Chicago Sun-Times

Let’s go camping in forest preserves

- The Woods Last Child in

Acamping expedition offers a break from the rush of urban life. It can give us a chance to clear our minds and look at life in a new way.

We suspect Cook County officials might have been on such an outdoors trip recently because they certainly have come up with a fresh and sensible idea: allowing people to rough it overnight in the forest preserves.

A ban dating back to 1929 has feel safe. Locations chosen for camping should be remote from the busiest parts of the city, not adjacent to heavily used highways or directly under O’hare Airport’s flight paths.

There’s no reason those goals can’t be met, even in and around a big city. Dupage Forest Preserve Commission­er Roger Kotecki says camping in Dupage’s Blackwell Forest Preserve has been popular and safe, partly because alcohol is banned and because gates to the camping area are closed an hour after dark to prevent people from coming and going all night.

For some people, camping might be their introducti­on to the forest preserve’s extensive woodlands and natural vistas, which too often are overlooked even though — or perhaps because — they are right at our very doors. It also might give many children their first taste of an overnight outdoors. Richard Louv, author of

and other books, says kids don’t get enough time in the woods. Natural surroundin­gs, he says, sharpen kids’ senses, lower obesity rates and even ease attention-deficit disorders.

We’ve got our bug spray ready and our ingredient­s for s’mores. Let the camping begin.

 ??  ?? Arnold Randall, general superinten­dent of the Cook County Forest Preserve District, visits the shuttered Camp Reinberg in Palatine on Friday. | RICHARD A. CHAPMAN~SUN-TIMES
Arnold Randall, general superinten­dent of the Cook County Forest Preserve District, visits the shuttered Camp Reinberg in Palatine on Friday. | RICHARD A. CHAPMAN~SUN-TIMES
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