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The Arrowhead

Camp Nebagamon's Monthly Newsletter

Volume XCIV

Number 6

June 2022

Return to Our New Style

Northwoods Inspiration

By Adam Kaplan

Every year we publish nine issues of the Arrowhead. Nine times a year I am faced with the challenge of coming up with something relevant and interesting to write about. (Those of you that know me are well aware of how rare it is that I am able to speak about things that are relevant and interesting, let alone write about them… needless to say, the monthly Arrowhead articles are a challenge!) Compounding this challenge is the fact that I am forced to write eight of those articles in the basement of my house, with little camp gestalt to inspire me. But the June Arrowhead is the exception. Every year I get to write the June article sitting in the Big House dining room. There is something about sitting here that just makes it easier to think on a “campy” level.

Perhaps it has to do with the fact that, as I sit here, there is an enormous photo of Nebagamon’s founder Muggs Lorber standing in front of the Paul Bunyan statue staring at me from its place above the fireplace in the Big House dining room. Perhaps it has to do with the fact that, as I look around this room, I can take in many photos and relics from countless Nebagamon summers over the years. Perhaps it has to do with the fact that, being up here at camp presents my other senses with inputs that are totally unique to being here. Camp has a certain smell to it, certain sounds associated with it, and that water in my glass (particularly from the Big House kitchen) has a certain taste to it that we all know!

More likely, it has to do with the folks that are sitting around the table right now as I write this article. Our pre-camp crew arrived on Monday to transform this place from its state of winter dormancy… dock-free, boat-free, and whirligig-free (those really cool Herb Hollinger creations that are placed around the Hill and do cool things when the wind blows) … to its more natural state (natural in the minds of so many thousands of campers that is!). It’s a space that screams for the infusion of that unbridled energy that can only be provided by hundreds of boys! It is sitting around the table with these folks that allows me to think so single-mindedly about camp.

This year’s pre-camp crew, as ever, is a wonderful mix of old timers, first-timers, and people brand new to camp. Conversation is free and easy… about goofy, camp-specific topics, sports allegiances, politics, zombie apocalypses (many of our pre-camp work crew are college students, used to noon wake-up times… they would make excellent extras on the Walking Dead at 7:00 AM when our work day begins!) and the best brands of frozen pizza (the answer by the way… Home Run Pizza). These are the exact kinds of discussions that take place in every cabin in camp throughout the summer. In short, within minutes, camp goes from that surreal (and wonderful) state of silence and isolation, to full on camp, and all it takes is the arrival of just a few camp folks, a crew working together towards a common purpose, a big family table to sit around together, and… of course… The Pines.

Looking forward to an amazing two months of experiences, laughs, challenges, and learning with all of them… and so much more. Here we go!!!

Please Remember to Complete your Camper Forms!

With camp just around the corner, our office has been busy checking in forms and getting ready for the first round of campers to arrive on June 18th. Regardless of which session your child is attending at camp, please submit his required paperwork if you have not already done so.

Please make sure the following items are completed as soon as possible:

*Cabin Preference Form: We need this information within the next few days in order to work on cabin placement before the season begins.

*Health History Form: Parents, make sure to complete all sections of this form (including medications and vaccination records) so that we are able to accurately understand your camper’s health history and prepare for his arrival. If your child needs daily medications, please place your order with CampMeds, Inc. at www.campmeds.com. The ordering deadline is 30 days prior to your son’s arrival at camp.

*Physician’s Examination Form: We need paperwork showing that your son has received a physical exam within the past 12 months. You may download our physician’s examination form for your child’s doctor to complete or submit a copy of similar documentation from the doctor’s office. Please note that any immunization records provided by your doctor should also be entered in your son’s online health history form by you.

*Medical Treatment Authorization Form: This form MUST be signed by a parent/guardian prior to camper arrivals. A copy of his health insurance card should also be attached.

*Objectives & Personality Form: This information helps our counselors prepare to guide your son towards completing a happy and productive summer. You may also email a more detailed letter to his counselors at [email protected].

Last, but not least, when you have logged in to the camper forms system, make sure YOUR contact information is up-to-date and that you have listed two emergency contacts besides a parent/guardian. You may do so by clicking on “Update Addresses/Phone Numbers” under the Your Family section.

