Mon 15 Aug, 2011 2:55 pm
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Tue 16 Aug, 2011 8:26 pm
Tue 16 Aug, 2011 9:39 pm
taswegian wrote:Jez that made me smile.
That said - Start 'em young - even before they are born.
Our days with 'the kids' started in the Flinders Ranges while they were just a rather large 'bump'. Camping and living rough.
Then when they arrived we headed north carting nappies with us for a couple of months doing the National Park drag, staying in an A frame tent or in the back of a Holden Panel van.
The family grew to 4 and we took off in a minibus and another National Park crawl again north and also Grampians area.
Where we went they did too and sleeping in bags and tents and carting a little pack was par for the course.
Precious moments with young lives living freely in the great outdoors following dad around taking countless photos.
(I remember the orchids in Q'land and how I would be down on my knees, head down bum up and then along comes the 18 month old and picks the very flowers I was trying to photograph and presents them to me with such a satisfied grin. What can you say?)
Tassie walks probably started with an Easter stay in our tent at Asbestos National Park, as it was back then, and of course the Bunny came, along with countless real live rabbits, wombats and an odd snake or 2.
Cheeers, I totally ruined my response.
First real bushwalking night out was Blue Peak when twins were about 4 or 5?, where I quickly learnt life without mummy at night is something very important to little minds. Not the best induction to 'real bushwalking' - for young ones (well one of them).
Walks then progressed to our middle daughter and our son when many cherished years were had in the Walls and Lees Paddocks area, central Reserve, Freycinet.
They were very precious times and still are as we talk about our exploits in the great outdoors.
Like Phil says - even at a very tender age they have an energy and determination that can defies our logic.
Enjoy the moments while you can
Richard
Tue 16 Aug, 2011 10:24 pm
roguetrooper wrote:I believe like schooling it starts in the home. It is 90% attitude and 10% slog. I have always approached challenges and adventures with a positive attitude and look at why you can do things rather than why they can't be done.
My daughter (now 13) and I have for the past 18 months taken up rogaining and regularly compete in 6hr, 12hr and 15hr-in-24hr events. We try our hardest and enjoy all aspects of the challenge - doing it together, the wilderness, competing, physical challenge and winning. We have also done a few 4-night hikes in the Barrington's and Blue Mountains. Four weeks ago we completed the Kakoda Track in PNG.
My point is I set a positive expectation and then we go out and do it. I treat her like an adult in these situations, asking for her opinion in tricky situations, sharing the camp setup-break down, cooking, etc. She carries some of the load.
At the end of a hard days hiking nothing beats sitting around the camp fire with your children, enjoying each others company and quality time.
Tue 16 Aug, 2011 10:39 pm
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