Saturday, 12 July 2014

Adults 'make children fear nature' says Chris Packham

A blatant steal from BT this one. Now Chris Packham is not my favourite wildlife presenter but he has a good point to make on this one.
 
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Adults 'make children fear nature'

Wildlife presenter Chris Packham has spoken out against parents who stop their children interacting with nature.
Last updated: 12 July 2014, 10:22 BST
 
Wildlife presenter Chris Packham has spoken out against parents who stop their children interacting with nature, adding: "They have got to be stung, slimed, slithered on and scratched."

The Springwatch host said allowing youngsters to get up close with wildlife should be an essential part of growing up but they are made to feel fear by adults who stop them climbing trees or insist on them using anti-bacterial gel after touching animals.

The naturalist, 53, told The Times he recalled being licked by a giraffe on a visit to a zoo as a child and being ordered to wash his hands and face by his mother. "I had been licked by a giraffe! I didn't want to wash it off," he said.

He added that he has since allowed hand-reared wolves to lick him "many times".
"Wolves' mouths are packed with bacteria which are perfect for healing," he added.
He went on: "This whole process is alien to children because they want to pick it up and touch it. The feel of worms, the feel of a caterpillar inching up their finger, the marvel of a ladybird gyrating round that finger and getting to the top of it turning this way and that and then taking flight; that's the stuff of magic. What are you going to do? Wash their hands with gel?

"When you ask a child to open their hands and you squirt that liquid and say, 'Rub that in,' you are saying, 'You are in a dirty and dangerous place.' And when you say to them not to climb the tree because you might fall out and hurt yourself, you are instigating fear in that child.

"Parents are to blame. Clearly we can't blame kids. They are born with the same innate curiosity that all of us were, but parents have pulled back from allowing their kids to engage with it."

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Yes there are some dangerous things out there but as he says children need to learn or be taught sympathetically what is good or bad, fun or horrible, safe or dangerous. Surely that is the role of parents in trying to bring up sensible rounded children who possess intelligence and common sense.

I can well remember my parents and the upbringing my bothers and I had, we got dirty, we got wet, we got cut stung and scratched. But we learnt from our experiences and were encouraged by our parents to carry on doing it.
I have fond memories of the family pulling up at various places on holiday, the vehicle door would open and we were off like greyhounds from the traps into the woods, onto the moors whatever with Mums words ringing in our ears.  Be careful, look after each other and get back in time for your lunch, we invariably did.

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