http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/02/opinion/02kristof.html?_r=1&scp=1&sq=how%20to%20lick%20a%20slug&st=cse
How to Lick a Slug
Published: August 1, 2009
MOUNT HOOD, Ore.
<http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/02/opinion/02kristof.html?em#secondParagraph>
Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times
Nicholas D. Kristof
<http://topics.nytimes.com/top/opinion/editorialsandoped/oped/columnists/nicholasdkristof/index.html>
While backpacking here with my 11-year-old
daughter, I kept thinking of something tragic:
so few kids these days know what happens when
you lick a big yellow banana slug.
My daughter and I were recuperating in a (banana
slug-infested) wilderness from a surfeit of
civilization. On our second day on the Pacific
Crest Trail, we were exhausted after nearly 20
miles of hiking, our feet ached, and ravenous
mosquitoes were persecuting us. Dusk was
falling, but no formal campsite was within miles.
So we set out a groundsheet and our sleeping
bags on the soft grass of a ridge, so that the
winds would blow the mosquitoes away. Our dog
looked aghast (Ugh, wheres my bed?!), but
sulkily curled up beside us. As far as we could
tell, there was no other hiker within a half-days journey in any direction.
We debated whether to put up our light tarp to
protect us from rain. No need, I advised my
daughter patronizingly. Theres zero chance
itll rain. And itll be more fun to be able to look up at shooting stars.
It was, until we awoke at 4 a.m. to a freezing drizzle.
The rain not only punctured the doctrine of
Paternal Infallibility but also offered one of
natures dazzlingly important lessons in
perspective, reminding us that were just tenants and ones without much sway.
Such time in the wilderness is part of our
familys summer ritual, a time to hit the
reset switch and escape deadlines and
BlackBerrys. We spend the time fretting instead
about blisters, river crossings and rain, and
the experiences offer us lessons on inner peace
and lifes meaning cheap and effective therapy, without the couch.
All this comes to mind because for most of us in
the industrialized world, nature is a rarer and
rarer part of our lives. Children for 1,000
generations grew up exploring fields, itching
with poison oak and discovering the hard way
what a wasp nest looks like. Thats no longer true.
Paul, a fourth grader in San Diego, put it this
way: I like to play indoors better, cause
thats where all the electrical outlets are.
Paul was quoted in a thoughtful book by Richard
Louv, Last Child in the Woods, that argued
that baby boomers may constitute the last
generation of Americans to share an intimate,
familial attachment to the land and water.
Only 2 percent of American households now live
on farms, compared with 40 percent in 1900.
Suburban childhood that once meant catching
snakes in fields now means sanitized video play
dates scheduled a week in advance. One study of
three generations of 9-year-olds found that by
1990 the radius from the house in which they
were allowed to roam freely was only one-ninth as great as it had been in 1970.
A British study found that children could more
easily identify Japanese cartoon characters like
Pikachu, Metapod and Wigglytuff than they could
native animals and plants, like otter, oak and beetle.
Mr. Louv calls this nature deficit disorder,
and he links it to increases in depression,
obesity and attention deficit disorder. I dont
know about all that, although his book does cite
a study indicating that watching fish lowers
blood pressure significantly. (Thats how to cut
health costs: hand out goldfish instead of heart medicine!)
One problem may be that the American
environmental movement has focused so much on
preserving nature that it has neglected to do
enough to preserve a constituency for nature.
Its important not only to save forests, but
also to promote camping, hiking, bouldering and
white-water rafting so that people care about saving those forests.
One sign of trouble: the number of visits to
Americas national parks has been slipping for
more than a decade. Likewise, Europe and Canada
have both done an excellent job of building
networks of long-distance hiking trails, while
the U.S. has trouble maintaining the trails it has.
One of our familys annual backpacks is the
40-mile Timberline Trail circuit around Mount
Hood, crossing snowfields and dazzling alpine
fields of flowers. In years when were
particularly addled, we hike it as many as three
times. But a washout almost three years ago left
part of this gorgeous trail completed in the
1930s officially closed, and unofficially
rather difficult to get by. Heres a spectacular
trail that was built in the last depression, and we cant even sustain it.
So lets protect nature, yes, but lets also
maintain trails, restore the Forest Service and
support programs that get young people rained on
in the woods. Lets acknowledge that getting
kids awed by nature is as important as getting them reading.
Oh, and the slug? Time was, most kids knew that
if you licked the underside of a banana slug,
your tongue went numb. Better that than have
them numb their senses staying cooped up inside