hello!
Before I say anything else, I want to mention that there is a yahoo.group that's specifically for hs'ing military families, that if you're not on that board already, you should DEFINITELY check out. Since I'm not military any more, I'm not on that board, but I've looked at it... and it talks exactly about those selfsame issues.
We HS (last year with a group, this year on our own... which is actually easier/more freedom/we've found more good friends this way, ironically), and I grew up a military brat (and then was in the usmc before kids)... and I've run into the same problem/challenge in BOTH situations.
Changing schools every 2 years is an interesting process. Unlike some of the other responders I LOVED moving and making new friends (my hangup actually expressed itself in decorating my room... By the time I was 11 I wouldn't do it for the entire first year, as I felt there was little point...then I'd get bored with it, decorate it, and then have to turn around and pack it up again. Correction. The movers would pack it up. Gee. I really miss movers.) Back on target though...
Some schools I felt totally out of place. Others I would be one of the most popular kids. Others I'd have one or two best friends. Obviously, I was the same kid. But so much of how "life" was, was dependent upon the area and the people in it.
We starting HS'ing our social butterfly DS7 last year for first grade (long, fairly common story, revolving around academics). Even though we live in Seattle, where there are over 20,000 registered HS'ers, even though we do gymnastics, soccer, basketball, baseball, swimming, art class, music class, HS groups, drama camps, etc... our son is, as I said, a social butterfly. He can NEVER get enough interaction with other kids & adults. And since the majority of kids are in school/in transit until 4pm, and then they either have a sport or their parents are trying to get some time with them, & then they have homework & dinner & bedtime... unless the kids are HS'd, it's really really difficult to get good silly time in with other kids. And it's still hard to get good play time in with HS'ers because we all have so many adventures going on, or multiple kids. (Class & sports time is different, we've come to find than good old fashioned hanging upside down off the bed/climbing trees/laughing about poop &/or other things mom does NOT find funny. ;)
After a year and a half, we're only JUST starting to find some other HS families that we gel with. Since there's little to no pressure to conform to schoolyard standards, HS kids tend to vary wildly in their interests... as I'm sure you've noticed <laughing> of course, as do parents. Then, of course, as I'm sure you've noticed... Western Washington tends to be rather sedentary. ((And for people who disagree... All I feel I have to point out is the HUGE influx of people you see out and about as soon as the weather stops being cold and wet and grey. It's not like in some places where I've lived (SoCal, DeepSouth, Gulfcoast, Hawaii, Italy, *parts* of Japan) where people are ALWAYS outside, moving, doing things, or just hanging out. Where the typical time spent outside is a bare minimum of 4 hours a day if you work fulltime, and on a non work/school day head outside just after breakfast and come in long after the sun has set. SAHM's maybe two or three hours inside, but that's only slanted because of cooking/naps. In many places I've lived an average person tends to spend an hour a day INSIDE -excluding sleeptime. Here the people I know who consider themselves active & outdoorsy tend to spend around an hour a day outside, usually while riding their bike to/from somewhere and maybe one day a week go hiking/boating/etc. Of course (before anyone complains) there are exceptions. But the cold & damp & rain keeps MOST people inside 9 months out of the year. And nearly every outdoor "thing" to do around here -except hiking- is sooo expensive. Snowboarding, skiing, sailing/boating, fishing, etc. They all cost a LOT in startup and maintenance. And so what with the weather and the expense it's not surprising that an hour or so a day is a LOT of time outside in this area.))
There's a durn good reason why coffee shops are so prevalent here, they're a place to meet people that's colorful, warm, & dry. Ditto videogames. Something that kids do inside when the weather is nasty. (Used to be music, too, but the City essentially killed that in the 90's with the teen music ordinance, and the scene has never recovered). So anyhow, western washington is sedentary. My own son watches more tv & plays more videogames than I would like (constantly sending him outside, too!)... but as long as we're here (a few more years at least, all of my family is in the area, dad retired here because my mom's a native to seattle)... we're going to be fighting the stay inside cravings. ((The longer I live here, and at this point it's been 9 years, the more I find myself staying inside as well.))
So a big part of what you're stubbing your toes against is geographic. The other part is luck. I've literally gone from most popular to biggest outcast in one move. Finding friends is so much about just happening to be at the right place at the right time, regardless of whether you're hs'ing or in traditional school. Which isn't super helpful, I know. A definite upside though is that your son isn't an only child. So even if he currently feels odd man out at school, he's still got a vibrant and interesting home life.
One thing you *might* do, is a unit study or two. Anthropology springs to mind (studying how different cultures throughout time deal with/ view social stuff). A few others are explorers, athletes, scientists... other people who regardless of how social they are, are in situations where they end up spending a lot of time on their own, and how they put that good use, and deal with periods of irritation/loneliness. Another is to "host" outings of the type you enjoy. Test the water's for interest first (I'm thinking about organizing a field trip to "x", or organizing a play, or ___fill in the blank___ is that something that anyone would have any interest in, blah blah blah). Once you start getting kids whose parents at least want them out and about, your son may find a peergroup/good friend or two a little easier.
Sorry for being a bit rambling! :)
Z.
"We are all connected;
To each other, biologically
To the earth, chemically
To the rest of the universe atomically"
- Dr. Neil deGrasse Tyson