ashley0323
Novice Camper
The title asks it all. I am homeschooling my children. No matter what we are doing, I try to include some kind of education as well. In what ways would you consider camping as educational?
That ol Eli Whitney. That's funny lol. I've never even thought about the cotton gin since that dusty paragraph in a textbook.I was not home-schooled; nor my children; but even so, I do consider that camping, and similar related activities are absolutely educational for children. there is just so much that you. Can learn, and teach your children about nature when you are out camping, as well as practical experience that will serve them in later life.
I started learning about cooking on a campfire by roasting hot dogs on a stick, and also watching my mother make hot cakes, bacon, and eggs for breakfast over the open campfire. Those hot cakes were the best ones I have ever tasted in my whole life ! !
Plus, we would catch and clean fish to cook for dinner, so I learned about doing that. I had swimming lessons at the lakes, learned how to row a boat (and not go around in circles), and had fun hiking in the woods.
My dad showed me the tiny red kinnikinnick berries, and told me they were edible, although not very tasty. the same ting with the Oregon grapes which grew everywhere.
I think that all of these kinds of things are as much of an important part of a child's education as anything that we learn in school. I have never needed to know when it was that the cotton gin was invented; but being able to build a campfire has come in handy many times throughout my lifetime.
Yes, that was my thought exactly !That ol Eli Whitney. That's funny lol. I've never even thought about the cotton gin since that dusty paragraph in a textbook.
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