Click here to access your forms!

Important Information Regarding Camper Luggage and Travel

Luggage Tags:

These should be firmly attached to every bag a camper brings with him, whether it is being checked in, carried on an airplane, or taken on the Chicago bus. This applies to everyone, regardless of airline or travel arrangements to camp. It is important that we, and airline personnel, are able to identify all baggage by the yellow Camp Nebagamon tags.

Duffle Bags/Luggage:

All Airlines: Please pre-pay baggage fees for your son’s return flight. (Please note that if for some reason the airline does not allow you to pre-pay, we will pay the fees on the return trip and charge your son’s spending money account.)

If you need to ship bags to camp, please notify Briggs ahead of time and send them at least one week prior to your son’s arrival at camp. Camp’s physical address (needed for any UPS/FedEx deliveries) is 11454 Camp Nebagamon Dr, Lake Nebagamon, WI 54849. Please note that if you also want the luggage shipped home at the end of the camp season, it is simplest for our office (and our local UPS & FedEx drivers) if you can mail to Briggs’s attention at camp ([email protected]) completed FedEx/UPS tags or forms. (Please note that due to limited storage space at camp, and our arrangement with the MSP airport, we do urge you to check bags on the trip home if possible, especially on Delta Airlines.)

Campers traveling via airplane:

If you are booking your tickets through our travel agent, Travel One, any questions about airline tickets should be directed to Travel One at 800-245-1111. Travel One issues electronic tickets for each camper, so do not worry about receiving a paper ticket for your child. If you are arranging travel independently, please submit the information via the online transportation form.

Mailgabber: The Pre-Camp Prologue

The Mailgabber features writing by members of the Camp Family. This month, we present a look in on the Pre-Camp crew’s preparations by former camper and staff member, and guest pre-camp staffer, Sam Prince (2002-’07, ’12, ’15). Interested in writing for the Mailgabber? Send submissions to Louis.

To the campers of 2022:

My name is Sam and you probably have no idea who I am, which is totally alright. The last summer I spent amongst the pines as a staff member was well over a half decade ago, and my time as a camper was long before that (the best way to frame my era is that I came to camp before the climbing wall was built, before Louis Levin was a Swamper, and before the Hanson-Kaplans were directors). When Louis asked me to write a pre-camp reflection, I’ll be honest that I was as surprised as I was honored, since I hadn’t been at camp in more than a few years. But, we share a love for Camp Nebagamon, and that’s what matters.

One of my favorite memories of camp is Adam Kaplan’s Sunday Service at the end of each summer in the Northwoods. During his Sunday Service, Kaplan talks about the notion of the metaphorical book that each member of our community writes about their summer. He discusses that some chapters are full of joy and excitement and others full of contemplation and courage. He reviews the things each of us have learned, and the lifelong friends we’ve made along the way. And Adam talks about how each day we write the story together.

In keeping with Adam’s metaphor, I’ve come to think of pre-camp as the prologue to the summer. It is a time when you may get to meet an important character or two, a time when all the scenery is set up, a time when a world is built. A lot of the things you would recognize about camp are taking shape, but none of it is quite in place just yet. Docks have to be built in the lake. Cabins have to get cleaned from the winter. Buildings need their paint touched up. Even the beloved bell is wrapped in a trash bag to protect it from the winter’s elements. No story is incomplete for having skipped the prologue, but those of us who are here for it are sure glad we have had the chance to get the place physically ready for the stories that are about to be written.

When I think of camp, I think of it as a place of joy. Of course, there are quiet moments, sure, but camp is a place you can be loud. During pre-camp, the grounds feel quiet, because they are designed to be occupied by the over 300 people who live here during the summer. In addition to the work of physically setting up camp, the pre-camp team begins to fill each nook and cranny with the laughs of budding friendships. Just like campers at projects, we are learning new things as well – how to build the H-Dock, for instance, but also, how to work together and accomplish things as a team. And we are sharing stories, stories from last summer, or in my case, the last summers I got to spend in this wonderful place. We are warming camp up from a long winter of stillness.

