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Hiking with Babies, Toddlers and KidsTips for Enjoying a Safe, Fun Hike or Nature Trail With Children
Hiking is great exercise and great fun for babies, kids and parents too! Here's how to be prepared for a hike with the tykes that's enjoyable for all ages.
Anyone who enjoyed hiking and/or camping before having kids will find that the rules change once a little one appears on the scene. Hiking with kids can be done, however – it just takes a bit more preparation and supplies. And a different, more patient and more childlike mindset doesn't hurt. Hiking With BabiesIn some ways, hiking with small babies is easy: as long as they are breastfed babies who haven't started on solids, the parents just need to bring diapers, a first aid kid with medications and rash cream, and a baby carrier. Very small babies can be carried in a Baby Bjorn or Snugli-type front carrier, while bigger babies need to ride in a baby carrier designed for hiking. Baby carriers for hiking have a metal frame and often have other special features such as a canopy to keep the sun off the baby. When taking a baby along on a hike or nature trail, it's especially important to be aware of environmental dangers to the baby such as sunburn, windburn, biting bugs and heat rash – not to mention diaper rash if baby rides in the carrier too long without a change. Hiking With ToddlersWhen children are ages 2-3 it is a difficult time to take them on a hike: toddlers don't want to ride in a carrier, but they don't want to walk, either – at least not in the same direction as the parents. They may prefer to dart off the path into a patch of poison ivy. Instead of getting frustrated, it's more helpful to adopt the "toddler mindset" and see the world as they see it. That means leaving plenty of time to explore the path, pick up every stick that looks like a good walking stick, and stop to help caterpillars off the trail and into the grass so that they won't get stepped on. Taking Bigger Kids on a HikeHiking with older kids is easier, but it's still important to come prepared:
Kids of any age can enjoy a hike, but should be taught to practice good "trail ethics": no littering, no writing on trees or rocks, no yelling or loud noises that can disturb other hikers and/or wildlife.That way they will learn to appreciate nature and respect other humans, too.
The copyright of the article Hiking with Babies, Toddlers and Kids in Kids Outdoor Activities is owned by Natalie Cooper. Permission to republish Hiking with Babies, Toddlers and Kids in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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