Posts Tagged With: Pilcher

Play in Nature Keynote Address

Play in Nature Speech

Today I was the Keynote Speaker for The Will County Regional Office of Education 2012 Early Childhood Education Conference.  What a fun day to meet with and talk to K-2 Teachers about Play in Nature.  Here is some of what I talked about:

I manage Pilcher Park Nature Center as well as write grants for the Park District. Pilcher Park Nature Center is a big log cabin in the woods where we see 15,000 children a year at the Nature Center for Nature Field Trips.  We have 640 Acres at Pilcher Park which gives us lots of room to roam around and explore. In the state of Illinois there are only 58 acres of prime upland forest and we have 52 of them in Pilcher.  We have a glorious array of wildflowers in Pilcher so if you haven’t come out to the park this is your official invitation.  All of our Field Trips are matched to the State Standards so that by coming out to the Nature Center you can cross something off the list of things to teach for the year.  We do field trips for children of all ages.  We have an animal adventure field trip for preschools where we have you pick an animal ……..  say a turtle……….. and we read a turtle story, bring a turtle out to pet, show you our turtle pond, do a turtle craft.  We can also do this at your school minus the turtle pond.  

Fairy Fest Pilcher Park

We do a couple of big festivals a year at Pilcher Park that are highly attended Community Events.  The Pioneer Fest and Pancake Breakfast and the Fairy Fest are our two most successful. 

Student from our Kids n Nature After School Program

Now that I have given you my plug for Pilcher Park and the Nature Center in general I will give you a little background on why I am so excited about play in nature.  My interest in Play in nature began with  a speech I heard in 2002 by two men who are now very good friends of mine, Ken Finch and Gordon Maupin.  The speech was given at an Association of Nature Center Administrators Conference in Wilmot, Ohio. The topic of the speech was that even though we are seeing large numbers of children for school field trips as environmental education facilities,  we are still failing to get the concepts of true environmentalism, conservation and the love of nature across to the kids.  They come out to our parks for an hour or a day for a field trip, we impart all of our enthusiasm for nature to them that we can in that period of time and they go home and spend the rest of their lives either in front of the TV or on the computer……….never entering a forest again in their lives. 

One of the reasons is        that children today are having an EXTINCTION OF EXPERIENCE.  The term Extinction of Experience comes from a book called The Thunder Tree by Robert Michael Pyle and was quoted from by Gordon and Ken in that first speech I heard.  That book resonated with me so much I used to buy the book by the dozen at half.com and give them out to anyone who would show a tiny bit of interest. My husband said giving the book away was my HOBBY.   I think I am down to my last copy.

Bob Pyle is a very interesting guy who was one of the first ones to contend that children were missing their childhoods as we used to know it.  So Ken, Gordon and I kept discussing the topic of what at that point we were calling Play in Nature in classes, talks and speeches.  We would meet at ANCA and talk about it amongst ourselves.  The next year after that first big speech our ANCA conference was in Washington State at Islandwood Nature Center and Bob Pyle was our Keynote speaker.

He had us go around a room and tell about our first experiences with nature.  What was our sacred space or earliest memory.  There were lots of stories about strange things.  One girl said she used to inject worms with bactine.  Lots of us caught and imprisoned some animal or another.  Mine was a box turtle named Antiquy food eater who was made to live in the window well of our house in Martinsville Indiana.  I have so many other memories of playing outside.  We always went to an island ( gilligans island) in Lexington Ky, we would play there all day.  Sadly – the last time I went there that creek had been captured and put into a culvert.  Perhaps…………if the people in the area…….had actually LOVED nature the way I did as a kid they would not have put a concrete casing around my favorite creek…..We used to build forts and tree houses, I still have a scar from defending my tree house and having to get 7 stitches.   We explored everything in our sights.  We made up games and caught lightening bugs at night and squashed them and made jewelry out of them! 

Richard Louv’s Book Last Child in the Woods

In 2005 Richard Louv published his best selling book:  Last Child in the Woods Saving our children from Nature Deficit Disorder!  I have to say ……………..  when I first saw the book and started to read it I thought he had stolen our idea!  At least Bob Pyle’s idea.   I didn’t like him very much for the first 10 minutes he was around!  As it turned out he had been thinking about this for quite a while.  He wrote an article in 1991 called Children’s Future.  

