Sounds like those kids were afraid of the dark. It didn't tell us how old they were, or did it? Did it tell us how they were warned about snakes and scorpions? Kids, especially Junior high, are more interested in what they know, and the social scheme around them, like a party. Having done maybe 50 to 100 field trips, I found that quite often, the kids just want to socialize and be cool. Cool being something that they brought with them that they know. The entertainment and learning are not so important. Often they don't care to be outside of their box. I suspect that he just experienced some of this and it supports the perception he has been hearing and the nature of the article. Kids love nature like ducks to water. It's in their nature. They do need to be taught what else to do with it, and how to respect it.
The urban kids around this town are disconnected from nature, especially in the poorer areas. They do video games and are carted off to activities like soccer, etc. They stay away from the desert if there is any. In the summer, they stay indoors. Maybe, when they experience it, it will hit them like being naked outdoors for the first time.
The comment about white people practicing being homeless got me. That was certainly insulated, and egocentric. Maybe it's not that they don't appreciate nature, but we don't appreciate technology and fancy shelters filled with convenience as much as we should?
We may be the last generation to go camping? I think not. REI and local Summit Hut, are not geriatric centers...but are still very white.
More for us, I suppose. They can stay in hotels, take tours and never venture further than a few hundred yards away from that, while we are nude and free and attuned in the fantastic distance.
It is getting about time to get granddaughter out camping. Seven is a good age to begin teaching. We took her hiking in a forest on Mt. Lemon. Big people do it, ya know.
Jbee