#4406007 - 02/18/18 11:03 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: MarkG]
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Blade_RJ
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brasil
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Around here you can blame on two things, violence and modern kds prefer to play on console and their phones, and now parents dont encourage them to play outside becouse its dangerous, we finally had governament to state federal intervention in rio de janeiro becouse it got out of control, but its too late, the druglords are already all over the city, they should had done this 10 years ago when there was a power stuggle, but politician as you know are vain and only think of themselve and call for a intervention would be political suicide. The only think i still see kids playing outside is football.
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#4406011 - 02/18/18 11:12 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: MarkG]
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NH2112
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Jackman, ME
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You’re right, when I was a kid we’d all play right in my backyard. Between it and the adjoining neighbor’s yard it was plenty big for pre-teens to get a game of baseball in. At least until we put in a garden. We also had a hoop on our clothesline pole (a telephone pole at the edge of the driveway, we lived in a 3 story apartment house), but like you I didn’t like basketball. I still played, though, just very poorly LOL.
There were a few playgrounds within walking/biking distance, which back then meant 2 or 3 miles. Walking or running 30-45 minutes to play all day wasn’t a big deal. You usually had to leave very early otherwise you weren’t likely to find an open field. We also used to play on the lawn at a nursing home, and were told more than once that some of the residents really liked to watch us play. Sometimes we’d even play “touch” football on a quiet dead-end street near my house. I say “touch” because as often as not you’d be “touched” by someone’s forearms and feet as you lay flat on your back on the asphalt while he ran over you.
Another thing you don’t see any more is kids lugging a lawnmower around the neighborhood in the summer, or a snow shovel in the winter. When it snowed we’d be up at 530 eating breakfast, and when the school closings were announced at 6 we’d be out the door. Regular customers came first (I also had a few I had to shovel out before school when it wasn't cancelled, those days I started earlier), then we’d go knocking on every door that still had snow on the driveway & walk. 10, 12, or 14 hours later we’d come back, soaked from the knees down, with frostbitten fingers & toes and $40-$50 in our pockets (usually earned $3-$5 at a time.) 1/2 hour of agony as our fingers thawed around a cup of cocoa, by then mom had the food ready and was ready to relieve us of all but $5-$10 of our earnings and put it in our savings or Christmas Club account.
Phil
“The biggest problem people have is they don’t think they’re supposed to have problems.” - Hayes Barnard
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#4406037 - 02/19/18 01:28 AM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: MarkG]
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Joined: Jun 2001
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coasty
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Asheville, NC, USA
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we had a big field next to the lake that was the centerpiece of the neighborhood. sometimes there were 3 games of football, softball, baseball, going at the same time and smaller flag football in assorted empty lots. we road bikes to and from. now the kids in that neighborhood get off the bus with huge backpacks, music instruments and cell phones in hand. if we are mowing they often seem to be startled to see us outdoors, as they disappear indoors.
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#4406108 - 02/19/18 01:58 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: MarkG]
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bones
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Earth
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Don't see anyone in our public parks and playground in my area playing games either. About the only time I see anyone in some kind of outdoor activity now is when I go do airsoft, heh. But at least it's kids and adults out doing something physical.
v6, boNes
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#4406109 - 02/19/18 02:04 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: MarkG]
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Chef
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North Carolina
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The field we used to play neighborhood baseball when I was a kid is now a forest. That will make you feel old. I can't blame kids today. I wonder how many of us would play outside or jump on computers instead had the opportunity to do so existed back then.
A coworker and I often discuss what our kids will complain about our grandkids no doing when they become parents. Usually we think it will be them griping about how much the grandkids are staying in their VR headsets. I hope there is a trend that one day reverses the stay indoors tendencies.
The road less traveled is filled with fewer needy people.
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#4406115 - 02/19/18 02:32 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: MarkG]
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Raw Kryptonite
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Beat the Kobayashi Maru
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MS
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While neighborhood games aren’t played much, IMO, it’s because organized sports for kids have advanced to amazing levels. You might not see kids out playing in your neighborhood, but it’s probably because they have fields now, time consuming team sports and even when they don’t have practice or games, they still like to hang out at the fields to play on their own. When I as a kid, our town had a couple of soccer fields. Now, we’ve got at least 4 within 5 minutes drive, 2 within walking distance with several fields. Entire complexes for multiple sports. Sure kids now play video games, so did we, but they barely watch tv at all. They spend about the same time in front of a tv as we did as kids, but for them, it’s social with online gaming.
Considering today’s environment, house tightly packed neighborhoods are now and the way people drive in them, plus how lawsuit-happy people tend to be now, that’s why you don’t see kickball played in the street. Fewer windows get broken, fewer kids get hit by cars and the kids are still active. Most here are in pretty amazing shape. We have very nice parks with some crazy structures, but that’s mainly for very young kids. At 4 kids start playing sports and the fields are where they spend their time. Soccer, football, basketball, baseballl, swim teams, volleyball, cycling...there’s a lot more going on these days and it’s more popular than ever. Paintball has taken the place of dirt clod wars and air soft instead of bb guns.
They aren’t in the streets because they have better options now.
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#4406126 - 02/19/18 03:39 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: Crane Hunter]
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VF9_Longbow
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Tokyo, Japan
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I'm 41 and at least where I live my generation was probably the last to have played a full variety of games outdoors on a regular basis.