Right around that time Ken Finch started a non-profit called Green Hearts Inc.   a non-profit organization dedicated to restoring and strengthening the bonds between children and nature. Then Richard Louv had his first grassroots gathering in Virginia at the National Conservation Training Center.  It was invitation only and Ken and I were invited. 

I have done quite a bit of research trying to find actual studies instead of just anecdotal evidence that document the benefits of play in nature to prove that this is as important as I feel it is.   All of us in the Nature Business have the FEELING that nature is good for us but where is the proof?   One name that kept coming up was Louise Chawla.  Louise is a researcher who used to work at University of Kentucky but now is at University of Colorado.  She has written many articles on children and their play spaces.  She believes that children have to have sustained contact with nature to learn to love it and she has done research since 1988 to prove that point. 

A lot of things have happened in the last 30 to 40 years to change the look of childhood.  First is the phenomenon of Helicopter parents.  You know the ones.  They hover over their children never letting them make a decision for themselves.  Never letting the children out of their sight.  Constantly connected to them.  10 year olds with cell phones.  WE are all connected.  All the time.  You would think that would make us feel safer but no.  The more contact it seems the more fear.  My Mother who is 86 ……….says she walked to and from school without a cell phone and never worried and she says she didn’t live in a good neighborhood like the ones strive for today.  Actually she says she walked to get beer at the bar down the street for her Dad and sat under the street lamps at night talking to her friends.  There is a very good blog about this called FREE Range Kids.  A little to the left for me occasionally and a bit subversive at times but really thought provoking.  And that is my goal here to ask the question???? Is this a good thing

 

What happens if there is a terrorist attack?  Will any of us/them survive???  How many of us can grow our own food the NATURAL way? Children learn so much from gardening.  My husband and I, along with our friends joined the Joliet Park District Community Garden this year.  We grew BEETS, Tomatoes, squash, cant elope, onions, Bok Choy ( which in my opinion we will NEVER grow again, ) swiss chard and Dinosaur Kale that my Grandson and I bought at the Field Museum on volunteer night.  We used it to make Kale Chips.  Along with these my Grandson Christopher grew Snake Gourds and Dragon Gourds.  They are HUGE!  The squash bugs got most of our squash but not the stuff Chris Planted.  Our friend has three kids who spend lots of time at our house.  Flynn the youngest decided this summer he LOVES BEETS!  He ate so many he pooped RED.  Then begs every time he is here to go to the garden to pick more.  So next year his mom is getting a plot for them.  I think Gardening is the BEST way to teach children nutrition and play in nature. 

Veggies from MY garden!!!

Video games are another phenomenon we could never have predicted 30 years ago.    Now I am not here to knock technology.  I am one of the most facebook addicted people you will ever find.  I have nearly 10,000 followers on twitter and write a blog called play in nature.  I LOVE technology.  And I will talk to you a little later about how and why you should tap into those resources too!   I would love to give a speech on social media for teachers someday! 

 Anyway,  as I started to say…………  play has changed.  How many of you would go out and play in the morning and not come home until the street lights came on?  How many of you played outside as a kid and made up your own games?  That just doesn’t happen anymore.  Or at least it rarely happens.  Parents are afraid to let their children outside alone.  CNN and other 24 hour news networks make it seem as if it is a VERY DANGEROUS world out there. My husband says Perception supersedes facts.  But when you spend your time with informed people who watch the news and talk about the news etc.etc…. it SEEMS like it is much more dangerous than it really is.  Another change is that now most families have two parents who work.  The children are left alone at home in the afternoon and told to stay inside and lock the doors.  They are told to call mom or dad when they get home and not to leave until the parents get home.  So mom and dad buy them X Boxes and Movies and other video games to entertain them while they are home alone.  Then when parents come home they feel guilty and then they take children from one organized sporting event after another.  These children are either alone or super programmed.  Oddly enough in the last 10 years there has been the largest number of children ever signed up for organized sports and the largest increase in childhood obesity.  Another interesting fact is that Kids free time  dropped by 38% between 1979 and 1999.

There have been several great strides made in the Bring Nature Back to the Kids Movement. There is a bill in the senate right now called No Child Left Inside.  Honestly it seems a bit lame in that it really just sets aside money to have kids go on field trips outside in the same old manner we are contending doesn’t work now.  But there is also funding out there for some very cool innovative projects like our Kids n Nature After School program. 

