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Thursday, October 12, 2023

Tony Orman: "Boot Camps” Negative Misnomer - Outdoors Youth Training is the Path

It’s difficult to understand the inward looking attitude of Police Minister Ginny Anderson to youth training camps. The title “boot camps” that she negatively uses is derogatory and distorts the intention and what they should be.

I’m of dinosaur age and did 18 year old compulsory military training (CMT) in 1950s. Initially reluctant on entering, I  soon realised and observed this was great for youngsters, dissolving arrogance in some entrants but importantly for all, developing skills and building self esteem and respect for others.

It instilled self esteem and made for better apprentice citizens and we were physically fit.


Why not reinstate CMT but adapt it to be like an Outward Bound course?


There are a multitude of tasks that trainees could undertake, tasks which bureaucracies seem unable to cope with. I think of the inept Department of Conservation and the need to maintain tracks and huts on public land, combat the invasion of wilding pines which DOC has sat on its hands over, the waste left after clear felling of pines which could be collected and cut into firewood for needy families and pensioners and a host of restoration projects of wetlands and native trees. 


Along the way trainees - both male and female - would be taught firearm skills and safety and respect for firearms, instead of the phobic fear that politicians and even the prime minster seem to have. 


Teach youngsters trapping of possums and the utilisation of the resource for meat and fur. Trap predators instead of government’s current use of aerially spreading toxic, ecosystem poisons.


Teach fishing and bushcraft skills - and more outdoor related education.

Okay diminish the military aspect today but run it on lines of Outward Bound’s outdoors training, teaching outdoor and survival skills, developing skills from carpentry and mechanics to gardening etc., and especially doing community work for needy older or disabled folk.

Many of today’s youth need help. Indeed there’s a solid case to have an Outward Bound styled youth training  compulsory for male and female youngsters.

Stifling Discussion

Dumbing down discussion as Police Minister Ginny Anderson and the Labour/Greens government have done for political expediency reasons, will not help troubled youth.

It’s irresponsible of government MPs to play political games and sweep New Zealand’s troubled teenage generation under the carpet. 

In February last year NewstalkZB reported New Zealand had the highest death rate for teenagers and young people among 19 of the world's developed, wealthy countries.


“It also ranks poorly in terms of adolescent suicide, pregnancies and deaths related to cancer and respiratory illness,” according to British healthcare think tank Nuffield Trust.


Neuroscience educator Nathan Wallis told NewstalkZB’s Kerre McIvor that the results were concerning. 


"We've got this idea that New Zealand is this wonderful, clean, green, beautiful nation that is a wonderful place to raise children, so this paints a different picture.”


We should be encouraging young New Zealanders into the outdoors. But sadly government priorities and policies don’t give incentive but even spawn disincentives by way of policies. One impediment to access to the outdoors is increasing foreign and corporate ownership of New Zealand farms resulting in locked gates in contrast to once when family farms willingly gave access.


Dying Rivers


Rivers that youngsters once swam and fished in, have had flows depleted by irrigation for corporate dairying. In turn, nitrates and other pollution have fouled water quality. 


Alarmingly the majority of NZ’s lowland rivers are rated unfit for swimming.


New Zealanders are not getting outdoors. Young New Zealanders are losing their connection with the outdoors while youth obesity, mental health and suicide rates are unacceptably high for a country of just 5 million people.


For youngsters the outdoors used to be a readily available indispensable class-room.  The sweet success of catching a trout or perhaps a kahawai, shooting a rabbit, climbing a mountain or canoeing a river were personal achievements which importantly built self-esteem in youngsters. 


Besides tramping, fishing and hunting encourage observation, analytical reasoning and a respect for Nature. And often a lesson was that to achieve in the outdoors, you have to sweat and slog it out. Work ethic.


Egalitarian


In New Zealand’s egalitarian society, anyone can fish or hunt. 


It was a legacy the first European settlers instilled into the new colony in order to escape the feudal system of Britain where for example, the best trout fishing, deerstalking or pheasant shooting is the preserve of the wealthy minority.


In effect, in New Zealand the kid down the street may go trout fishing on equal terms and rights as the city’s top solicitor, doctor, baker and the candlestick maker or even the Governor General  or Prime Minister.  Indeed at least two former Prime Ministers have been keen fishermen. The late Jack Marshall a National government PM, was a very keen trout fisherman. The much respected Labour government PM Norman Kirk was a hunter in his younger days and an ardent fisherman. 


