Children need the chance to poke in dirt, to turn over a log and find a salamander, to get eye to eye with a squirrel, to bring home a seed pod or a found bone for display.

 

 

 
Editor's Note

Spring 2001

Debra Shore, Editor

Children, Culture, and Wildness

She joy of discovery is part of the enormous fun of childhood. Perhaps the best part. Steve Barg recounts some of those childhood moments he has experienced and witnessed in "Kids and Wilderness." His article builds on work by Gary Paul Nabhan and Steven Trimble in The Geography of Childhood: Why Children Need Wild Places. Nabhan and Trimble say that connection with nature in childhood is an important part of building a healthy culture.

 


Photo by Phyllis Cerny.


I worry that the places for free, unfettered exploration are disappearing from our world — the ephemeral ponds, the woods at the end of the street, the vacant lots filled with weeds that we called "prairies." Worse, the character of modern life makes us as parents less and less willing to allow our children to go exploring in the wild unsupervised, with their time unstructured.

Yet children need the chance to poke in dirt, to turn over a log and find a salamander, to get eye to eye with a squirrel, to bring home a seed pod or a found bone for display. I am prepared to make the case that this is a need as vital to our health as any other. Our world is so much bigger, fuller, when we learn about and love the other creatures in it; our hearts and spirits so much smaller, diminished, when we do not.

Jens Jensen, landscape architect of the early twentieth century, knew intuitively the importance of connecting to the landscapes in which we live. "Our native landscape is our home," Jensen wrote, "the little world we live in, where we are born and where we play, where we grow up and finally where we are .... laid to eternal rest. It speaks of the distant past and carries our life into the tomorrow. To keep this pure and unadulterated is a sacred heritage, a noble task of the highest cultural value."

Jensen designed parks to build nature into the culture of democracy. He helped conceive the revolutionary idea of a "forest preserve" for the same reason. We hope that this magazine, with our circle of readers and the participating organizations of Chicago Wilderness, are natural descendants of that same impulse.

Jerry Sullivan connected to the wild world around him at an early age and never lost his sense of wonder and joy and humor. (Nature can be funky, after all.) He maintained his personal relationship to the natural world by watching birds, restoring habitat, tramping through the woods, writing about his adventures and discoveries, and by planting native plants in his small backyard garden.

"Living with these plants has totally changed my attitude," Jerry wrote in one of his "Field & Street" columns for the Chicago Reader in 1998. "Seeing them develop and change day by day, watching the cycle of their lives through the year is an experience quite unlike making an occasional visit to a natural area ... An intimate association with the rest of nature was the typical human experience through most of our history as a species ... The loss of that intimacy has had terribly destructive consequences. How wonderful that even a city yard can give us a taste of that ancient relationship."

Recovering that intimate association, building a culture of conservation, is what Chicago Wilderness is all about.


And Now the Envelope, Please ....

The American Planning Association has awarded the Chicago Wilderness Biodiversity Recovery Plan its "Outstanding Planning Award for a Plan." This is a big and wonderful deal, the first time the APA has recognized a plan whose primary focus is ensuring the health of ecosystems and their contribution to the quality of life.

The Chicago Audubon Society has presented this magazine’s editor an award for Excellence in Environmental Reporting/Journalism.

Thank you, thank you, thank you.


Debra Shore may be reached at editor@chicagowildernessmag.org.