Nature Preschools have started to emerge in the United States.  I had a very dedicated staff member in Cathy and she made it her mission in life to make sure this program was opened and that it thrived.  She is definitely the force behind the success of Little Sprouts.  We had been dabbling in children’s classes for years.  We had nature babies, nature tadpoles and green frogs classes.  We didn’t have a perfect building or the money to retrofit one to make it conform to the regulations that have to be adhered to for a customary preschool.  So our days are shorter than they would be for a preschool and our sessions are CLASSES under the park district format.  They are essentially a monthly class that is signed up for 9 times.  We have Monday, Wednesday, Friday, classes and Tuesday / Thursday classes in the morning and afternoon.  We use nature as our curriculum.  We use our 640 acres as our classroom as much as possible.  We do have a classroom but we try to stay outside 75% of the time.  If it is a beautiful day we might stay out longer. 

Cathy Rehr

I happened to get an email from Cathy yesterday that I want to read to you.  This was sent from her to a local newspaper and she just cc’d me so I would see what she sent. 

I come to work every day and rarely is there a day I feel like I’m working.  I love seeing the excitement in the children as they find turkey tail fungus, hickory nuts, butterfly eggs and taste the maple sap dripping from the trees as the trees wake from their winter nap.  At first, some children don’t know what to do without structured playground equipment to guide them, but it doesn’t take long for their imagination to soar.   A stick becomes a guitar, a pile of rocks becomes a dam in a shallow creek, a fallen tree becomes a pirate ship or an airplane, or a motorcycle.  They begin to make up games of their own.  I have seen shy kids blossom into confident leaders once they are outside.  It’s a whole different world outside than it is sitting in a classroom. 

I am so blessed to have an employee who feels the same way I do about this and loves her job!  She is awesome and if you ever want a tour just call us and she will be happy to give you one!!!

We have outside time every day. Rain, snow or shine and discover the world of nature.   It is exciting and filled with opportunities.  We hike, we explore and we play.  Our goal is to develop a child’s ability to work independently and cooperatively, and to act in a caring, responsible way towards the environment and the creatures, both human and non-human that inhabit it. 

Our classroom time is structured much like a normal preschool.  We have circle time, story time, then they have a bit of free play at the stations in the room.  One is the craft table, there is an art area, a science table, sensory tubs and the kitchen/house area.  We go over the calendar, say the pledge of allegiance and talk about our BIG WORD OF THE WEEK.  Some of our big words are:  nocturnal, vibration, camouflage, pollination, chlorophyll, evaporation, metamorphosis, etc.   Very much like your classes ……BUT ….ours is just based on nature. 

 

Little Sprouts Pilcher

Some of the benefits of Play in Nature for Children are: 

  • Children with ADHD are better able to concentrate after contact with nature
  • Children with views of and contact with nature score higher on tests of concentration and self discipline.  The greener the scenery the better the scores
  • Children who play regularly in natural environments show more advanced motor fitness including coordination, balance and agility, and they are sick less often
  • When children play in natural environments, their play is more diverse with imaginative and creative play that fosters language and collaborative skills
  • Exposure to natural environments improves children’s cognitive development by improving their awareness reasoning and observational skills
  • Nature buffers the impact of life’s stresses on children and helps them deal with adversity.  The greater the amount of nature exposure, the greater the benefits.
  • Play in a diverse natural environment reduces or eliminates bulling
  • Nature helps children develop powers of observation and creativity and instills a sense of peace and being at one with the world. 
  • Early experiences with the natural world have been positively linked with the development of imagination and the sense of wonder
  • Children who play in nature have more positive feelings about each other
  • Natural environments stimulate social interaction between children.

Ok………that is all I have to tell you about my views on Play in Nature!  I love my job at Pilcher Park and am grateful every day to get to talk to people who love nature. 

Categories: Childhood, Children in Nature, Nature Play, Play in Nature, play outdoors, Preschool, Preschoolers, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

WHEN WAS THE LAST TIME YOU MADE SNOW ANGELS?

Yesterday was one of those magical days when it snows and snows and snows and it is so beautiful and peaceful.  I sat in my office in Pilcher Park Nature Center and watched it snow.  It was so beautiful.  The park was empty with only a couple of staff and me there. 