New Zealand could do with a few more practical keen fishing-hunting persons - male and female -  in Parliament. 


A Horizon survey of sporting participation rates in 2012  showed fishing had more than five times more people participating than rugby. Twenty-six percent enjoyed fishing while just five percent played rugby.


Yet in economic terms, recreational fishing stimulates over a billion dollars a year in economic activity.


Governments’ Ignorance


The list goes on and on, where government out of ignorance, have let the public and particularly youngsters down by policies allowing the despoiling of the outdoors.


The solution to helping young Kiwis out of their predicament is a recognition of the priceless value of the outdoors whether it be fishing, hunting, tramping or other recreation, to youngsters. Youth training is a must.


However from once being an outdoor-minded society, New Zealanders have become sedentary, stressed, uncertain and often lost. The youth statistics mirror that.


Today’s youth are tomorrow’s adult citizens.


Investing in the well-being of youth makes for a better society in the years ahead.

Chris Hipkins and Ginny Anderson need to heed the dire statistics about New Zealand’s youth and stop their negative political games.

Tony Orman is a past president of the NZ Recreational Fishing Council and past chairman of the Council of Outdoor Recreation Associations of NZ, as well as an author of over 20 books, many on the outdoors.

8 comments:

Max Ritchie said...

The author is confused. National’s boot camps are for 60 (only) serious offenders. Some of them may well be “troubled youths” but as well they are criminals, many with psychological problems. What National is advocating is a form of prison for serious criminals. Nothing wrong with that but the Army should not be running it.

Lewis Hore said...

Some of the sedentary life styles Tony speaks of maybe due to the fact that the school camps that used to be extremely popular, shooting air rifles archery tramping and many other outdoor activities no longer exist due to the rules and regulations attached to outdoor activities these days. The consequences for not sticking to the rules or if someone is injured is horrendous for the school involved. My mate took kids from a secondary schools tramping and camping for thirty years then regulations made the principal so gun shy because of these consequences stopped all outdoor activities.
Outward Bound is a great place but the cost is out of reach of many so bring on the boot camps.

Lewis Hore

Anonymous said...

Good words Tony.
My takeaway from it is,
1. The political atmosphere has moved to a quandary where your logic can not be comprehended.

2. Corporations have to much say in the environment that the public owns.
Corporations own the farms and also the commercial fishing permits that were once family owned.
Hence the high prices for publicly owned resources run by corporations.


CXH said...

The only problem is the idea any political party is interested in solving this issue. The left want the failures to point at and claim they want to help them. The right want the failures to point at and claim they just need to make the right choices.

They both want and need the poor and disadvantaged and will do nothing to help them long term.

Robert Arthur said...

Boot camps work/worked for those with the appropriate latent attiude, but many do not now have. The degree of discipline necessary for effect is now impossible. Noone will risk antagonising youth with such brainwashed maladjusted anti colonist convention attitudes and with brothers worse and in gangs. Introducing criminal types to tramping trrcks and huts and honing their physical skills represents a danger to others.

Gaynor said...

I like all your suggestions but as an educationist focusing on the basics of reading and arithmetic and having fought for those, including being involved in the reading wars for 40 plus years, I absolutely believe NZ principally has to return to the ethics, discipline and teaching methods we used to have up to mid last century. It was largely academia that destroyed NZ education, by foisting trendy new ideologies into teaching. These ideologies ridiculed traditional values and arrogantly insisted what they advocated was superior,modern and progressive.

Now we have to live with the results of this with catastrophic failure in the basics and a broken society.

As was mentioned in a programme on reading TV1 today , half of those in prison have failed to reach competency in reading.

By all means have youth get outdoors but first of all have them achieving in the basics, using time proven methods, which also happen to be further proved now by cognitive science. Further, purge our educational system of progressivism which is responsible for the decline in discipline and ethics as well.

Anonymous said...

Just be aware that the military you remember from your CMT days is a mere shadow of its former self, and has little to no capacity to run these sorts of activities.

Anonymous said...

All by design throughout all western democracy. Bigger agenda at play here.