Now, if you see kids playing outside at all, it usually involves either some kind of skateboarding or so called "North Shore style" mountain biking.
I just turned 32 and when I was a kid we still played outside. Video games were part of our life but we still made time for outdoor activities. I was blessed to live in a house right beside the ocean and mountains though. I spent a LOT of time out in the bay in a small rowboat fishing for ling cod and salmon and dogfish. When I lived in the city we still played street hockey and baseball. In Japan, nowadays parks are heavily regulated and ball sports are all prohibited due to risk of injury (Thanks stupid parents!) and they have been paved over. Playgrounds are literally all concrete. Not a nice place to play. I feel lucky to have grown up in an area that had grass turf in the parks, multiple baseball diamonds and soccer fields for public use, and many schools with basically public grounds free for anyone to use as long as the school wasn't using them. My mother was poor as hell (Single mother and not a very good one, sorry to say) but the location I lived in allowed me to enjoy nature to the max. I feel sorry for kids these days who grow up not knowing the fun of fishing, building floating docks out of driftwood, going into the forest without a plan, target shooting with 22's or shotguns, etc. Living in Tokyo for the last 10 years has made me realize that big cities corrupt people's very soul. If you're someone who has kids or is about to, moving to the countryside is probably the best thing you can do for them so long as you can provide for them.
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#4406144 - 02/19/18 05:29 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: MarkG]
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JimK
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Remember those days well, grew up in Coon Rapids,MN and the street we lived on we were surrounded by families all about the same age and 2 to 12 kids to a house. Was never a problem getting up a baseball game or football. Even had tennis courts out our back gate into park behind our house. Bike trails around. Practically lived out in the park all year. Does not get used near as much anymore. But that was 50 years ago. Subjects like this is making me feel old.
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#4406170 - 02/19/18 08:44 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: MarkG]
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KraziKanuK
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Back in the day mothers didn't usually work, so kids were supervised from out of a window and mothers talked to each other. So we roamed pretty much a will but were supervised.
There was only 16 squadrons of RAF fighters that used 100 octane during the BoB. The Fw190A could not fly with the outer cannon removed. There was no Fw190A-8s flying with the JGs in 1945.
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#4406172 - 02/19/18 08:48 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: KraziKanuK]
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JimK
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Back in the day mothers didn't usually work, so kids were supervised from out of a window and mothers talked to each other. So we roamed pretty much a will but were supervised. Very true,and they were not afraid discipline a neighbors kids as their own. And all parents agreed. And whats funny about it , most of those neighbors I had not heard from for 45 years until facebook reconnected our old neighborhood in a facebook group. Fun talking to old neighbors.
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#4406173 - 02/19/18 08:55 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: Chef]
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NH2112
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Jackman, ME
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The field we used to play neighborhood baseball when I was a kid is now a forest. That will make you feel old. I can't blame kids today. I wonder how many of us would play outside or jump on computers instead had the opportunity to do so existed back then.
A coworker and I often discuss what our kids will complain about our grandkids no doing when they become parents. Usually we think it will be them griping about how much the grandkids are staying in their VR headsets. I hope there is a trend that one day reverses the stay indoors tendencies. We had an Atari 2600 in the early 80s and a year or 2 later I had a computer with plenty of games (TRS80 Color Computer, followed by an Atari 600XL and then an Atari 800XL.) I still spent a lot more time outside than inside, and not only because being inside almost invariably meant getting put to work cleaning something.
Last edited by NH2112; 02/19/18 08:56 PM.
Phil
“The biggest problem people have is they don’t think they’re supposed to have problems.” - Hayes Barnard
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#4406174 - 02/19/18 09:07 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: JimK]
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KraziKanuK
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Ottawa Canada
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Back in the day mothers didn't usually work, so kids were supervised from out of a window and mothers talked to each other. So we roamed pretty much a will but were supervised. Very true,and they were not afraid discipline a neighbors kids as their own. And all parents agreed. And whats funny about it , most of those neighbors I had not heard from for 45 years until facebook reconnected our old neighborhood in a facebook group. Fun talking to old neighbors. Complaining about being disciplined by a neighbour usually resulted a harsher discipline by ones parent. Yes NH one reason to get out doors was to escape household chores.
There was only 16 squadrons of RAF fighters that used 100 octane during the BoB. The Fw190A could not fly with the outer cannon removed. There was no Fw190A-8s flying with the JGs in 1945.
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#4406175 - 02/19/18 09:08 PM
Re: Are outdoor neighborhood games dying?
[Re: JimK]
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NH2112
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Jackman, ME
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Back in the day mothers didn't usually work, so kids were supervised from out of a window and mothers talked to each other. So we roamed pretty much a will but were supervised. Very true,and they were not afraid discipline a neighbors kids as their own. And all parents agreed. Yep, back then any adult had authority over any kid. Did we mouth off? Hell yeah, from a safe distance! But likely as not as you were running away you’d hear “I know who you are, you’re _____’s boy!” Then it was playing word association all the way home. Ass? Grass. Lawnmower. If you were lucky, you’d only have to deal with whatever your parents dished out for punishment. Sometimes that wasn’t the case, though, and you found yourself being sent back to the scene of the crime for whatever THEY thought was a fair punishment.
Phil
“The biggest problem people have is they don’t think they’re supposed to have problems.” - Hayes Barnard
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CD WOFF
by Britisheh. 03/28/24 08:05 PM
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