All terrain

 

Georgia USA, is making sure their parks and hiking trails are accessible to everyone. The Aimee Copeland Foundation and Georgia Department of Natural Resources have teamed up to provide a fleet of all-terrain wheelchairs in 11 of Georgia's state parks. The wheelchairs are free to use.

The chairs are able to travel through mud, sand, snow and water. 

The video link (in the above article) says; "Georgia Sate Parks are offering free all-terrain wheelchair rentals so people of all abilities can enjoy the great outdoors."

Cory Lee is a wheelchair user and travel blogger who has covered accessible adventures throughout the world. but has never been able to explore his home town of Georgia until now, He says the chairs are life changing, giving people more independence through the parks.

- What is the best thing about going to a park?
- How might a visit to the park be different for a wheelchair user?
- what is an all-terrain wheelchair? How does it work?
- why do you think the chair need to be able to travel through mud, sand, water, snow? What else do you think it will travel through?
- Why do you think Georgia State Parks have done this?
- Cory Lee has covered may accessible adventures; what is an accessible adventure?
- Why might parks and hiking trails be inaccessible to some people? 
- Why does Cory Lee say the wheelchair are life-changing?
- Why has Georgia State Parks chosen to make rental of these chairs free?
- What can we learn from Georgia State Parks?
- Why is this about No Outsiders?


www.no-outsiders.com


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Start of school year

Friends

Alligator