General Outdoor Discussion
Kids and Mentors Outdoors (KAMO)
8/23/12 @ 5:50 AM
KAMO is a Wisconsin-based non-profit organization that gets kids off their earbuds and into the outdoors. Never before has there been such a substantial need for adults to pass their outdoor skills on to a younger generation that has become disconnected with nature.
KAMO has 5 chapters - Florence, Ladysmith, New Lisbon, Baraboo, La Crosse/ Onalaska. Kamokids.org is the group's website and provides details, contact information and photos of the group's activities.
KAMO is unique in that members of the group plan, organize, and finance activities year around. These activities can be done one on one, small or large group. KAMO mentors are encouraged to contribute the time what they can comfortably give and are not pushed for more. KAMO has been popular and can always use new mentors who bring their ideas and energy to the group. The La Crosse group I'm a memeber of could use some people for Learn to Hunts or other mentored hunting experiences for events on the river and local Mississippi Valley properties. We are open to someone who may have horses or places to camp as that is what our kids are asking for.I will try to post our activities on here once in a while.
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The La Crosse Chapter - Coulee, held an internet field day at the Omni Center on Saturday, September 2nd.
It was a mixture of KAMOKIDS, parents, the general public. These classes are in high demand - it is the one day event following the online course. Having been an instructor for over 20 years, I was skeptical about an online, then one day exposure. I became certified IFD, had someone from the state help our group do the first class. Never looked back - have run over a dozen IFDs since.
From January 1st, 2023 to July 5th, 2023, 7,050 people graduated from hunter ed statewide. 4,296 from a traditional class and 912 from an IFD. That total comes from 318 total classes. 243 traditional, 75 IFD. Statistics from summer edition of the Wisconsin Hunter Education Newsletter.
It was a mixture of KAMOKIDS, parents, the general public. These classes are in high demand - it is the one day event following the online course. Having been an instructor for over 20 years, I was skeptical about an online, then one day exposure. I became certified IFD, had someone from the state help our group do the first class. Never looked back - have run over a dozen IFDs since.
From January 1st, 2023 to July 5th, 2023, 7,050 people graduated from hunter ed statewide. 4,296 from a traditional class and 912 from an IFD. That total comes from 318 total classes. 243 traditional, 75 IFD. Statistics from summer edition of the Wisconsin Hunter Education Newsletter.
Displaying 1 to 15 of 248 posts