 

I got home around 5:00 and my dogs ran out to greet me.  They LOVED the snow too.  They were running and playing like puppies in the snow.

It reminded me of a snow a few years ago when my grandson and I were outside making snow angels and my dog ( DOG-DOG …….really his name) came out and made snow angels with us. 

It was Friday night and I was supposed to go out with a girlfriend.  Fortunately for me she is as adventurous as I am and she still wanted to go in the middle of a snowstorm.  We braved the weather to go have some margaritas.  By ten o’clock it had stopped snowing and all that was left was a beautiful peacful snow covered world.  Today it is getting warmer and by tomorrow it is supposed to be FORTY degrees and raining!  I told my husband to forget about shoveling (he still thinks I am crazy for saying this) because it is going to melt tomorrow!  For today I think I need to go take a walk in the snow. 

I will write more tomorrow when I am trapped inside in the rain and cold. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Mom says “Go outside and play!” Now What?

My Mother used to say “Go Outside and Play!” and I would say “with who?”  Then I would grab a book and read under a tree somewhere.  Parent’s today are afraid to say “Go Outside and Play!”  Parents are afraid that their children will be bored, they are afraid their child will be kidnapped or worse ( thank you CNN and television dramas like Law and Order SVU)  Most of all parents are afraid they will be seen as BAD parents.   All of these things are outlined in Richard Louv’s  first book Last Child in the Woods  .   Last Child in the Woods talks about the Extinction of Experience that Robert Michael Pyle wrote about in the Thunder Tree. 

My goal here is to save play!  The kind of play that kids do that helps them learn all kinds of cognative skills.  The kind of play that makes kids dirty and tired at the end of the day and the kind of play that exposes them to germs so they are immune to diseases and less allergic when they get to school.  There really is something called The Hygiene Hypothisis

The fear really doesn’t go away even if the children are 24 and living in a completely locked up safe apartment in the next town over.  We have to learn to allow our children to LIVE,  and to trust that we have taught them to be safe,  and to trust their instincts. Trusting your instincts is a much better skill than knowing how to lock the door and stay inside!   The world isn’t more dangerous now than it was then - we just have CNN now.  CNN and other news channels  run the same things over and over and over about the same children.  Really – there are statistically about the same number of abductions and murders than  there were in the 1950′s,  we just see them more now on television.  Somewhere along the way we taught children to stay in side and lock the doors while we are gone.  Some of that was because both parents generally work now. Some was because we were afraid.  Somehow it got turned in to stay inside while I am home and now…………we don’t want our kids to get dirty at all and we feel we have to entertain the children all day with some game or other.  The kids have unlearned the ability to entertain themselves.  They are BORED!  How many times have you heard that word?  They want something or someone to entertain them.   We send them to camp, to baseball and soccer practice and have a coach entertain them and we stay there with them while they play so that their self esteem is not ruined because mom takes her gaze away from them for one second.

Really it is guilt.  Guilt because we work or guilt because we feel they aren’t getting enough of our time.  Actually it is the QUALITY of that time not the quantity of time.  That time and attention can be anything and can be anywhere. It just takes focus.

Time spent outdoors is fabulous.  If you have a small child (preschool age) you can spend HOURS and HOURS just sitting by a creek and letting them throw rocks.  They are learning while they do this too.  And when they learn that the rock sinks or if they throw it hard it goes farther or whatever concept is swirling around in their head at the moment………….they move on to the next thing.    Maybe it is picking up sticks or breaking sticks or crunching leaves.  All natural, normal, fun things for children to do.  Best of all……….when they get home they are tired.  Really tired!

 

Categories: Childhood, Children in Nature, National Parks, Nature Play, Play in Nature, play outdoors, Preschool, Preschoolers, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

It’s time for Preschool: Have you considered a Nature Based Preschool?

One of the most important things you can do for your child is make him comfortable being outside.  Children who play outdoors on a regular basis are far less likely to obese.  Chidren who play outdoors grow up to love nature and value conservation and the outdoors when they are adults.  Children who play outdoors have increased self-esteem.  They learn to be creative.  They learn to negotiate.  They learn self-reliance.  If your child doesn’t learn to read by age 4 rest assured ………….they will eventually and they will catch up with those children who know how to read already and they will be more well rounded than those who have had to sit in class all day.  Children learn through play.*

Place-Based Education and Practice: Observations from the Field by Robert Barratt & Elisabeth Barratt Hacking – University of Bath, UK

Nature Based Pre-schools like Pilcher Park Nature Center’s Little Sprouts Nature Based Early Learning Center and Dodge Nature Preschool http://www.dodgenaturecenter.org/Preschool/  ,  Schitz Audubon Nature Center Preschool http://www.sanc.org/natpre.htm and a few others are gems within the preschool world.

