โ€œSugar invasionโ€: excess snacks sour childrenโ€™s four-day walk

Every year, hundreds of thousands of Dutch children spend four evenings trekking through their nearby parks or woods, in an effort to inspire a new generation with healthy living.

But councillors in Amsterdam are concerned that the Avond4daagse โ€“ the four evening walk โ€“ has been sabotaged in recent years by a โ€œsugar invasionโ€. Instead of a stroll, they believe, it now is a 5km or 10km stretch full of โ€œnon-stop Twixes, licorice laces, vegan pig gummies, happy cherries, Chupa Chups and all kinds of crisps, ice creams and cookies mixed with cola, Red Bull or other sugary drinks.โ€

According to formal questions submitted to the council executive by the CDA Christian Democratic Alliance and PvdD Party for the Animals in Amsterdam, the trend is โ€œproblematicโ€ and something needs to be done.

Rogier Havelaar, head of the local CDA, told Dutch News that things have certainly changed in the 28 years since he himself was 12.

โ€œThis is a really lovely tradition where children spend four evenings walking, but although the fourth evening was always a kind of party where you got sweets from people standing along the walk, in recent years, from the moment the children leave to the finish line, it is non-stop snacking,โ€ he said. โ€œA sweetie or two is fine, of course, but this has got out of hand. So we are asking the municipality what it can do to incentivise healthy eating.โ€

He said that schools organise pitstops for children taking part, although the event is organised by volunteers. But while some concentrate on handing out cucumber sticks, others apparently give out sweets. โ€œThere is nothing wrong with eating a sweet or two, but 5km of nothing but sweetsโ€ฆitโ€™s a sugar invasion,โ€ he added. โ€œA lot of municipalities are talking to schools and the evening organisers about how they can make this event a little healthier.โ€

The Avond4daagse is organised by the national walking association KWbN โ€œwith a mission to get as many children as possible moving and to give them an unforgettable party.โ€

It says that 500,000 Dutch children take part every year and during the coronavirus pandemic, it organised a โ€œcoronaproofโ€, DIY version, complete with a medal. The event takes place around the country in the summer months.

By Peter

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