Results for outdoor activities

Chinook Book Events Through March 25

ECOMETRO PORTLAND TEAM / Thursday, March 18, 2010 06:08 PM

Don’t let the Pigeon Drive the Bus - Northwest Childrens Theatre
Finally, a play you can say ‘no’ to! When a bus driver takes a break, a wheeling-and-dealing pigeon begs to take his place! The popular book ‘takes flight’ as audiences get on the bus and move to a Latin groove in this original musical about a little bird with big dreams.
Mar 20-Apr 4, Showtimes vary
Northwest Neighborhood Cultural Center, 1819 NW Everett


Spring Break Rocks! Band Camp
Searching for a way to keep your little rockers both busy and having fun during their time off from school? More...

TAGS: EVENTS, arts & culture, gardening, kids, music, theater

Time to Take the New Year by Storm

ECOMETRO PORTLAND TEAM / Monday, January 4, 2010 08:07 PM

By Sally Bell, Chinook Book Advertising Sales Manager

It's the New Year. I'm ready to take 2010 by the horns and live with more intention. What can I do for 2010? I'm making a list of resolutions that are good for the planet and good for my soul. Here are some ideas I plan on putting into action to make 2010 really count. More...

TAGS: FOOD, LIVE, dining, gardening, grocery, local, organic, outdoor activities, restaurants

Park(ing) Day 2009

Portland Staff Blog
ECOMETRO PORTLAND TEAM / Tuesday, October 13, 2009 03:59 PM

This year, Park(ing) Day 2009 was held on Friday, Sept 18th. Founded in 2005 by Rebar, a San Francisco art and design collective, Park(ing) Day has blossomed into an annual, global, one-day event where local residents transform ordinary parking spaces into temporary parks and green spaces. Friends of Outdoor School, The Freshwater Trust, Friends of the Columbia Slough and The Intertwine created this space along SW 2nd Ave and Couch. Volunteers at the lush green space invited onlookers to engage in educational activities, including the study of tree rings, plants and salmon.

To learn more about PARK(ing) Day, click hereMore...

TAGS: GO, cars, transportation

Product Review: Outside Baby Mini Messenger Bag

LowCarbonMama
STACY LARSEN / Tuesday, December 9, 2008 07:26 PM

I admit it: I expect my children to reflect how cool I am, how urbane, how out-of-the dreary-mainstream.  At least I expect them not to reveal how I sometimes fall from that grace into the plastic, mass-produced quagmire or cave in to unreasonable demands for inappropriate toys or accessories.  

Enter the Mini Messenger bag. The perfect opportunity for my eight-year-old daughter to carry around her wanna-be-tween flotsam and jetsam in an ultra-hip bike messenger bag rather than the transparent pink plastic petrochemical Tinkerbell nightmare from which everyone can see the bottles of nail polish and trainer lip-glosses that she has accumulated against my better judgment. A rugged, unisex bag suited to the collection of stones, cones, and sticks; sturdy enough for a water bottle and a hearty snack on one of our urban explores.  A bag to reflect well on mama’s tastes and choices.   More...

TAGS: PLAY, kids, outdoor activities, product reviews

Getting Dirty in Stumptown--October Events and More

LowCarbonMama
STACY LARSEN / Tuesday, October 9, 2007 05:14 PM

My four-year-old son is out under the yellow plum tree, building a “worm nest” out of soil clods and populating it with “brother worms and sister slugs” dug from other parts of the garden.  He’s been at it long enough for me to scoop up the dog. . .leavings, set up the laptop, send three emails, and brew a cup of tea—an astonishing twenty minutes.  He has not given me a glance, except to ask, “Mama, am I magic?”  Though I just say “Yes,” his simple backyard magic is disappearing from the experiences of children all over the country.

 

Along with over-scheduling and lack of unstructured play, millions of American children are suffering from what author Richard Louv has termed “nature deficit.”  His book, Last Child in the Woods: Saving our Children from Nature Deficit Disorder, links the disconnect between children and nature to concurrent increases in obesity, attention disorder, and depression rates.   Responses to the book have included states passing “No Child Left Inside” legislation, a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service initiative to connect children with nature, and nation-wide local efforts to promote children’s access to natural spaces for their own magical journeys.

 

Our uncommonly lovely city is rich with nearby wild spaces, and many free or low-cost opportunities for getting down with plants and critters.  Nobody with children should miss these next two events:

 

Salmon Festival!!  My kids have gone every year of their lives.  Learn about your watershed and celebrate the return of fall Chinook in Oxbow Regional Park.  It will rain on you, that’s part of it, and you’ll have a blast all day long.  Music, horse carriage rides, grilled salmon, fry bread, endless activities, fish-friendly products, services, and organizations, and close-up views of spawning salmon!  October 13-14.

