The Reading Ranch - May 2025

PRST STD US POSTAGE PAID BOISE, ID PERMIT 411

6991 Pecan St, Suite 200, Frisco, TX 75034

469.817.9809

Pre-k - 8th Grade

Literacy & Tutorial Centers

ReadingRanch.com

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Support for Every Stage of Literacy

Enroll at Reading Ranch Today Unlock Your Child’s Full Reading Potential

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The Monsters History Tried to Forget Creamy Chicken Carbonara

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Tips for Engaging Your Kids in a Nature Hike

Help Your Kids Fall in Love With Hiking Step by Step

leaves, and types of flowers, and you can even have them keep an ear out for different bird calls.

Getting your kids outdoors to enjoy nature is a goal worth pursuing, but smartphones, video games, and social media have made it far more challenging in recent years. We celebrated Earth Day on April 22, and a nature walk is a great way to keep the appreciation for nature going. Planning games, creative projects, and other challenges to engage them during your hike can get kids involved from the start. Choose a trail that isn’t too difficult, and allow your children to wander and explore. If your children have a creative flair, encourage them to collect dried leaves, pieces of bark, seed pods, sticks, and other items to use in a collage. For adventurous kids, you can draft an age-appropriate list for a scavenger hunt to keep them from growing bored on the walk. You can include different insects native to your area, specific colors of

Challenge your kids to make a list of all the plants or animals they can identify while they walk. Apps like Leafsnap help you identify plants using photos of their leaves or other parts. Additionally, the Arbor Day Foundation offers an online step-by-step guide at ArborDay.org for identifying a tree by its leaves. Keep the learning going by having your kids record their distance based on trail signs or a map app on their phones and calculate their average speed. You could also invite your youngsters to become cartographers, tracing the trail and surroundings on paper, including landmarks, rivers, and lakes. Older kids can add topographical information using their phones or an altitude app such as Altimeter or My Altitude. Hiking is a fantastic activity to help your kids appreciate the outdoors rather than their phone screens, but being in nature takes energy. Remember to pack snacks and a water bottle before you leave, or pack a favorite picnic meal to savor the rewards of exploring the outdoors!

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