a hand.

For more information about programs, go to www.salvationarmycolumbus.org and www.greenwoodlakecamp.org.

mlane@dispatch.com

Explore the Outdoors official report - We are proud to be a sponsor!

June 3, 2008 – 10:58 am

Firstlady
First Lady Frances Strickland hands out the first copies of the Explore The Outdoors activity book to young kickoff participants.

sand
Kids dig for buried treasure at the Alum Creek State Park kickoff event.

COLUMBUS, OH – The Ohio Department of Natural Resources (ODNR) and many of its recreational partners are challenging the state’s young people to turn off their computers, televisions and PlayStations and “Explore the Outdoors” this summer.

The challenge is aimed at reuniting children, especially those in elementary school, with the natural world in order to improve their physical and emotional health and make them better environmental stewards in the future.

“We want this campaign to ignite interest in the outdoors and help children experience the benefits of being connected with nature,” said ODNR Director Sean D. Logan. “These activities will help them grow into healthy adults with an appreciation and love of their natural surroundings.”

National studies show the average elementary-age child spends more than six hours a day playing video games, watching television and operating computers. In Ohio, a 2007 study showed 34.3 percent of the state’s third graders were either obese or overweight. Sedentary activities and weight gain have long-term developmental and social impacts on children. However, additional studies document that children who are in touch with their natural world are healthier, perform better in school and have better self-images.

Alum Creek State Park in Delaware County was the site of an “Explore the Outdoors” kickoff today with First Lady Frances Strickland on hand for the festivities. A wildflower hike, fishing demonstration, sand treasure hunt, kite flying, disc golf and canoeing were among the youth-oriented activities.

Earlier in the day, Governor Ted Strickland and a group of celebrity sports figures also led a group of 11 youths on the first annual Governor’s Turkey Hunt in Muskingum and Coshocton counties.

The cornerstone of the “Explore the Outdoors” challenge is a 34-page, full-color guide that lists 10 outdoor activities such as “Catch A Fish,” “Camp Under The Stars,” “Spot A Bird,” etc. Children are encouraged to complete eight of the10 activities by September 1. “Explore the Outdoors” posters, featuring correlating codes, are now on display at welcome centers and kiosks in ODNR and partner facilities across Ohio.

explore photo
Once an activity is completed, the child will enter the appropriate code in the guide. When all eight activities are completed, the child can enter the corresponding codes at exploretheoutdoorsohio.com to receive an Ohio Outdoor Explorer certificate. The first 1,000 children to obtain an online certificate will also be eligible to receive a Coleman mini companion lantern.

Nearly 800,000 Explore the Outdoors Activity Guides will be distributed to public school students in grades K-5 during the coming week – just in time for summer vacation!

ODNR partners lending support to the campaign include the National Park Service, Audubon Ohio, Wayne National Forest, Leave No Child Inside – Central Ohio and Greater Cincinnati, the Ohio Parks and Recreation Association, Ohio Metro and County Parks and the state departments of Health and Education.

kite

Sponsors contributing to the activity guide include the American Heart Association and Coleman. Gander Mountain provided the youth fishing demonstration at today’s launch event. The Raisin Rack Natural Food Market in Westerville provided snacks and drinks for the event.

National Get Outdoors Day: June 14

May 29, 2008 – 8:37 pm

National Get Outdoors Day: June 14

The first-ever National Get Outdoors Day is June 14 with special events taking place in dozens of communities across the country to raise awareness about the benefits of active time outdoors. To find out more about planned events, or to nominate a site for an event, please visit www.getoutdoorsusa.org.

Spreading the message to regular people

May 29, 2008 – 8:31 pm

Alice Hohl spoke to the Westerville Kiwanis Club last week, and it was a great opportunity to introduce new people to the topic. Usually we are “preaching to the choir” but now we are beginning to have opportunities to educate new groups!

The message was well received and Alice ended by stating that one of the most important things group members could do to help is take their children or grandchildren camping or on a daytime nature outing. Many heads were nodding in the room, so hopefully it will happen!

Leave No Child Inside legislation

May 29, 2008 – 8:28 pm

(Reprinted from No Child Left Inside Coalition)

From the Desks of Senator Jack Reed and Representative John P. Sarbanes

May 23, 2008

To Members of the No Child Left Inside Coalition:

Because of your critical support and interest, we want to update you on our progress in advancing the No Child Left Inside (NCLI) Act.

