I was having “one of those days” yesterday. I found myself pondering the differences between local kids and tourist kids. I’m sure you already know where this is going: SS is feeling old and cranky again.
This weekend is the height of our summer tourist season and is viewed with apprehension by the local SAR people, because it seems as though every year everyone gets called out to find some youngster who has wandered off from its parents campsite, vehicle, cabin, etc. The unwritten rule of thumb is that there is about 4 hours to find a lost tourist child before it becomes a potential recovery (the parents are of course not informed of the rule). Overnight is deemed something like a 50-50 chance for a non-local under 15.
In contrast, a local kid missing in the mountains is a different deal. Parents are concerned but not really worried until the child doesn’t show up by midnight. Except in Dec-Feb., it is expected that the child will survive the night ok, but may have an injury which is slowing them down.
If the youngster does not show up by morning, the “jungle drums” somehow are at work and there will be a bunch of horse trailers showing up unsolicited with riders prepared to spend 24 hours in the saddle “just taking a look around.” Usually the kid shows up by her/himself, having gotten delayed looking for a lost dog or cow pony. (A cow pony suitable for a six year old local cowboy can be a 17 hand, green-broke gelding.) Ranch families often don’t even call the sheriff (which is what triggers a formal SAR response) until evening of the second day. Ranch girls are every bit as capable as the boys, so when I talk about cowboys consider me as meaning both boys and girls.
So I am standing there at this public gathering place listening to these whiny, self-important, overly-funded brats and wondering how they were ever going to learn anything in even the most rudimentary way about survival skills, stuff which our cowboys and farm kids seem to absorb very early. These tourist kids are clearly not going to learn it from their parents, who themselves are whiny, self-important, and overly-funded. Boy and Girl Scouts used to fill this role pretty well; but my sense is that this is not so common as it was when I was a youngster. So, how does learning survival happen for children in the US? The great majority of children don’t grow up on farms and ranches anymore. And most of them are not lucky enough to have parents or grandparents like members on this Forum.
I think I am going to shut up, saddle up, and take a ride.



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