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C&NN“What if more and more parents, grandparents and kids around the country band together to create outdoor adventure clubs, family nature networks, family outdoor clubs, or green gyms? What if this approach becomes the norm in every community?”— Richard Louv, author and Chairman, Children & Nature Network

Featured Nature Club:

SRC Family Connection
Illinois

The mission of SRC Family Connection:

To bring families together through faith, fellowship and fresh air, and to inspire each person to explore their surroundings and develop an appreciation to the beauty and blessings that God has… [+] read more


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NCFF ToolkitC&NN's Nature Clubs for Families Tool Kit


C&NN Nature Clubs for Families Tool Kit: Do It Yourself! Do It Now! provides inspiration, information, tips and resources for those who are—or who might be—interested in creating a Nature Club for Families.

Download the Tool Kit [>]

Tips, Inspiration, and Resources for Starting Your Own Family Nature Club.


DO IT YOURSELF! DO IT NOW!
[+] DOWNLOAD THE NATURE CLUBS FOR FAMILIES TOOL KIT >

Hagalo Usted Mismo! Hagalo Ahora!
[+] DESCARGAR LA CAJA DE HERRAMIENTAS >


What’s a family nature club? Here are a few examples of active clubs, followed by lists of tips and resources to set you on your way.

Kids In the Valley, Adventuring! (KIVA)
While reading "Last Child in the Woods," Chip Donahue and his family were inspired to spend more time outside as a family. In December 2007, they launched their own family nature club -- a free outdoor adventure network for families in their own neighborhood in the Roanoke Valley. One day their five-year-old son had an even better idea: "Dad, why don't we invite everyone?" Chip sent a notice to the local paper, and within a few months, over 170 families joined.

imageKids In the Valley, Adventuring! (KIVA) now helps families get together for outdoors adventures or nature reclamation projects. The club publishes a monthly e-mail newsletter that lists recommendations for places for families to play, recommends books, and offers other resources. "One important thing is that we have required that parents or guardians stay with their children at all times," Donahue emphasizes. "We say, 'Stay and make a memory with your child.' The only thing we ask is that they consider joining us on volunteer days or finding another volunteer opportunity. There are so many beautiful free things to do outside."
http://www.kidsadventuring.org

Nature Strollers
Two outdoorsy moms, Laurel Dodge, a naturalist and environmental educator, and Kathleen Diamond, a Teacher of the Deaf, took their kids out hiking at every opportunity, but they were surprised to find that on trail after trail, their families hiked alone.
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Speculating that many parents longed to take their kids out in nature, but were worried about going it alone, Dodge and Diamond volunteered to lead a free family nature study club for the Orange County Audubon Society of New York. Families flocked to the Nature Strollers group, relieved to be able to take their kids on the trail in a way that improved safety and reduced anxiety. Nature Strollers became a place for families with a common interest in nature to meet and become friends, and for parents and children to discover the natural world together.
http://www.naturestrollers.org/

Other approaches include “nature circles,” which California-based Hooked on Nature created to help families and individuals meet and explore their relationship to nature. In the United Kingdom, families and individuals are banding together to form "green gyms" for regular outdoor exercise.


imageFunding for this initiative has been provided by REI to encourage active outdoor participation by young people and their families.
[+] find out more, visit the REI Web site




NOTE: The role of the Children & Nature Network (C&NN) is to help build the children and nature movement, and to help parents and others learn about ways they can connect children to nature. Nature clubs for families is an approach we wish to encourage. However, such groups act independently and C&NN is not responsible for the actions of specific groups or individual members of such groups. At any time, when children are outside on their own, or with families and friends, everyone should take safety precautions and be mindful of risks.


Nature Club Listings


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On the Air:

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View the “Today” show's special segment on family nature clubs with Chip Donahue and an in-studio appearance by Richard Louv, live from New York.
[+] view the segment
Testimonial Happy Trails “Why did I start a family nature club? I view my role as a goodwill ambassador to the place and to nature. I wanted to get past the barrier of parental fear…to push people to do things they haven’t done. ” Jodi Hiland, Happy Trails
Find Jodi and other nature club leaders and participants on the Nature Clubs for Families forum.

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DAILY DOSE
Harmony
Ken Finch

Ken Finch reflects on a special place in the Vermont wilderness, as he travels thought it and comes upon a violinist expressing his own harmony with nature.

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