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Summer Camps: Canoes, Campfires, and Family Time

I knew I was doing something right when my eight-year-old daughter exclaimed, “I love camping!” Grinning wide through a mouthful of pancakes, she was the most contented camper who ever dined at the tiny table of our weathered tent-trailer. 

Connect to Calgary nature. When your home is decorated, edged, mowed, and landscaped, we lose track of nature’s natural tendencies. National and Provincial Parks that offer camps are all about preserving native vegetation particular to the region.

From the beginning of my parenting journey, I was very conscious about wanting to share similar camping experiences with my children that I had experienced while growing up. My childhood perspective saw that, at camps, the basics of life were fulfilled and life felt unencumbered. Some of the most vivid and treasured memories from my childhood come from my family’s summer camping trips in Calgary.

But not everyone had the same outdoor summer camping experiences that my family did. And by the time my happy camper was in high school, she reported that many of her friends had never been to summer camps. Richard Louv’s landmark book, Last Child in the Woods: Saving Our Children from Nature-Deficit Disorder, documents 
the dramatic change in modern childhood that has resulted in children spending less and less time outdoors. Luckily, a growing awareness of the developmental need for children to experience a connection to nature has spurred widespread implementation of programs that aim to support children and families with opportunities to get outdoors and to increase visits to National and Provincial parks.

But what if you didn’t grow up going to camps? You may not have camping gear stocked and ready for the next summer outing in Calgary. Reservations ought to be made and precautions considered before you are ready to pack up the car.

Get-away time is limited, and sending your kids to day camps or overnight camps is a growing option. However, if you opt to give camping a try, you and your kids could grow to love camping as a family, too.

Choose from abundant camping choices. These days, you can choose Calgary campgrounds that offer resort-like amenities, even Wi-Fi. Or you can camp out in your own back yard. And when you are ready to experience summer wilderness, more primitive accommodations are waiting to be discovered.

Once you have your camp gear together, getting to know your National and/or Provincial Parks is a good place to start. (There are definitely ones close to Calgary that are drivable and easy to find.) Well-established facilities normally provide shelters, bathrooms, trash disposal, and access to clean water. The presence of equipped and experienced park staff give support to your camping efforts and can provide peace of mind when you are away from home.

Slow down. When you arrive at the best location for your family, camps offers a chance to adjust your pace as there are no calendars with appointments to keep. Breathing Calgary outdoor air is the first step in releasing accumulated stress from worries at home. Shift your perspective and notice what is unique and beautiful in your temporary landscape.

Create a simpler life at camps. The basic rhythms of mealtimes, planned or spontaneous activities, and evening time around the campfire are enough to structure your day. Young children are often happy to explore the microcosm of nature near a shrub, in a puddle, or under a tree.

Any early-birds in your family can revel in a sunrise while everyone else sleeps peacefully in the tent. Watching the sun go down as a family offers an opportunity to appreciate an everyday occurrence that we often miss or take for granted in our day-to-day Calgary life.

Connect to summer nature. When your home is decorated, edged, mowed, and landscaped, we lose track of nature’s natural tendencies. National and Provincial Parks that offer summer camping are all about preserving native vegetation particular to the region.

Whether high desert, forest, meadow, or coast line, your chosen campground offers an environment ready to explore. Guided nature walks and evening talks may be provided. Nature needs to be experienced first-hand by little and big hands; use all of your senses.

Develop outdoor and wilderness skills. Back yard camping is a good way to practice setting up the tent. You may also want to test the pad or air mattress you plan to sleep on. Do you know how to attach propane bottles to the camp stove?

Building a ‘10 essentials pack’ can engage kids in learning basic outdoor skills. A compass, First-Aid kit, whistle, space blanket, and nutrition bars are some of the items to include in your essentials pack. Older children will need guidance in learning to handle fire-starting materials. All children can carry a flashlight.

Transplant a Calgary community for a week. Planning a campout to accommodate a Calgary community of families that play together, ride bicycles together, or go to school together can create an opportunity to experience an intentional ‘village’ for a time. Living next door, campsite to campsite, tent to tent, allows children to interact 
and play all through the day in a setting that differs dramatically from the car-driven routine at home. Adults may get to have conversations with one another at camp that there had not previously been time for. At least one large potluck meal at a central campsite makes for a festive feeling that helps strengthen the sense
 of Calgary community.

Learn some Calgary history and geology. Camps
 are often located near natural areas that feature museums and educational displays available to the public. Investigate these places along the route to your camps destination. You may be amazed by the colorful characters who occupied the territory before you. Before leaving on your camping trip, watch films that detail hundreds of years of geological transformation about the region you are traveling to.

Mishaps make for fun storytelling around
the campfire. Campfire time offers opportunity to recount the adventures or misadventures of the day. Embellishments are allowed and all members of the family can contribute. Watching the flames dance in the darkness stirs our sensibilities and has the power to unite family members in lasting and memorable ways.

Form traditions over time. When you have gone 
on enough summer camping trips, favorite spots at camps become apparent. Think of all the memories that could be formed over many years of visiting the same camps or locale. Each return visit feels fresh and new, yet the familiar landmarks, the places to watch the sunset,
 the familiar trails that meander up the hill all form an imprint that steadily builds on previous visits. A summer camping tradition that you start with your family may very well be carried on by your children and their families.

From every trip, bring back the best experiences from sumer camping to everyday life at home. There will be gear
 to put away, clothes to wash, moments to remember, and stories to tell. The evening summer sunset at home beckons weary campers for yet another Calgary view.

Diane is a freelance writer who loves the outdoors, and is actively anticipating camping trips with friends and her grown children this summer.

 

 

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