The story of the summer of 2022 won’t be written this week because you’re not here. But because of the hard work of a number of your future counselors, trip staffers, and the amazing caretaking team, the space is ready for you. Soon counselors will come for training, and then before you can blink, you’ll be striding off that bus and hugging friends you’ve missed during a long off-season. Camp is waiting for you to come. Whether it’s your first or your final summer, camp is so excited that you are about be here.

A story is about to be written, your story is about to be written, and it is going to be a fantastic one. Enjoy every second of that story!

News of the Camp Family — June 2022

Compiled by Adam Fornear

The excitement is building for the beginning of camp! This week, we have a small community arriving to being setting up camp and putting in the docks. By June 12th, there will be 130 staff on the property preparing for the arrival of 200-or-so campers just a week later. The camp population will explode to north of 300 people! And among those 300 people, there are many common goals shared with each other for the summer — put on, and experience, the best summer of our lives! Of course, we all come to camp with our own goals in mind as well: try new things, or learn new skills, or meet new people… Camp Nebagamon is this wonderful place to try out new activities, ones that catch your eye and make you say to yourself… hey, I’d like to try that. Our program affords you the opportunity to chase that curiosity.

I personally love to let my curiosity guide my experiences in life. When I was back in college at the University of Minnesota Duluth, I was active within the college’s recreational sports program. Every aspect of the rec sports department caught my eye… intramural soccer, climbing, whitewater canoeing/kayaking, sea kayaking, birding, Telemark skiing and many other activities. It was all there for the taking and take I did. Being a volunteer for the UMD Outdoor Program had some great perks, like having a key to the boat barn down on Park Point. Don’t tell my mother, but from time to time we would show up a lil late to class after a great session of surfing kayaks on Lake Superior. I’m feeling a little nostalgic, as this summer is the 42nd year of the UMD Outdoor Program, and with camp starting, it’s hard to ignore the parallels. In my time there, I caught the spirit of adventure, and when I first came to Nebagamon, I found a place to help foster that spirit in the next generation. I found so much in common between Nebagamon and UMD — the outdoors, great people, and an infinite list of experiences to keep that curiosity fulfilled!

I’ve been soaking up the spring air this past month, riding bikes, fishing on Lake Superior and roaming the backroads of Douglas County on motorcycles. It’s such a gorgeous time of year up here, and I can’t wait to bring 200 campers up north in the 54849. Get ready for a great summer of chasing those curiosities and taking in all of the adventure of Camp Nebagamon.

Even though The Arrowhead is going into hibernation for the next three months, please keep on sending any news of the camp family. Thank you for your contributions, and I look forward to sharing updates with you after the summer. And for those of you arriving here in the next few days and weeks… See you soon!

WHERE ARE THEY NOW: Gus Peters (Raleigh, NC ’10-’15,’17) graduated as a Second Lieutenant with a Bachelor of Science degree from the Air Force Academy in Colorado Springs, CO.

CONGRATULATIONS ON THE RECENT ENGAGEMENTS go to Matt Myer (St. Louis/Denver ’06-’11,’13- ‘16) and Caroline Brown (Denver).

WEDDING CONGRATULATIONS go to Joey Laskin (Los Angeles ’00-’06,’08-‘10) and Rachel Niku Laskin (Los Angeles), and to Josh Weinberg (Chicago ’04-’09,’11-‘13) and Nika Arzoumanian (Chicago)

IN THE BIBS AND DIAPERS DEPARTMENT: It’s a boy, Henry Wayne, for Michael Kaplan (L.A./D.C. ’01-’05,’07-‘08) and Elizabeth Kaplan (D.C.). It’s a boy, Jack Fox, for Michael Cohen (Atlanta ’05-’07,’10) and Emily Cohen (Atlanta).

BAR MITZVAH CONGRATULATIONS: go to Avi Maidenberg (San Francisco)

How Keen Is Your Eye?

By Louis Levin

Try our June Arrowhead quiz — this month, we’ve got some itsy-bitsy, teeny-tiny pictures from around camp. Think you can identify what’s in each picture?

Test your eyes here!