 

Just to complicate that same weekend with irresistible outdoor fun, the Ridgefield National Wildlife is holding it’s annual Birdfest.  Crafts, bird walks, guided refuge tours, kayaking, wildlife viewing, and Chinookan cultural activities including cattail art, grinding acorn meal, splitting planks, and archeological walks.  Most activities are free, but Saturday is also the Bluegrass Festival in Ridgefield with music all day for an additional modest charge.  Ridgefield is in Washington, about a 35-minute drive from Portland.

 

Pumpkins and Farm Animals!  Old McDonald’s Farm in Corbett holds their annual Pumpkin Pick October 20-21 and October 27-28.  You can buy pumpkins, roast marshmallows over a fire pit, ride Clancy the friendly pony, go on a hayride,  watch goat-shearing, and support a great non-profit in the process.  For those who prefer not to slog around a muddy wasteland of waterlogged pumpkin carcasses and instead find some of the best specimens invitingly arranged around small fields, quirky scarecrows, and antique tractors, this is for you!  They also offer one of the best summer camp experiences in the area, so get a jump on next year!

 

And for all the other days. . .

 

Ladybug Nature Walks are just for preschoolers and their parents and explore parks all over Portland with a trained naturalist.  They meet year-round on Fridays and Saturdays at 10 am for $2 per child (adults are free). Most walks are easily accessed by bus.

 

Fathers can take easy, child-friendly hikes with their children and connect with other dads through Outdoor Dads. Hikes meet the fourth Saturday of every month at various metro-area locations.  Participation is free, and the group welcomes all ability levels.

 

Tryon Creek State Park in SW offers “Story and Stroll” for preschoolers and guided walks and classes for all ages.  Themes include Urban Wildlife, Changing Leaves, Mushrooms, and Owls.  Volunteer to pull ivy, buy native plants. Many programs, and all walks are free.

 

Get out, get down, and get dirty! More...

TAGS: PLAY, kids, outdoor activities

Are Your Kids Getting Their Green Hour?

GreenJeans
CECILY CACEU / Tuesday, October 9, 2007 01:29 PM

So it has come to this, we now have to schedule time for our children to get exposed to nature!  The term for this outdoor time has been coined “The Green Hour” by the National Wildlife Federation (“NWF”).  The “Green Hour” is defined as: “a time for unstructured play and interaction with the natural world.”  There is even a “greenhour” blog that can also be found at the same web site. 

Don’t get me wrong I love this idea.  I just wish we, as parents, did not have to be told to get our kids outside to play and especially to enjoy UNSTRUCTURED time!  Today our kids only seem to be outside for some type of organized activity, usually sports related.  

Do any of you remember the hours spent outside playing with neighbors, building forts, constructing fairy houses, roller skating or riding bikes up and down the block?  Most kids today just don’t get those chances and may not even know what to do outside if they are not told! 

Recently the book, “Last Child in the Woods” brought us parents something new to worry about: “nature deficit disorder”.  Richard Louv, the author, has spawned a widespread movement across the country to get kids back in touch with the outdoors. The research promoting the benefits of children’s exposure to the outdoors is astonishing:“Children who regularly spend unstructured time outside:

*Play more creatively

*Have lower levels of stress

*Have more active imaginations

*Become fitter and leaner

*Develop stronger immune systems

*Experience fewer symptoms of ADD and ADHD

*Have greater respect for themselves, for others and for the environment.”  (From the Green Hour site.

A recent related movement: “Leave No Child Inside” is closely related to Richard Louv’s book.  Leave No Child Inside campaigns have been started by various State and Regional agencies (Cincinnati, Cleveland, Chicago, the San Francisco Bay Area, St. Louis, Connecticut, Florida, Colorado and Texas are just a few).  A clever play on words, (think “No Child Left Behind”), this movements‘ main goal is simply to get kids outside to play, play, and play.  (Read more at Orion Magazine.

By now we all know verbatim the articles about our overscheduled, under-exercised children.  What I don’t think many parents realize are the actual benefits of what unstructured outdoor time provides. 

Those of us in the Northwest are all too familiar with the long grey wet winters.  We as parents will need to try extra hard to get our kids outside for their GREEN HOUR.  But since we now know the benefits it will be easier to do. 

Other web sites to check out are:

Children and Nature Network

Hooked on Nature  and

Fairy HousesMore...

TAGS: LIVE, kids, kid's activities

Travel and Recreation: Outdoor Classes and Groups

ECOMETRO EDITORS / Saturday, September 29, 2007 03:52 PM

The best part of embracing local living is meeting the people around you. Meet other locals at places like the neighborhood farmers market, where you’re ten times more likely to chat than in a store. And consider taking your next vacation locally. Airplanes have significant CO2emissions (find out how much at carboncounter.org). More...

TAGS: PLAY, outdoor recreation

Kids: Family Trips and Volunteer Opportunities

ECOMETRO EDITORS / Saturday, September 29, 2007 03:35 PM

Kids may be more aware of environmental issues than most adults realize. Some studies have shown that children worry about the state of the environment more than their homework!

TAGS: PLAY, kids, kid's activities, outdoor recreation
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