Showing posts with label A is for Alpine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label A is for Alpine. Show all posts

Friday, May 30, 2014

Photo Friday

Just looking around, and decided that in honor of my picture book, A Is For Alpine, and the start of summer vacation, I'd do a little photo essay on what little kids do when backpacking.  These were taken on a 6-day trip in the Wind River Mountains of Wyoming, in 2005 when our boys were 6 & 7 years old.

What do kids do in the woods?


Wherever they are, they'll find swords and have a sword fight.   Right in the trail.  Don't imagine you're going anywhere in a hurry!  Taking kids to the woods will change your perspective and priorities.

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Kids will stop and snack.  Also right in the trail, and more often than you would have thought possible.  Note that Mom's pack is larger than the kid.  That's also something kids will do--increase your pack size!  Taking your kids hiking will make you a stronger and fitter person.

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Kids will explore.  You did bring dry clothes for them, right?  Because kids and water?  It's pretty much a magnetic pull.

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They'll find treasures.  You didn't know that old bones were treasure?  You must not have boys.  Or you've not taken them outdoors.  Every stick is a weapon, and as Calvin said (that's Calvin as in Calvin and Hobbes), there's treasure everywhere.

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Like mother, like sons.  Sometimes all they want is a pad of paper and a pen or two for some quiet play--to do in the woods just what they'd do at home.

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And sometimes they sit and eat in the best seat in camp.  Mom thought that was her seat!

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Sometimes they'll just sit, because being outside can be tiring.

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Eventually they'll crawl into their tent, and into warm sleeping bags, and listen to a story.

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And when the pack comes off at (or near!) the end of a long hike, they might just fly away!


And of course, when it's all over, they'll eat ice cream.  And burgers.  And fries.  More of all of it than you would have thought possible!  If you're lucky, they will NOT proceed to become carsick.

So what are you waiting for?  Take your babies camping!

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 On an unrelated topic, the Wendig Challenge this week was to write a complete story in 100 words.  Here's mine, exactly 100 words, exclusive of the title.

The Mountain


The mountain was their god, the one thing on or about the Island that was always there.  And then, one day, it wasn’t.  After that, there wasn’t much to do but survive, for the few people left.  Most of the island’s people were gone, buried under the rubble and the lava.

Those who were left worked and struggled and ate everything that wasn’t stone, and they survived.  But they did not pray to the mountain-god that had turned on them.  Gradually, they rebuilt their world with neither mountain nor god.

When the rescuers finally came, the survivors refused to go.
 #
©Rebecca M. Douglass, 2014

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

A is for. . . A to Z Challenge Kick-off!


It's the A to Z Challenge, and we're kicking off our wilderness adventures with a bit of an intro, a passing nod to one of my books, and the promised Tuesday bit on wilderness travel.

In case you didn't see my Theme Reveal post, my theme for this year's A to Z Challenge is wilderness travel (with a side of ice cream).  And what, you ask, is the A to Z Challenge?  Follow the link for more info, but in short, A to Z is a blog-everyday-or-die challenge to help bloggers gain followers, get the hang of the blogosphere, have fun, and find out just what they can do.  I had fun with it last year, so I signed on to do it again this year.  Through April, I will be blogging every day except Sunday, with each day's post themed to a different letter of the alphabet.

That's the intro.  The book that just has to be mentioned on Day A of a wilderness-themed challenge is, of course, my picture book for kids in the wilds.


Since this is a little long, I won't do a story or a trip report (as I will the rest of the Tuesdays this month), but just a few words about children and hiking, camping and backpacking.

Do it.

You want more words?  Kids love the outdoors.  Place you might think are boring are full of amazement for the knee-high crowd.  Put aside any squeamishness and join your child in chasing bugs, studying what grows under logs, and getting muddy.  And go camping, hiking and backpacking to whatever extent you can.  I can't think of a healthier vacation.  And remember: being dirty never hurt a kid.

And there's always ice cream.
The author takes ice cream seriously


 And don't forget to enter the drawing--and join the ice cream party!

a Rafflecopter giveaway