Children learn by doing, by playing and by exploring.  WE base our education on nature but at least half of the class and more if possible is held outside.  Sometimes it looks like the children are just playing outdoors but they are really learning.

Louise Chawla, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louise_Chawla is an expert in children and how children interact and play with each other and she highly recommends Play in Nature.  The best way to teach them to Play in Nature is  to just LET THEM PLAY.  Children will make up games, make forts and toys of their own if allowed to do so. They will sit for hours

There are so many resources on playing outdoors!  Please look into a nature based Preschool experience for your child.  I will be bringing more information about Nature Based Preschools in the coming months and like ours there are probably some open spots in one class or another.  WE have 4 openings in the afternoon class.

 

 

Categories: Childhood, Children in Nature, Nature Play, Play in Nature, play outdoors, Preschool, Preschoolers, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Joliet Partnership for Healthy Families Launched Today!

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Today in Joliet, Illinois: a small town mostly known for its prisons we launched a radical plan to make our city healthy! Yes! Healthy. We have been meeting for years as a group of about 12 people representing the Joliet Park District (I work for the Park District), Provena St. Joseph Medical Center, Joliet Schools District 86, the YMCA, the Will County Health Department and the University of Illinois Extension Service.

Four years ago I had an idea for an after-school program that allows children to play in nature.  I wanted to have the children play.  Just play.  Run, chase squirrels, play in the creek, what ever they wanted to do.  Just like when I was a kid.  The big difference now is that parents don’t want their children to play outside.  They fear that they will be abducted or they will get lost or they will get hurt or they will fall in with a bad crowd etc.  Statistics actually show that children today are just as safe as they used to be but now CNN is here to scare the living daylights out of parents and make them feel like bad parents if they aren’t with them day and night.   Back in my day parents didn’t have to attend EVERY baseball, soccer, monopoly game the kids played.  They didn’t feel like they would ruin their childs self esteem if they allowed them to play alone with a bunch of kids in the neighborhood who self selected pretty well based on things other than who was the biggest most powerful hitter in the world.  They learned political skills on the playground.  They learned to work with each other.  They learned to be creative.

Ok. I digress.  In Joliet we now have a great big partnership that is going to connect more parents and children to things that can help make them healthy than ever before. The School District is a part of three programs.  Camp Fitness for third graders, Kids n Nature Adventure for fourth graders and SOAR for 5th graders.   Camp Fitness is a traditional afterschool program with 45 minutes of exercise built into it.   Kids n Nature Adventure is an outdoor recreation program where the kids run and play.  They also garden in an organic garden and learn about healthy fruits and veggie as well as bugs and snakes that reside there.  They learn to splash in the creek, climb trees and they learn to get along. These are inner city kids from DIFFERENT neighborhoods and backgrounds.  These are the younger brothers and sisters of gang members that would be against each other and they learn to get along.  Hopefully someday when the day comes that they see each other on the other side of a gun they won’t shoot.  And when they are even older, they will bring their children to the park they learned to love as a kid.

The great thing here is we are all working together to make our city a better place to live and grow.  We are doing things that will make our work places better.  Political things.  Some with a big P like government changes that will change everyone’s lives and some with a little p like no more candy being sold in my Nature Center.

Categories: Childhood, Children in Nature, Nature Play, Play in Nature, play outdoors, Preschool, Preschoolers, Uncategorized | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Little Sprouts Started School Today in Pilcher Park

Today our Little Sprouts Nature Based Early Learning Center started it’s second year.  This year to orient the children to preschool we had an open house with children and parents and had them go on a scavenger hunt in the Nature Center, their classroom and around the immediate grounds of the Nature Center.  One of the things they had to find was me.  They also had to find Mr. Dave the Maintenance Man ( aka. Super Dave), the stuffed Turkey we have sitting on the 7 UP machine in the hall way and the class snake.

