Turns out today is Flag Day. Who knew?
I took this picture while sitting around bake saling for the Great American Bake Sale. Which leads in nicely to:
“What is patriotism
but the love of good things
we ate in our childhood?”
-Lin Yutang
Turns out today is Flag Day. Who knew?
I took this picture while sitting around bake saling for the Great American Bake Sale. Which leads in nicely to:
“What is patriotism
but the love of good things
we ate in our childhood?”
-Lin Yutang
Teaching children about the natural world should be treated as one of the most important events of their lives.
-Thomas Berry
In his book Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children From Nature-Deficit Disorder Richard Louv links the troubling trends in childhood obesity, diabetes, attention-deficit disorders, and depression, to the increasing disconnect between children and nature.
The most obvious culprit is “screen time”: TV, computer, video games.
But there are other factors, too. Even I, hippie-dippie earth mother that I try to be, am guilty of some of these:
This last one is the “big thing”, I think, for me. This is my call to action. This is something I can do, actively; in fact, have already begun. I can bring about personal intimacy with our immediate environment. I will work on the other points, too, but this is the one that has me rubbing my hands together. Goodie, a project.
Louv worries about the abilities of future generations to see problems in the environment as they occur; if no children are skimming ponds for tadpoles, how will they know when those numbers begin dropping? If they are not learning to identify and name insects and wildflowers, will they notice when they are gone? If they are not outside at night to hear the spring peepers, who will sound the alarm when the night air is silent?
“[What is the] extinction of a condor
to a child who has never seen a wren?”
-Robert Michael Pyle
Yes. I will take my kids out-of-doors. Together we will “name all the animals”.
“Humans seldom value what they cannot name.”
-Elaine Brooks
This is my pledge: We will become backyard naturalists. We will look for, identify, and record everything our backyard wilderness contains. We will share, with exuberance, everything that we learn. When we have become satisfied that we know our property, we will move on to the nature preserve. To the river. To the watershed. Who knows how far we can go?
Love for the Earth first means love for the earth. The small and the familiar.
“Though it’s a small area, just a square mile or two, it took me many trips to even start to learn its secrets. Here there are blueberries, and here there are bigger blueberries…You pass a hundred different plants along the trail- I know maybe twenty of them. One could spend a lifetime learning a small range of mountains, and once upon a time people did.”
-Bill McKibben, in The Age of Missing Information
“To quote the words of Professor Abraham Joshua Heschel…our goal should be to live life in radical amazement…Everything is phenomenal; everything is incredible; never treat life casually. To be spiritual is to be amazed.”
-Rabbi Martin Levin
P.S. In a really bizarre instance of blogosphere serendipity, as I was casting about trying to find a good photo to accompany this review, my husband walked in and said that a toad was hopping around him outside, did I want to show the kids? And take a picture? What, you mean just like the cover of the book? Sure I do. Thank you, blogosphere.
Please note: All quotes in this post come via Last Child in the Woods, not from my personal stash.
I still have lots to say on this subject, so stay tuned! If you are a parent, truly you need to read this book. Twice.
More information about Richard Louv and the movement his book has inspired, No Child Left Inside, can be located at the Child & Nature Network.
Book #1 of the Still a Bookworm Challenge for Green Bean Dreams: Done. Next up: Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring.
Maverick is reading the companion book to Last Child in the Woods, entitled I Love Dirt!: 52 Activities to Help You and Your Kids Discover the Wonders of Nature . I’ll have him let you know what he thinks. The book is meant for adults, but, whatever, the kid likes to read.
Finally, I cannot at present name or identify this toad, but I will let you know when I do.