Last Child in the Woods

smslavin

Adventurer
Has anyone read [ame=http://www.amazon.com/Last-Child-Woods-Children-Nature-Deficit/dp/156512605X/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1289180008&sr=8-1]Last Child in the Woods[/ame]? What are your thoughts? I just started reading it yesterday and lots of passages are resonating with me. Maybe it's our current position in life. Maybe it's because my oldest daughter is 8 and she's never seen snow. Maybe it's the megalopolis of Southern California. It's all of those reasons and more.

So, what are you doing to cure your child of nature deficit disorder?
 

007

Explorer
I take my 3 yr old with me on most trips. She was upset that I left her recently on a big game hunt, so we went out and shot a grouse. I showed her how to dress it out and we sautéed it with mushrooms and beer and loved it.

She really appreciates the outdoors and is always asking about the next trip...which is coming up soon in Death valley :)
 

styx

New member
I live in Northern Nevada, so not a real problem here. I always wish I could get out even more though.
 

Moody

Needs to get out more
I give that book to friends and family that have children. Fantastic book. There is an updated version I just saw at a bookstore locally here...mine is the last edition.
 

smslavin

Adventurer
She really appreciates the outdoors and is always asking about the next trip...which is coming up soon in Death valley :)

That's awesome. Within the past few months, partly due to our current living situation, I've been getting my girls out as often as I can. It could be a trip to the desert or a run down the street for a hike around the lagoon. Our last trip out to the desert was a great experience for all 3 of our girls.

Moody said:
Fantastic book.

The book is partially fueling are current thinking of moving out of SoCal. Besides not being able to afford it any longer, I'm finding the density slightly suffocating.
 

nwoods

Expedition Leader
The book is partially fueling are current thinking of moving out of SoCal. Besides not being able to afford it any longer, I'm finding the density slightly suffocating.

Where would you go? With your ocean oriented lifestyle, where can you go in the US that offers what SoCal does? I am not jesting here, I am asking myself that same question, for all the same reasons. I just haven't found a place that compares well on all the positives.
 

MuckSavage

Adventurer
I haven't read it, but I've read alot about it in everything from here, to local newspaper to the Appalachian Mountain Club Magazine. I plan on buying a copy for my brother-in-law & his son, who's 11. (I'll read it first) The boy always shows an interest in going out with me, whether it be hunting, geocaching, or just out for a ride. My bro-in-law would rather tell him to play his video game. Matter of fact, they bought a GPS to try geocaching. In a week my bro-in-law returned the GPS & brought the kid video games.

Sad, Sad thing that's happening to out kids.
 

preacherman

Explorer
I read it and loved it. We already camp quite a bit with our boys, but the book has given me a reminder that they need to turn off the video games and go outside more. They have been spending more time in the backyard lately playing with the dogs and building forts.

I enjoyed the book a lot and it made me rethink how often I "push" my kids outside.
 

smslavin

Adventurer
Where would you go? With your ocean oriented lifestyle, where can you go in the US that offers what SoCal does? I am not jesting here, I am asking myself that same question, for all the same reasons. I just haven't found a place that compares well on all the positives.

I have enough outdoor activity interests that I could trade the ocean for something else, like snow. I had been an avid backcountry skier for years. The feeling I get from skiing is very very similar to what I get from surfing. We're currently looking into CO (have been for a couple of years now). The cost of a surf trip is way less than the cost of a ski trip with a family of 5. ;)

Being up there would give the girls larger and easier access to the outdoors. The areas we're looking into all pretty much have the woods right out the backdoor. Giving the girls a yard to play in would be huge as that isn't something they've ever had.
 

Riptide

Explorer
I have the book, but haven't read it yet. Every time I think about sitting down to read it, I think, if I have time to READ about taking my kid outdoors, then I have time to take my kid outdoors. So off we go...

I get to it this winter. I suspect it will resonate with me, as well...
 

kjp1969

Explorer
Where would you go? With your ocean oriented lifestyle, where can you go in the US that offers what SoCal does? I am not jesting here, I am asking myself that same question, for all the same reasons. I just haven't found a place that compares well on all the positives.

Seriously, where else can you live by the ocean, drive two hours and be in the local mountains, Joshua Tree, Mojave or Anza Borrego. Drive North a little further and you're amid the redwoods or the Sierras. Drive South and you're in Mexico.

If you're not out-and-about enough in SoCal, a change in location probably will not fix the problem.
 

Paladin

Banned
I guess I'll be the lone voice in saying I'm slightly disappointed by the book. I wanted to love it. But I find it's very cerebral. It just goes on and on, talking about this study and that study, and this expert and that one. It's very academic. I was hoping for something much more... hands-on.
 

Rufjeep

New member
Seriously, where else can you live by the ocean, drive two hours and be in the local mountains, Joshua Tree, Mojave or Anza Borrego. Drive North a little further and you're amid the redwoods or the Sierras. Drive South and you're in Mexico.

If you're not out-and-about enough in SoCal, a change in location probably will not fix the problem.

We chose Chattanooga, TN over San Diego and couldn't be happier- world class whitewater, great mountain biking, good climbing/ bouldering, and tons of hiking and backpacking trails. It may not be the ocean, but it aint badd.
 

rusty_tlc

Explorer
I think this explains why the people who want to limit access and close areas off to the public are so successful;

Instead of passing summer months hiking, swimming and telling stories around the campfire, children these days are more likely to attend computer camps or weight-loss camps: as a result, Louv says, they've come to think of nature as more of an abstraction than a reality

As long as we can watch a show on the Discovery channel or view a slide show on the internet why do people need to actually go to these places? It's much better to close them off and preserve them.
 

Andy G

Adventurer
Haven't read it...but seeing as how we live in Alaska, I'm not so sure much of it would apply to my hunting/fishing/hiking/camping kids (and parents!).
 

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