Since we first introduced this legislation last year, the Coalition has helped make tremendous strides in rallying around, drawing attention to, and galvanizing support for this issue, which has helped us greatly in gaining support for NCLI in Congress. We now have 14 cosponsors of the Senate bill and 49 cosponsors of the House bill. We recently held two highly successful events: a press conference at the Capitol and a field hearing at Patuxent Wildlife Research Center.

Now, we understand the Coalition has achieved a significant milestone of its own with the 300th organization joining its ranks - perhaps one of the largest coalitions of its kind. We congratulate you on this achievement. In our view, this underscores the powerful and growing public sentiment for promoting environmental and outdoor education in our nation’s schools.

There’s much more work to be done to ensure that the No Child Left Inside Act becomes law. The more cosponsors the bill gains and the more attention this issue attracts, the easier it will be for the respective Committees and the full Congress to approve the measure. We’re working hard to urge our colleagues to join us in this effort, bolstered greatly by groundwork that’s been laid by the Coalition outside Washington.

Again, thank you for the important work you do and your strong support for the No Child Left Inside Act.

Sincerely,

Senator Jack Reed and Representative John P. Sarbanes

Early Education conference in Marietta - we’re helping to spread the word!

May 21, 2008 – 9:15 am

Jenny Morgan and Alice Hohl were invited to a conference at Washington State Community College in Marietta over the weekend. The audience was early educators: those working with children in preschool and daycare settings.
Dr. Cheryl Charles from the Children and Nature Network was the keynote speaker, and she stayed all day listening to the other presentations and meeting the participants. A highlight of the day was visiting the early education center on the college’s campus, where the staff subscribes to the Reggio approach of child-led activities. The playground was constructed from natural materials and featured a popular “mud box”, tree stumps to climb, and an all-important hose to wash off the kids when they are done playing. There is also a woods right outside where the children frequently take hikes, swing on vines and play in the stream.

Jenny shared many great songs about the movement and about children and animals. Music is such a powerful messenger!

Jenny and Alice also shared the progress of our Collaborative here, and invited the participants to join. It was a great day!

Richard Louv asked us to post this great article:

May 21, 2008 – 9:04 am

BEYOND NATURE-DEFICIT DISORDER
It’s Time to Turn Consciousness into Action
By Richard Louv
Author of Last Child in The Woods

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.”

Adapted from LAST CHILD IN THE WOODS by Richard Louv, © 2008. Reprinted by permission of Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.

In our families and our communities, it’s time to take action. That’s why the new, expanded 2008 edition of “Last Child in the Woods” contains a “Field Guide” with 100 Actions that families and communities can take, along with discussion questions, a report on the movement, and other resources for parents, educators, conservationists, business people and community leaders.

For more information on the Second Edition of “Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder,” go to www.lastchildinthewoods.com. To help build the movement, please join the Children & Nature Network at www.childrenandnature.org

Richard Louv, recipient of the 2008 Audubon Medal, is the author of seven books. The chairman of the Children & Nature Network (www.cnaturenet.org), he is also honorary co-chair of the National Forum on Children and Nature.
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New member building a children and nature retreat!

May 14, 2008 – 11:08 am

Lina Mendez Howison, Ph. D., has asked to join the Collaborative, and she sounds like a very interesting person! Here is her note:

My husband and I are in the process of putting together an 80-acre retreat in SE Ohio (Hamden, Ohio, some 85 miles from Columbus) with the specific aim of creating a way for children to connect with nature. It’s called Treebeard’s Retreat and our nascent website can be seen at www.treebeardsretreat.org.

I am de facto manager of this project, and Darla White suggested I become involved with the growing network of like-minded folks in this area who want to bring kids back to nature. I have had my nose to the grindstone for so long I forgot to notice that there were other crazy people like me and my husband who believe that this is the coolest way to spend one’s time and money. I can’t begin to tell you how thrilled I am to discover there is so much wonderful company on this journey.

If you could, please let me know how I might get more involved with the local network. We are looking forward to sharing our resources!

Lina Mendez Howison, Ph. D.
www.treebeardsretreat.org