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It’s easy for kids to get caught up watching screens for hours rather than engaging in active play. Dragging your kids away from online movies, social media, and video games can seem like an uphill battle. At our New England summer camp for boys ages 7-16, we know boys quickly realize they don’t need technology to have fun – and often have more fun without it, immersing themselves in outdoor activities at camp. Fortunately, you can achieve the same results at home with these simple ideas on how to get your son to play outside more in 2025.

Plan a Playdate or Outing

Helping your child realize the benefits of outdoor play can be as simple as a planned outing to a local playground for younger kids or hiking at an interesting park or nature preserve for older tweens and teens. Invite their favorite friends, planning a special snack or picnic lunch. If friends can’t attend, make it a family event and lead by example, joining your kids on their outdoor adventure and reconnecting with your inner child or outdoor explorer.

Outfit Your Backyard with Hard-to-Resist Items

Boost their excitement to go outdoors with enticing play equipment like climbing frames, swings, a sandbox, or an inflatable pool. Lure them outdoors to try something new, picking up fun backyard additions like sidewalk chalk, stomp rockets, toy cars and diggers, or colorful toy balls. Offer inspiration on the fly, providing jumbo cardboard boxes, lawn furniture, and old sheets and blankets for fort building.

Play in the Dark

Playing under the moon and stars with siblings or friends can be especially exciting for children. Improving outdoor lighting with fairy lights, solar spotlights, and lanterns allows kids to enjoy the outdoors safely while being monitored by parents. If this isn’t a regular option, consider the occasional overnight home camping session, allowing your kids to camp in the backyard while providing supervision appropriate to their age and maturity level.

Watch – and Play Sports

Watching network sports and attending local high school and college games can inspire your son to try and mimic a pro athlete’s moves. Take advantage of this opportunity, bringing your child to a nearby sports facility or signing him up with the local softball, basketball, tennis, volleyball, soccer, track, or indoor swimming league.

Take Advantage of Snowy Weather

Your child should absolutely spend time outdoors when it’s cold. Bundle up and sled, build a snow fort, have a snowball fight, craft an army of snow creatures, or make up your own icy weather adventures, indulging in Mother Nature’s fleeting snow amusement park.

Grow Your Own Food

Growing fruits, veggies, and herbs in your yard inspires a better understanding and appreciation of nature and food production. Seek out the sunniest spot to ensure success, starting with low-cost, low-maintenance herbs like parsley, dill, and cilantro and work up to more exciting and labor-intensive choices.

Plan a Seasonal Camping Trip

Spring and fall weather are perfect for camping at a local campground or nearby national park, offering the ideal opportunity for kids to explore new places and activities like hiking, kayaking, fishing, and cooking outdoors.

Schedule Special Outdoor Adventures

Splurge, spending your time and money on a unique family outing like horseback riding, llama trekking, rock climbing, whitewater rafting, deep sea fishing, whale watching cruises, butterfly and hummingbird gardens, and more, depending on what’s available in your area. Discovering new interests together will create family memories your kids will carry into adulthood.

Take Advantage of Nearby Boys’ Overnight Camp Programs

Make the little changes necessary to help your child feel healthier and happier with these and other tips on how to get your son to play outside more in 2025 from Camp Mowglis outdoor adventure experts. Incorporate more outdoor fun into your son’s life with an annual trip to our boys’ summer camp in New Hampshire. Contact us at 603-744-8095 to learn more about our program and secure your spot today.

 

Current Weather

Last updated: May 20, 2025 5:00 pm

  • Temperature: 52.2°F
  • Feels Like: 48.2°F
  • Humidity: 65%
  • Condition: Cloudy
  • Wind: 9 mph at 345° (NORTH_NORTHWEST); Gusts up to 17 mph
  • Precipitation Chance: 10% (Rain)
  • Air Pressure: 1013.87 mb
  • Visibility: 10 miles
  • Cloud Cover: 100%

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The Mow-Trow Gear Exchange: Smart & Sustainable Gear Sharing:

If your son has outgrown Mowglis uniform items (aka Mow-Trow) that are still in good shape, please add them to this spreadsheet. If you’re looking for Mow-Trow or other gear (hiking boots, backpacks, etc.), you can check out this spreadsheet, and if you find what you’re looking for, contact the parent who posted it up and either arrange for shipping (or to pick it up if you live in the same area).

 

The best way to pay for shipping will be for the family with the items to box them up and bring them to a UPS Store and have the parent receiving the items call the store with their credit card number. That is how we send lost and found items at the end of the summer, and it works quite well. Please note when items have been claimed once they have been. Any unclaimed items can be brought to camp on arrival day or shipped to camp.

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Protect Your Investment: Program Protector Tuition Insurance:

Program Protector, tuition insurance, is now available for purchase during the online registration process.

 

If purchased, may protect up to the full cost of your son’s session and include various other benefits should the need arise.

 

To buy this coverage, please go HERE.

 

Determine if Program Protection Tuition Insurance is right for you by going HERE.

Please be in touch if you have any questions about this program. 

 

PLEASE submit all camper forms by May 15th. There aren’t too many forms; all are important, and most can be completed right online.

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Keeping Campers Safe: Our Tick Management Approach:

How do you manage the threat of ticks?

While we have fewer ticks in NH than in more southern New England states, we still take ticks extremely seriously.

 

Here are some big-picture ways we protect our campers from ticks:

 

  • Our defense starts with staff education – all campers and counselors are taught what, where, and when to look for, and we have the campers do tick checks at least daily and every time they’ve been out in the bushes.
  • If a tick is found embedded on a camper while at camp, he will go to the nurse for removal and bite-site mapping, and then the tick is saved, and the camper will be monitored daily for any signs of infection.
  • If there is a parental desire or signs of infection, the tick is sent to a lab for testing.
  • We have bottles of bug spray throughout camp and on all trips.
  • We cut back brush to minimize the chance of ticks hopping onto folks as they walk around camp.

Mowglis Boys Summer Campers are Family

Our families know that Mowglis overnight summer camp for boys aged 7-15 is an extraordinary place. This is due in no small part to the wonderful families who have chosen our outdoor leadership camp for their sons. In joining the Mowglis family, you help us pass the torch, carrying on the tradition of summer camp to future generations and other families across the country.

 

From the bottom of our hearts, we thank you for becoming part of the Camp Mowglis family. Please help us spread the joy of camping. If you know of someone you’d like to invite to join our camping family, please complete our camp referral form so we can reach out.

 

Thank you – and see you soon!

Nick Robbins, Director

Camp Mowglis Yearling friends
summer camp new england

Book Your Informative Video Call

Connect with Nick

Nick Robbins

Director of Camp Mowglis

[email protected]

(603) 744-8095

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