our blog

1

Bike Adventures with Kids!

Charles R. Scott, author and Family Adventure Guy, was recently featured on Get Out With Kids, a Family Outdoor Adventure blog from the UK!

When I turned 40, I decided to write down a list of goals for the second half of my life. One of the items on that list was, “Have adventures with my kids.” I wanted to slow down time and create lasting memories while they were young. I worked at Intel Corporation and assumed that we might spend a week or two doing something more adventurous than a trip to Disneyland. But then my son and I got carried away…

CYCLING THE LENGTH OF JAPAN
For the first family adventure (2009), I convinced Intel to give me a 2-month unpaid leave of absence to cycle the length of Japan – 2,500 miles – with my 8-year-old son, Sho, who pedaled on a trailer cycle connected to my bike. We carried about 75 pounds of gear, including a tent. The trip took us 67 days.

"With my 8-year-old son Sho at the start of our ride across Japan, we cycled over ten mountain passes."


We cycled over ten mountain passes, took on sumo wrestlers, met remarkably friendly people and learned that a kid can do a whole lot more than most adults think. In the first week of our ride, Sho threw three major temper tantrums, and I worried that the trip was going to be too much for him. But after I told him that I couldn’t do the trip without his help and that he should think of himself as a team member, the temper tantrums disappeared. Sho rose to the occasion and did great over the following 60 days. I learned an important lesson: a child thrives with loving support and high expectations.

Rising Son: A Father and Son's Bike Adventure across Japan
Sho and I raised money for a global tree-planting campaign, received press coverage around the world, and were named “Climate Heroes” by the United Nations.

I wrote a book about the experience, Rising Son: A Father and Son’s Bike Adventure Across Japan, and believe that the most precious gift a parent can give a child (besides love) is time.


I returned from Japan and dove back into my busy corporate life, but started planning how to change my profession so that I could take more trips like these with my kids. Finally, in 2011, I ended a 14-year career at Intel and became a writer and family adventurer, taking my kids on endurance challenges linked to charitable causes and writing about the experiences.

CYCLING AROUND ICELAND

A week after leaving Intel, I flew to Iceland to cycle the circumference of the country with Sho, age 10, on the trailer cycle and my 4-year-old daughter Saya in a bike trailer.

We carried about 100 pounds of gear and spent 46 days exploring Iceland’s rugged countryside. My wife Eiko joined us for the final 3 weeks of the ride. I was overwhelmed by Iceland’s remarkable beauty and the abundance of animal life. So much of the country’s natural environment remains pristine, but the effects of climate change are apparent. We talked with locals and scientists about the retreating glaciers and declining puffin population, and I wrote articles about our experience for the Huffington Post. I discovered another lesson: the more time kids spend in nature, the more connected they feel to the world around them, and the more they want to protect it.

CYCLING ACROSS EUROPE
Last summer, my kids and I cycled across Germany, Switzerland, France and England. Saya graduated to the trailer cycle, and Sho rode his own bike and carried his own gear.

CYCLING THE LEWIS & CLARK TRAIL ACROSS THE USA
This summer, my kids, now ages 6 and 12, and I are re-tracing the Lewis & Clark Trail in the U.S., cycling 1,700 miles from North Dakota across the Rockies to the Pacific Ocean. My wife will join us in the final week of the trip. You can track us on our blog here: http://familyadventureguy.blogspot.com.


As we cycle, my children and I will collect roadkill data for a project with Adventures and Scientists for Conservation designed to reduce the impact of roads on wildlife. We will also study Lewis & Clark’s remarkable expedition, the plants and animals they documented, and the Native Americans they encountered. I am writing a book about this experience, and my kids and I will give talks at schools and science museums after we return. I hope that a student who hears us will think, “If a 12-year-old boy and 6-year-old girl can ride bikes over the Rocky Mountains, I must be able to do some amazing things too!”

1 comment:

  1. It will likely be great for the particular never-ending cycle commuter, or perhaps people who go shopping by simply bike. If you'd prefer to help bike to execute, along with you don't own satisfactory room to place the particular things within, that is a outstanding remedy. It offers a new effective very little design and style, handy along with hassle-free.bike cargo trailer
    bicycle cargo trailer

    ReplyDelete