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Camptown Receives IPL Golden Eagle Grant

November 20, 2012 by Brent Freeman

Camptown has been named as one of three Indianapolis Power & Light Company 2012 IPL Golden Eagle Environmental Grant recipients. Proceeds from this grant will bring nature education to urban youth through Camptown’s “How Wild is Your School” program, Eco Day Camps, and Canoe/River Clean-Up programs. These programs will give students the opportunity to see, touch and interact with the natural environment. These hands-on environmental education and nature experiences will help foster positive environmental attitudes while teaching sound environmental stewardship principles.

IPL Golden Eagle Environmental Grants provide funds for projects that will preserve, protect, enhance, or restore environmental and biological resources throughout IPL’s operating territory. Since 1993, IPL has contributed more than $1.2 million through this program.

Filed Under: News

Camptown Recieves IPL Golden Eagle Environmental Grant

November 20, 2012 by Brent Freeman

Camptown has been named as one of three Indianapolis Power & Light Company 2011 IPL Golden Eagle Environmental Grant recipients. Proceeds from this grant will bring nature education to urban youth through Camptown’s “How Wild is Your School” program, Eco Day Camps, and Canoe/River Clean-Up programs. These programs will give students the opportunity to see, touch and interact with the natural environment. These hands-on environmental education and nature experiences will help foster positive environmental attitudes while teaching sound environmental stewardship principles.

IPL Golden Eagle Environmental Grants provide funds for projects that will preserve, protect, enhance, or restore environmental and biological resources throughout IPL’s operating territory. Since 1993, IPL has contributed more than $1.2 million through this program.

Filed Under: News

Vote for Us!

September 25, 2012 by Brent Freeman

Camptown is a finalist for a $10,000 grant through the IPL Golden Eagle Award program. IPL will select the recipient for the award based upon public votes. We need your help!
Here is what we are going to do with the $10,000 award if we win. We plan on conducting 10 of our How Wild is Your School? programs, 4 Eco-Camp days and 2 River Monitoring programs to inner city schools at no charge to them. This will bring nature education to over 1,200 urban elementary age children.

Here is what you can do to help.
Camptown is one of the smaller organizations as finanlist, so your vote is crucial to us. Please log on to the link below between now and October 7th and vote for Camptown. You will need to scroll down the page to find us. Then pass this link along to your friends, family, co-works, the bagger at your grocery store, anyone and everyone!

VOTE HERE!
Voting is scheduled to end on October 7, so please vote today. Thanks!

Please Note: You’ll need to register with WIBC to vote (to keep it fair, WIBC asks for your name and your email address – one vote per registration). Don’t worry, WIBC won’t email you news unless you give them permission. If you’ve never voted in a WIBC contest before, you’ll have confirm your email address in your email inbox, and then click through to the voting page. You can also log in with your Facebook account.

Filed Under: News

Health Benefits of Being Outdoors

September 4, 2012 by Brent Freeman

Research links more time in nature with stress reduction

by: Richard Louv | from: AARP Bulletin | July 23, 2012

Marti Erickson always carries two collapsible chairs in her car. When she is having a particularly bad day, she finds a grassy spot, plops down, breathes deeply and soon is soothed by the nature around her.

“The reason I have a couple of those chairs,” says the developmental psychologist, “is that my oldest grandchild likes nature breaks, too, and joins me when we’re out together.”

Based on research and firsthand experience, Erickson says that time spent in nature “may be one of the best and most accessible natural stress-busters any individual or family could find.”

She’s not alone in that belief. In 2005 in my book Last Child in the Woods, I introduced the term “nature-deficit disorder” — not a medical diagnosis, but a way to describe the growing gap between kids and nature, and the consequences. Many adults later spoke with deep emotion about both their children’s deficit and their own. My new book is more about adults. It asks: What would our everyday lives be like if we were as immersed in nature as we are in technology?

A growing body of research links more time in nature — or in home, work or hospital environments enhanced through nature-based design — with reduction of stress and depression, faster healing time and less need for pain medication.

Health care professionals are taking note. In 2010, a pilot program in Portland, Ore., began pairing physicians with park professionals, who helped children and families get their green exercise or, as I call it, their dose of “vitamin N.”

Other benefits of vitamin N include enhanced use of the senses and higher work productivity. In 2008, University of Michigan researchers demonstrated that, after just an hour interacting with nature, memory performance and attention spans improved by 20 percent. In April, researchers at the University of Kansas reported a 50 percent boost in creativity for people who were steeped in nature for a few days.

Plant a garden. Create a backyard wildlife habitat. Replant with native species to encourage butterfly and bird migration routes. Bring the outdoors in by using nature-oriented decoration, perhaps an indoor garden.

Be a nature mentor to your children or grandchildren. Encourage them to dig holes or build forts. (A small pickup load of dirt provides hours of creative play.)

Be a hummingbird — not a helicopter — parent or grandparent. Don’t hover over your children or grandchildren, but watch from a distance as they play in nature.

Create a nature club where multiple families or groups of adults share hikes and other activities. Get to know nature where you live. As writer Wendell Berry put it, “You can’t know who you are until you know where you are.”

A final thought: Boomers could be the last generation to remember a time when it was considered normal and expected for children to play in woods and fields. When we leave this earth, will the memory of such experiences leave with us? Reconnecting the young to the natural world (as we reconnect ourselves) could be our greatest, most redemptive cause.

 

Richard Louv is the cofounder and chairman emeritus of the Children & Nature Network and author of The Nature Principle: Reconnecting With Life in a Virtual Age.

Filed Under: News

PeyBack Foundation Supports Camptown

June 14, 2012 by Brent Freeman

Camptown received a $7,500 grant from the PeyBack Foundation to support outdoor summer adventures.  With the support from the PeyBack Foundation, over 700 urban and suburban youth will have experiential opportunities unlike ever before.  Youth will have the opportunity to spend time surrounded by trees or eating lunch by a quiet stream.  They will hike, canoe, camp, backpack, climb, raft, plan games and explore.  Lessons learned during an outdoor experience are transformational.  the intensity of an outdoor experience creates indelible memories that help youth take the lessons learned in the woods and transfer them back to their everyday life.

Filed Under: News

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Camptown

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Camptown's mission is to challenge, mentor, and teach youth about life through outdoor adventure and nature programs that help build confidence, character, and hope.

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