Caretaker Joe’s Signs of Spring

By Joe Crain

At long last the month of May brought some much-desired Spring weather to the Northwoods of Wisconsin. Though the lake was still mostly iced-over for the first five days of the month and temperatures struggled to get out of the 50s, things really turned around for the second week as temps reached above normal. The opening day of the fishing season here in Wisconsin was Saturday May 7th and on the morning of May 6th the lake was still 75% covered in ice! The local anglers didn’t let that hamper their plans as we watched several boats launch into the 200-foot band of open water between the shore and the ice at the public landing and along the shore past camp to the west. The temperature had bumped up near 70 degrees both the 4th and 5th, and the ice cover was looking very candled and slushy, so the boat launchers’ gamble that the ice would be off by Saturday morning was a pretty safe one. Sure enough, they were right, and by early afternoon on Friday the 6th we were watching waves out on the lake, and for the fishing opener the next morning the sky was sunny. Although the water temperature was still very cold, the air temperature reached up into the lower 70s and a delightful day on the boat was had by those who participated in the annual Spring rite!

That’s a fox alright!

Many other markers that Spring has sprung and is here to stay throughout the month were evident all around camp. One of my favorite Spring signs is the emerging of fox puppies from their dens. Camp has several fox dens, and it’s always exciting to see which den will show signs of fresh digging when the first litters are due. This May, the dens up behind the target shooting range showed signs of activity, and as I was passing by early in the month, three pups were out on the edge of the den sunning themselves. I stopped the truck up the road a bit and then snuck back on foot to see if I could get a better look. Two of the three darted back into the den as I approached, but one was very brave and let me watch him for a while. It looked to be a month old or so and was maybe about five pounds, about the same size as my adult Yorky, Zigs. After a while he spotted me spying on him and jumped down in the den. I stayed very still and quiet, and he slowly poked his nose out and emerged again, letting me watch a while longer as he groomed his paw and scratched at its ears.

Another fun sign of Spring I like to watch for is the migrating birds that work their way through camp’s forest. Early in the month, we spotted huge numbers of Common Redpolls. As the days of the month ticked past we were treated to the return of camp’s breeding Merlin hawks, and the call of loons returned soon after. I’ve had humming birds at the nectar bottles I hang around my house since the middle of the month, and in the last week I have been excited by the beautiful song and flashes of orange in the trees of Northern Orioles. I’ve heard Migrating Cranes and Swans as they pass over head and I’ve glimpsed a few in area ponds. They usually only pass by on their way farther South and are rarely seen on our lake for reasons beyond me.

The Axeman/Lumberjack shower room is getting a facelift and new dividers!

Around the shop we are in full Spring mode as the camp season heads our way. Caretaker Andy has re-connected all of the water system and filled the water tower for the first time this year. He had to push that job out as late as he could do to the threat of frost that can burst water pipes late in the month. But things have turned warmer again, and the system got its annual bleaching this week. The whole waterworks was sanitized and ready for the arrival of the second wave of camp occupants: the pre-camp crew who arrived on the 30th and headed into the water the next day to get the docks installed. Thankfully for the pre-campers, the lake temperature has risen quite a bit since the late ice out at the beginning of the month and the water is quite nice. I had my feet in the other day and thought the temp was quite tolerable. I also know of a couple of our staff have been in swimming already and only one of them spent the rest of the day complaining of a permanently lowered core temperature!

Looking forward to that day in June when the buses roll up to the gate filled with all of the eager campers, it’s Caretaker Joe At Camp.

Now Presenting: The Staff of 2022

What a year of hiring staff for the 2022 summer. That we are proud of our 2022 staff lineup would be an understatement! Many of them have a wealth of experience working with kids and everyone is excited to continue the tradition of counseling amongst the tall pines! Their experiences vary from bass fishing to creating amazing ceramic artwork, to leading international camping trips to a deep familiarity with these Northwoods. Whether they are from California, Memphis, River Falls, WI, Germany, The UK or Puebla, Mexico, they all have one common goal: to create an amazing experience for the 320 campers coming to camp this summer!
(* denotes a new staff member)

