Traveler III
I was an alone explorer and discovered "overlanding" is better with people. Better yet, with my older teenage son. Check out our moments:
Forest Trail: Encountering Young Life
Forest Trail: Encountering Young Life
Traveler III
Guardian I
19963
Awesome!I was an alone explorer and discovered "overlanding" is better with people. Better yet, with my older teenage son. Check out our moments:
Forest Trail: Encountering Young Life
Traveler III
Nurture those moments, they are cherished forever!Awesome!
And I agree. I enjoy time alone especially in nature. But my daughter who is 16 expressed wanting to camp and overland with me. So we went out the first time last weekend and going out again in a few weeks. And again once a month. The next few months. I’m getting to teach her a lot and she’s like a sponge. It’s great!
Educator I
31008
That’s great! I love hearing that kind of stuff.my wife got me into this when we were dating and we married a few yrs ago when my oldest son was a senior in high school. we took him on some trips and he loved it. throughout college, we would drive up and get him on breaks and go camping in arkansas and even a couple trips out west. next thing i know, hes buying gear and taking friends out camping and even going solo at times. now hes a senior in college and has a girlfriend and they do a good bit of tent camping together. they seem to have a good relationship and im sure they will have a much better future relationship by doing that together versus going out to clubs and doing the typical college thing.
the wife and i have done a lot of bonding via the camping/traveling and i think its great for the younger folk so they can learn to slow things down and enjoy nature and communicating with others without texting. the OP definitely sees the benefit of exposing teenagers to this and i totally agree. with all the smart phones and technology, people are quickly forgetting how to actually be together and work thru a little adversity. a smart phone down to 10% battery is NOT a real emergency and a wet sleeping bag isnt the end of the world...its important to learn to work with inconveniences and overlanding is all about that!
even as adults, i see a great benefit in this because i do get to meet better people.
i wake up in the morning and if i drive into town, the people on the roads are pissed off and in a hurry and then it seems like most stores have employees that dont want to be there and are usually not in a good mood or very friendly. gets to where i just dont want to deal with people. then the wife and i go on a trip out in the woods and always end up meeting cool people. i wont go as far to say that those times fully restore my faith in humanity...but it definitely helps
Trail Blazer I
15310
Traveler III
Enthusiast III
Good point...that is why I came to this site. Plus, wheeling alone is a risk.I was an alone explorer and discovered "overlanding" is better with people. Better yet, with my older teenage son. Check out our moments:
Forest Trail: Encountering Young Life