Jul 11 2008

Come On Mom, Come On Dad, let’s make campfire pies

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Come On Mom!

From Lobster Press comes Come on, Mom! It features 75 activities mothers and daughters can do together like making perfume or bread-dough clay to playing radio reporter or playing goofy golf. Each activity includes easy-to-follow instructions and a materials list if supplies are needed. This girls-only guide will create memories that will last. For girls ages 3 to 9 and their moms.

Not to fear, there’s a father/son version, too - Come on, Dad!: 75 Things for Fathers and Sons to Do Together. For boys ages 3 to 9 and their dads, sample activities include Personal Pizzas, Paper Air Force, Time Capsule, Family Story Collection, Math Olympics, Obstacle Race, Recycled City, Personal Place Mats, and Backyard Camp Out.

Not only are these books great for parents, they’ll be helpful for new stepparents, volunteers in big brother/big sister type programs, and babysitters.

I like how these books have their share of pretend play, physical activity, mental activities, and cooking. Speaking of cooking, another great activities to do with your kids on your next camping trip is to make Campfire Pies. Grilling dessert over the campfire? Sounds like wholesome family fun.

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Jul 01 2008

A family that vacations together is a family that stays together

The reason I started this blog was to promote family activities through books and cooking. But in reality it was about finding ways to bond with your children and to create family memories that they would cherish as they got older. Doing it with books and food was just one way I like to do that with my family.

However, there are other activities, like taking trips together. So as I prepare for another weekend of camping hell, I repeat what my husband said to me the other day, “Camping is not about you having a good time. It’s about creating memories for the children.”

And it’s true. Some of the fondest memories I have with my parents and sister are our vacations to the Florida Keys, and the road trips my mom took us on to Virginia and Montreal.

Memories and bonding – could your family use some? Well, maybe it’s time to think about taking a family vacation. Now I know money is tight. However, Beaches Resorts is holding a WonderFALL Celebration during the off-peak season months of September and October. Not only do you get to enjoy everything Beaches offers year-round, but you can SAVE up to 45% off published rates and get two Nights Free on stays of seven nights or more. 

Yes, I know the kids will be back in school. But you can take school work with you. After all, the first month or two of school is a refresher course on all the things the kids forgot over the summer. (This is what my son’s teachers told me. And another reason to get your kids to read, read, read this summer.) You have nothing to lose – only memories to gain.

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May 23 2008

Go outside and play this summer

Published by Anne-Marie under Activities, Books

It’s Memorial Day weekend and that means camping for our family. It’s one of the few times I spend time outdoors. While I used to love playing outside as a child, I don’t as an adult.

last child in the woodsIf you need a little inspiration to get outside and play, check out Richard Louv’s book Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children From Nature-Deficit Disorder.

I reviewed the previous version of Last Child in the Woods in June 2006. The new, expanded 2008 edition 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.

Richard Louv was interviewed in the San Diego Union-Tribune on April 20, 2008. They also ran: For the children, Excerpts from Richard Louv’s ‘Last Child in the Woods’ make a case for increased urban access to nature. You can learn more about the book at www.lastchildinthewoods.com, go to Richard Louv’s website, or read the following excerpt from the book.

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.

richard-louvMcGee 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.”

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Jun 06 2006

Camping and the search for the perfect GORP

Published by Anne-Marie under Recipes

tentI’m camping challenged. While I like being outdoors in beautiful Colorado, it comes with a price:

  1. Days camping = days grocery shopping, packing and cleaning up after the trip.
  2. Pedicure goes all to hell.
  3. Hoping my glasses don’t fall in the pit toilet.
  4. Runny noses and rashes requiring massive doses of allergy medicine and topical creams.
  5. Sunburn and the weird freckling I get that looks like the infamous “mask of pregnancy.”
  6. Freaking out about my kids falling in the fire or getting bounced out of the boat.
  7. Staying up half the night worrying that the camper was going to be blown over, like when we experienced 50 mph winds last Memorial Day weekend at North Sterling State Park.

I wonder if all the effort is worth it. But then there’s the good part:

  • Family fun, lots of terrific memories, and a few good stories. (Remember that time it snowed…in August?)
  • Hanging out with the friends we always go camping with.
  • Meeting new people and exploring new places.
  • State parks with electric and water hookups, showers, and flush toilets.
  • FOOD! After all, isn’t camping an excuse to eat slabs of grilled bacon and scarf down sandwiches of deli cold cuts and sliced gourmet cheese?

There’s nothing like hanging out on our friends’ boat, snacking and drinking away, while watching the kids go swimming and the dads (unsuccessfully) try to fish. Last weekend I even managed to read a book, Julia Child’s My Life in France, while lying in the sun.

However, there’s the snack issue. Maybe it was reading about all the fabulous food Saint Julia was cooking up in her book, but I’m tired of all the premade, over processed crap from the store. I want something healthier than chips, cookies, and premade trail mix. Chocolate isn’t practical to bring since it melts in the heat. So it’s time to experiment, and come up with some fabulously funky, quasi-healthy, gourmet GORP (Good Old Raisins and Peanuts) that even the kids will eat.

everythingkidscookbook First, let’s start with a basic trail mix recipe from Everything Kids’ Cookbook.

Take Along Trail Mix
Difficulty: easy
Makes 2 cups of trail mix

Ingredients:

  1. 1/2 cup small pretzel sticks or twists
  2. 1/2 cup raisins
  3. 1/2 cup peanuts
  4. 1/4 cup sunflower seeds
  5. 1/4 cup chocolate chips

Directions:
In a large bowl, combine all the ingredients. Store the supply in an airtight container or resealable bag.

Then let’s make it a bit more fun:

  • backcountrycooking Substitute different kinds of dried fruits (papaya, apricots, bananas, pineapples, cherries, etc.) and nuts (pecans, cashews, pistachios, etc.)
  • Use M&Ms instead of chocolate chips (less likely to melt in the heat). Or some Gheradelli chocolate chips - even melted Gheradelli is better than no chocolate at all!
  • Instead of pretzels, use Chex mix or broken up Wheat Thin crackers. In Backpacker Magazine’s More Backcountry Cooking, they recommend Rice Krispies cereal, goldfish crackers, and corn nuts.
  • Try the bulk food aisle at your health food store or local grocery store. Buy a little of this and a little of that and mix it up!

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