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“Ding” Darling Refuge Designs Free and Wild Fun

On a subtropical barrier island in the Gulf of Mexico is a wonderful family destination that features programs from birding tram tours to beach walks: the J.N. “Ding” Darling National Wildlife Refuge.


SPECIAL PROMOTIONAL FEATURE

by Chelle Koster Walton

Tall pink birds that eat with spoons, tyrannosaur-ish reptiles with big teeth, age-old critters wearing suits of armor, zebras that fly! It may sound like somewhere out of a Dr. Seuss book, but it actually exists in a magical place on Sanibel Island, Florida, known as the J.N. “Ding” Darling National Wildlife Refuge.

Roseate spoonbills (photo above), alligators, armadillos, and zebra longwing butterflies are only four out of nearly 300 species of wildlife that call the refuge home. Within its 6,000 acres, families can meet and learn about local wildlife year-round on kayak and canoe nature tours; via free deck talks; and by driving, biking or walking its Wildlife Drive and trails.

A visit to the refuge’s free Education Center primes visitors for what they can see out in the woods and wetlands. During the summer, free programs designed especially for families teach more in-depth lessons about Sanibel Island’s unique habitat and wildlife.

A special week-long eco-festival in the fall called "Ding" Darling Days celebrates the refuge, one of the most popular and widely-visited of the 550 national wildlife refuges across the United States.

From June 15 through August 15 every year, three summer programs run weekly--all ideal for child parenting activities:

  • Family Birding Tram Tours, every Wednesday and Saturday, 10 a.m. All aboard! The first 28 people to arrive score a free narrated birding tour along Wildlife Drive. Learn how to identify and count birds during the tour, then return to the Education Center to enter sighting data into the E-Bird Trail Tracker computer.
  • Reading at the Refuge, every Thursday at 11 a.m. Those who attend each reading-and-crafts session will receive a free Nature Journal (one to each child) in which to record their impressions of their refuge visit and future nature encounters.
  • Family Beach Walk, every Tuesday at 9 a.m. In partnership with the Bailey-Matthews Shell Museum, the program convenes at Gulfside Park beach for a one-hour exploration of the refuge’s gulf-front Perry Tract.

For more information on the refuge and its summer programs, visit fws.gov/dingdarling.

 

Chelle Koster Walton is an independent travel/cuisine writer, television producer, wordsmith, and resident of Sanibel Island, Florida, who specializes in Florida, the Bahamas, and the Caribbean. She is the author of seven books, including The Sarasota, Sanibel Island & Naples Book.

Photo courtesy of Nancy Wagle

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Inspire Your Kids to Cook

 

by Christina DiMartino

 

Your kids—boys and girls alike—express a desire to cook from a very early age, likely without your even realizing it. They make mud pies in the sandbox, play with child-sized cooking sets, and organize kitchens in doll houses or play areas, and they probably inquire about what you’re cooking from the time they begin to communicate.

 

Kids Cooking Activities offers up reasons why you should encourage cooking activities with your kids. (Set up link at underlining to http://www.kids-cooking-activities.com)

 

* Cooking with your children helps them to learn about nutrition and healthy eating. 

* Cooking in the kitchen will give children a boost of self confidence. They are accomplishing a task, learning something important, and contributing to the family.

* Taking time to cook with your kids will give them lasting memories. They will pass the traditions on when they are grown and have their own families.

* In the enthusiasm of creating something themselves, your children will be more likely to eat what they had a hand in making.

* Kids learn real lessons in science, language, math, and creativity in the kitchen. Cooking will help reinforce all these subjects.

* Cooking is a great way to learn life skills. This is especially helpful when children are older and more independent. They won't have to rely on fast food and junk food to sustain them.

* Working together in the kitchen teaches your child teamwork.

* Cooking teaches children planning and making choices skills.

* Kids practice creativity and imagination in the kitchen. Cooking activities are a great way for kids to express themselves and enjoy their creations.  

 

It may take longer to get the meal or snack done, but the moments with your children will be priceless. Remember to have patience. Don't worry about flour on the floor or spilled milk.

 

A role model for cooking with kids

 

Cooking With Kids, a series of 90-second videos, is hosted by James Beard Award-winning chef John Sarich. Development of the program was inspired by the reality of childhood obesity, anorexia and other eating disorders, Type II Diabetes, and low bone density, which have all become national issues. Cooking With Kids encourages parents and children to spend time in the kitchen together preparing healthy meals in ways that improve communication and help children develop healthy nutritional habits. (Set up link at underlining to http://www.cookingwithkids.org/fact.html)

 

The program shows how easy it is for kids to prepare snacks and meals that taste good and that are good for them. It uses the five food groups as a platform for nutrition messages. You can watch the videos with your children through the website, then print out the recipe and go try it yourselves.

 

The recipes that Sarich prepares with kids on the segments teach them which categories on the United States Department of Agriculture’s Food Pyramid are included in the recipe. He explains how vegetable burritos, for example, include foods that have protein, fiber and dairy, and that the burritos are low in fat.

 

Good cooking habits

 

Spatulatta provides 350 step-by-step videos that teach kids good cooking habits, and offers advice for moms, dads and kids on numerous issues related to cooking with kids. It emphasizes topics like teaching kids to wash their hands properly before handling food.  (Set up link at underlining to http://www.spatulatta.com)

 

When it comes to working in the kitchen, you know your children. You know what abilities they have and how fine their motor skills are. Some children are ready to handle a certain kitchen utensil or work at the stove earlier than others. It’s up to you to make that determination.

 

You set the rules in your kitchen, such as you will always light the burners and oven for your children.

 

Go over the workings of every electrical appliance with your child. Explain that the beaters, for example, should be inserted into a hand mixer before the mixer is plugged in.

 

Safety and courtesy are behaviors that need to be re-enforced and modeled.

 

Once you've explained how to handle an item safely, try asking your child to tell you how to do it the next time the task is required when making a recipe. We all learn best when we try to teach.

 

 

CREDIT:

Christina DiMartino has been a freelance and assignment writer since 1985. She is a researcher, interviewer, writer, editor, and manuscript collaborator with a repertoire of clients from around the world.

 

 

PHOTO / ILLUSTRATION RECOMMENDATIONS:

Go to http://www.cookingwithkids.org

 

 

TEASER: 

Cooking with your kids does much more than produce tasty treats! It teaches teamwork, safety, courtesy, math, science, and more, and encourages creativity and imagination. And there are some terrific online videos that will help you get started.

 

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