Our kids are now 49 and 50 and the things they remember most are, are you ready for this?, the educational things. We tent camped and took part in Ranger/Naturalist Programs, historic sites, and seeing whats beside the road. They of course loved getting to their cousins home in coastal Oregon and going berry picking, fern diving, bee whipping and exploring the coastal forests. Swimming both in the ocean and lakes, rivers and streams. At their cousins we would turn them loose after breakfast and not see them until hunger brought them home. Aunt Eula had pretty strict kitchen hours and if the kitchen was closed it was either do without, make your own or go pick it off the vine.
Today it's the DGKs turn. The cousins are grown and scattered around, live in more regimented areas and don't have vast achrage to explore so it's local, state and federal parks for their playgrounds. The DW and I can't do the tent thing anymore so to make things interesting at meal times my lovly DW has made up special names for mudane meals, Grand Canyon Supreme is original Hamburger helper. I don't cook as much as I would like over the campfire but were try to do meals that way. Card games to fill rainy afternoons, a few (15 min each) episodes of ALF (you older folks will remember that) and outings on the sand or in the forest and exploring the desert.
And of course all those things the parks have available in the form of hikes, ecology studies, crafts, over twenty Jr Ranger programs and nightime Ranger led fireside talks. The best thing for the kids who are now 11 and 12 is being turned loose with almost no restrictions. We keep them away from real danger but let them extend their reach almost into danger. Our only real restriction is stay in touch using the FRS walki-talki's. Last year they found lots of banana slugs up in Washington. DGD loved the stories of her mom and auntie being tought to tie dandylion stems around the slugs and swinging them overhead and seeing how far they could throw them. They don't go that far, but the DGD had six of them on her hand and arm.
We,ve been as far East as DeSmet SD to the Ingalls homestead as far North as the Arctic Circle for the Summer Solstice (a fly drive camping trip) and as far South as the Galapagos (fly cruise). And their favorite is the PNW Coast. Nothing like gathering driftwood and making a cafe or hut or...
Well that's my story and I sticking to it.
DOD (from Doggy Dog cartoon series, Dear Old Dad, now Granddude)
"I travel not to go anywhere, but to go. I travel for travel's sake. The great affair is to go". R. L. Stevenson
David Bishop
2002 Winnebago Adventurer 32V
2009 GMC Canyon
Roadmaster 5000
BrakeBuddy Classic II