A
summer vacation is a wonderful time to introduce your children to the
great outdoors through backpacking, rock climbing, horseback riding,
ATV adventuring, motocross or go-kart racing, and mountain biking.
Backpacking
Do your kids love bugs and being outdoors? Backpacking might be the
hobby for them. Billy and Marci Dennis of Outback Guides provide trips
to Beavers Bend, Greenleaf, and Robbers Cave State Parks. They group
families with same-age children together so that the difficulty of the
trip is age-appropriate. Marci says that every trip is a biology and
botany lesson where children are introduced to “bugs, snails, shells,
and mushrooms.†Kids will often meet her “bottle ratsâ€-baby
squirrels she frequently bottle feeds on her backpacking trips. Trip
dates and prices are available at outbackguides.com. Most two-day trips
run about $295 per person including guide, food, and camping gear.
Outback Guides can customize trips to include canoeing and kayaking.
Call 918-446-5956 for further information.
Rock Climbing
My boys got a taste for rock climbing by rappelling at Red Rock
Canyon with the Boy Scouts. Now, to keep me from climbing the walls at
home, they frequent OKC Rocks at 200 SE 4th Street in Oklahoma City.
Located in an old grain elevator, OKC Rocks offers climbing routes with
difficulty levels from novice to expert. I have always found the
facility to be well-staffed and well-supervised. OKC Rocks is open
Monday-Friday from 4-10pm; Saturday-Sunday from noon-6pm. They offer a
variety of pass packages with very reasonable family rates. Novices can
rent all necessary equipment on site. Climbing information and prices
can be found at okcrocks.com or by calling 319-1400.
Horseback Riding
Horses and summer are always a great combination, and Thunderbird
Riding Stables, just 13 miles east of Norman on Highway 9, is a great
place to introduce your children to exploring the outdoors on
horseback. The stables provide both guided rides for novices and open
rides for experienced riders. All rides are $17 per person, per hour.
Thunderbird also offers summer horse camps just for kids. The morning
camps will be held June 5-8, 19-23, and 26-30 for $200 per child. For
details about camps, call Bobby or Cindy at 321-5768 or check out their
web site, thunderbirdridingstables.com. Call at least two days ahead if
your family wants to ride on a camp day. The stables are open 8am-4pm
Monday-Friday and 8am-5:30pm on Saturday and Sunday.
Mountain Bikes, Motocross, and ATVs
Does your family prefer wheels to hooves? Bring your two- or
four-wheeled vehicles to the Stillwater Cycle Park, 6500 W 56th Street
in Stillwater, and enjoy 500 acres of riding area. This park is truly
all-terrain with tracks running through woods and creeks. Buy season or
day passes at the Stillwater Parks, Events, and Recreation Department,
315 E 9th. Riders are required to wear helmets, and all bikes must have
a spark arrester. Call 405-747-8070 for more information.
For a change of scenery, Lance Harzman of Little Sahara Power Sports
invites all ATV owners to ride the dunes at Little Sahara State Park.
The cost is only $7 per day per driver. Lance says there is nothing
like a night ride when the moon is full. Your vehicle must meet all
park safety requirements. Call 580-824-1471 or log onto lspsonline.com
for more information about ATV fun and on camping facilities at or near
Little Sahara.
Go-Kart Racing
Regardless of your age, Rodney Berryhill assures me there is a race
for you at Norman's Oklahoma Motor Sports Complex. If you have never
raced, take time to see one before you buckle into your own kart. The
complex, located at 3501 S Interstate Drive, holds races twice a month
on Saturday nights. Call 579-5278 or check championkart.com for race
days. Admission is free and the atmosphere is much like that at high
school football games-concessions and noisy fans. During the week, ages
10 and older may rent karts at the complex. Staffers will provide basic
instruction for beginners. The complex is a popular birthday party
spot, and they can accommodate large groups.
If you don't find the adventure you crave listed here, explore the
travelok.com web site section on activities. Whether your family wants
to adventure on their own two feet, on horseback, or atop four wheels,
you can find a guide, instruction, or just a place to roam free in
Oklahoma.
Pam Washington is the Dean of the College of Liberal Arts at the
University of Central Oklahoma. She and her husband Mike have been
married for six years and have traveled Oklahoma with their blended
family of five children.
Posted on Monday, June 19, 2006
by Exploring OK
filed under