Just some of the things and People our Sprouts had to find today.

Little Sprouts or any other Nature Based Preschool is a great way to get your children to love nature.  This connection to Nature is something that they will carry with them for the rest of their lives.

As stated in Richard Louv’s book Last Child in the Woods,  Gordon Orians, professor emeritus of zoology at the University of Washington, says research suggests taht our visual environment profoundly affects our physical and mental well-being, and that modern humans need to understand the importance of what he calls “ghosts”, the evolutionalry remnants of past experience hard wired into a species’ nervous system.  The childhood link between outdoor actvity and physical health seems clear but the relationship is complex.

Categories: Childhood, Children in Nature, Nature Play, Play in Nature, play outdoors, Preschool, Preschoolers | Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Suprise your little one ………with Nature’s Spacecrafts! Hummingbirds!

Hummingbirds are facinating to watch and children and adults of all ages love to watch them.  So often in area’s that they migrate through they find a place to stay and return to every year.  That is what happens here at Bird Haven Greenhouse in Joliet, Illinois.  The gardens are perfect habitat for the hummers.  First, there is a fabulous garden with hummingbird attracting plants and secondly there is a forest surrounding the gardens that is the perfect place for them to perch and build nests.  Every year from August until the first cold snap we have hummers!  LOTS of them!

Formal Gardens at Bird Haven Greenhouse

What kind of plants attract hummingbirds?  Anything brightly colored, preferably blue or red with a tube.  So, any kind of salvia (they LOVE blue Salvia at the greenhouse and in my yard).  Red Canna Lillies, Trumpet Vine, Any color Monarda or lipstick plant or Coneflower.  They are all over my yard and all over the Greenhouse grounds and the plants aren’t the same each year.  Anything brightly colored with nectar.

Ruby Throated Hummingbird eating from Purple Salvia

What about feeders?  Using feeders is a great way to attract hummingbirds to your garden.  Try using any commercial feeder or make your own.

Make your own Hummingbird Feeder

Please feel free to vist me on Twitter at Play_in_Nature

Enjoy your summer and the possibilities being outside with children can bring to you.   There is nothing more magical than watching children play in nature!

 

 

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Introducing Debbie Greene, Play in Nature and Pilcher Park

I am Debbie Greene and in real life I manage Pilcher Park Nature Center in Pilcher Park  (a 640 acre park in in Joliet Illinois with spring fed ponds, a large creek called Hickory Creek and many 250 year old oak trees).  We see 15,000 children per year for school field trips, we have a Nature based Early Learning Center called Little Sprouts plus an after-school program called Kids n Nature.  All of this plus 15 years at this job is where I get my ideas to share with you.  I am lucky to have a VERY creative and talented staff to make this all work.

I belong to a great organization, ANCA, Association of Nature Center Administrators.  They are a great resource and a great trigger for ideas that lead  to a jumping off point.  Most of my current beliefs about nature play come from an ANCA conference in Wilmot, Ohio where Ken Finch ( you will hear lots more about him in the future!) and Gordon Maupin gave a speech.  They said we were not changing the lives of the children who come to our centers for school field trips.  They said this was an old model that isn’t working.  They said that one hour in the fourth grade for a child isn’t going to change their lives.  They were 1000% correct!  This began a debate in the Nature Center world and it hasn’t stopped yet.  (more on that to come later also)

What came out of that debate is a new way to teach children to love nature.  They need to have extended contact with nature to have it make any difference in life.  They need to become a part of it.  In today’s society we have lost that contact.  Our children stay inside and play video games.  They play on sterile playgrounds and they wash their hands over and over with anti bacterial soap!  There was a time in this world when children drank water directly from the water hose!  Not from the sink with a filter on it and not from a bottle from a store.  From the hose!  They made mud pies, ate dirt and rolled in the grass.  And most of them survived!

They climbed trees instead of jungle gyms made of plastic and steel and they saw actual BIRDS in those trees.  They learned the songs of birds.  They saw butterflies and wildflowers.  They chased rabbits and sometimes they caught them!

This is what I wish all children could experience.  In our Little Sprouts Early Learning Center and our Kids n Nature after-school programs they do.  It is my hope that through this blog I can give you inspriation to help you give some of this back to your children, grandchildren and students.  Thank YOU for letting me share this with you.

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