Discovering
Nature with Your Grandchildren
By Fay A. Klingler
One
of the most wonderful gifts you can give to a grandchild is the opportunity
to enjoy and discover nature. Whether it is a summer, moonlight walk in
a gentle rain, a service project cleaning the vacant lot down the street,
or sledding together down a slope covered in new, winter-white powder
you become more involved with each other and develop a sense of wonder
and appreciation of God’s creations.
When
you plan outside activities, you’re not only helping your grandchildren.
You’re helping the adults in the family as well. Exploring nature can
be comforting, uplifting, and liberating in any season of the year. Perhaps
it has something to do with the sunlight aligning your circadian rhythms
with the cycles of nature. I don’t know what it is.
But
I do know that activities outside the home, whether they be structured
or spontaneous, can act as a refreshing reprieve from daily concerns and
frustrations. Healthy attitudes about life and the joy of living are often
formed by families camping, hiking, or boating together. Discovering nature
has a lot to do with releasing creative thought processes and having fun.
When our children and grandchildren come to visit in the summer,
we are usually working in our garden. They all enjoy helping us shell
peas in early summer, snap string beans in the middle of summer, and shell
dry beans in late summer. We take a bucket of produce and sit on the soft
lawn near the garden and talk and laugh and eat. It is a fun time. (The
LDS Grandparents’ Idea, Fay A. Klingler, Book Spring Creek Book Company,
p. 106.)
Several of our children own four-wheel-drive vehicles. In the
summer we have a family, car caravan overnighter or picnic in the mountains.
It’s fun to follow each other through the woods on little roads (or no
roads!), stop occasionally to hike around, cook over an open fire, write
notes on each other’s cars in the dirt that has collected on the back
windows, and sing songs through the intercoms we’ve connected to each
car. (The LDS Grandparents’ Idea, Fay A. Klingler, Book Spring
Creek Book Company, p. 105.)
Consider
the following ideas and experiences. Perhaps one of them might spark an
interest and help you develop a family activity that captures forever
a moment of beauty and adventure in the lives of your grandchildren.
- Discovery Walk
It may be in the neighboring city park, the nature reserve,
in the mountains, or your own backyard. Listen for and point out the
sights, sounds, and smells. Do you see the many hues of green in the
landscape? Can you identify and name the birds by the sounds you hear?
Do you recognize by the smell the lavender growing freely on the hillside?
Two of my grandsons go to the elementary school a few blocks
from my home. My daughter was ill and needed help with the children.
I walked to the school to meet them. On the way back to my home, we
leisurely picked up leaves, grasses, pinecones, and pieces of bark.
They ate the snacks and drank the water I brought for them. We talked
about school activities, the funny shapes and sizes of our “finds,”
and whatever came to their minds. When we got home, the boys used their
“finds” to dip in paint and stamp get-well cards for their mother. They
enjoyed working with the different sizes, textures, and shapes. They
even found grasses that worked well as fancy paint brushes!
Recently, while babysitting, I took a granddaughter for walk
around the block. She picked up a stick and waved it like a wand, gently
tapping bushes and trees along the way. Then she spontaneously started
singing in a happy, uninhibited voice. I recognized the tune and joined
in, stopping only to point out the colors of passing cars or the sounds
of the quail skittering across the driveway ahead. Her joy to move freely
outdoors was obvious.
Walking on the California beach this past winter was a thrill.
My daughter and granddaughter discovered a washed-up lobster, a starfish,
sea plants that felt like rubber, and numerous colorful shells. We jumped
small streams of fresh water at the shoreline, and even sighted three
porpoises swimming a short distance out from the beach. Later on the
Internet, we researched and learned about porpoises and yearned to repeat
the visit.

Terri and Jasmine find a starfish on the beach.
- Overnight Camp
It could be in a campground or in your own backyard. It could
be in a tent or sleeping under the stars. It could include structured
activities or leave the time for roaming and spontaneous discoveries.
Just the act of setting up camp, orienting to the area, and doing without
the luxuries of home can be an adventure, fun, and exhilarating.
Sometimes for our family camping trips, I plan to teach a survival
skill to my grandchildren. Usually I have a craft, like the windsock
they each made a couple of trips ago. Or I might give them small gifts
to enhance their experience, like flashlights or insect nets. I always
take my cards to play double, triple, or quadruple Solitaire. Last summer
I brought a smiling, candy-filled piñata.

Camping trips can feature everything from crafts to piñatas.
- Scenic Drive
It may be across the valley, in the mountains, or to the neighboring
state. Driving outside your area can help a grandchild feel relaxed
and less confined. Point out colors and shapes, different animals’ behavior,
rainbows, and cloud formations.
When my dad could no longer hike or walk, he took our family
for drives where we explored trails through the mountains. I’ve never
forgotten my mother telling us about my grandfather’s desire for his
children to see and enjoy nature. As she spoke of him, she helped us
keep a tally on the deer we saw, encouraged our noticing the colors
and kinds of flowers growing along the roadside, and pointed out the
varying smells, like the strong odors of sage and mesquite. It was on
one of those summer drives I carefully collected and discovered the
sweet taste of fruit from the prickly pear cactus.
- Community Events
It may be a city fun run/walk or a community garden watch or
fishing competition. Participating as a family group in community events
can be thrilling and uniting.
I have been a runner for many years. To tell the truth, now
I would consider myself more of a walker than a runner! Nonetheless,
when I chose to participate in community runs/walks, I invited by children
and grandchildren to participate with me. This year I have a goal to
run one more 10K. I will invite my family to participate with me. Everyone
in the family will be invited to the pre-race dinner in our backyard.
Runners will be encouraged to spend the night and travel with us to
the competition site. The whole family will be asked to cheer us on
along the race route. Working toward a common goal unites families and
instills lasting positive memories.
- Family Work Project
It may be building an outside patio, helping in the garden,
cutting down a tree, or washing cars. But the camaraderie and bonding
that occur are priceless.
Last summer several of my grandchildren helped me build and
landscape a stone patio. We talked and laughed. They made a difficult
chore seem so much easier.
My brother invited his extended family over for a car-washing
evening. Every family brought their car to be cleaned and everyone scrubbed,
splashed, and laughed their way to cleaner transportation! I’m planning
to follow my brother’s example in August this year. Does that give you
any ideas?