ADMINISTRATIVE STAFF AND PROGRAM SPECIALISTS: Adam Kaplan (Director), Stephanie Hanson (Director), Joe Briggs (Associate Director/Office Manager), Adam Fornear (Associate Director/Wilderness Trip Director), Louis Levin (Associate Director/Program Director), Cassandra Owens (Swamper Village Director), Alex Gordon (Logger Village Director), Matthew Wilhelm (Axeman Village Director), Noah Stein (Lumberjack Village Director), Jeremy Nordin Berghuis (Waterfront Director), Isaac Murray Stark (Waterfront Director), *Amelie Sadler (Sailing Director), Troika Brodsky (CNOC Director), Sean Kennedy (Artshop Director), *Nora Starhill (Artshop Specialist), *Ellie Friedman (Artshop Specialist), *Philip Spyrou (MOCA Director), Stanton Strauss (Target Shooting Director), Gus Peters (Climbing Wall Specialist), *Ryan Huff (Climbing Wall Specialist), *Theresa Nevins (Waterskiing Director), *Li Kane (Promotional Photographer), Zach Muzik (Specialist At Large)

SENIOR COUNSELORS: John Bellaire, Sam Branstad Phillips, Simon Topf, Joey Rivkin, Tommy Branstad Phillips, Jesse Herzog, *Gavin Stern, Max Rontal, *Zach Herman, *Marc Rosenthal, Owen Wignall, Sam Shapira, *Drew Klearman, *Owen Goldsmith, *Luis Muntadas, Eric Portillo, *Toni Rudel, *Ethan Pittham, *Noah Keim, *Mickey Silins, Sam Reichert, *Fletcher Redondo, Oliver Held, Henry Quinn Pasin, *Josh Helguria

JUNIOR COUNSELORS: Tyler Gray, Jack Goodman, Michael Bayer, Michael Bass, Jesse Chan, Jordan Carlin, *Aidan Capes, *Andrew Condrell, *Anthony Gutierrez, *Adam Eberhard, *Nelson Mendels, *Seth Lambert, *Josh Marcus, *Owen McCaughtry, Jason Shacter, Jesse Gell, *Ben Hackney, *Nick Fleisher, *Nathan Starhill, *Jacob Laytin, *Ben Bakal, *Asher Mendelson, Nate Woldenberg, *Nick Friedman, Ben Shacter, *Sean McSherry, John Osburn, Matthew Hooper, *Emmitt Gerstein, *Michael Cohen, *Jack Turula, *Misha Patent, *Drew Smith.

TRIP STAFF: Adam Fornear (Trip Director), Jason Yale (Trip Director), Bill Hensel (Trip Driver), Ron Gaare (Trip Driver), John Star (Quartermaster), Jonah Domsky, Phoebe Stern, Isaac Schiff-Lewin, Billy Galpern, Orion Kornfeld, Salma Schwartzman, *Zoe Peterson, Charlie Cohen, *Claire Barlass, *Henry Burns, *Kalista Jordan-DeBruin, *Caden Martin, *Kaitlin Weiss, *Rose Welch, Brady Rivkin.

FOOD STAFF: Anne Rowe (Food Service Manager), Cody Keys (Cook), Henry Pulitzer (Cook), Alex Fuller, Noe Alvarez, Cynthia Dominguez, Maria Alonso, Ruben Perez, Alejandra Rodriguez, Marco Torres, *Abraham Jaurez, *Alexandra Madrid, *Paula Garcia, *Crysthina Garcia, * Sasha Wood, *Ronin Hulett, *Bobby Chavez, *Isabel Squires.

MEDICAL STAFF: Amber Burvall (Nurse), *David Goodall (Nurse Assistant), Drew Aronoff (Nurse Assistant), Trent Rosenbloom (M.D.)

OFFICE STAFF: Joe Briggs (Associate Director/Office Manager), Allen Bennett (Town Driver), Julie Gordon, Josie Hanson Kaplan, *Adena Rosenbloom, Emily Jodock

CARETAKING STAFF: Andy Mack (Head Caretaker), Joe Crain, *Ximena Cervantes, Josh Levitas

Congratulations to our June Birthdays!

This month’s birthdays include…

June 1th – Phoebe Stern

2nd – Adam Fornear, Cooper Milan

3rd – Matthew Wilhelm

4th – Andrew Condrell, Judah Thacker

6th – Ben Bernstein

7th – Sam Vincent

8th – David Iorio, Miles Luskin, Nate Feldman, Sam Schwartzman

10th – Chase Kornblet, Jesse Herzog, Toni Rudel

11th – Owen McCaughtry, Ryan Glickamn

12th – Allen Bennett, Reece O’Connor

13th – Isaac Murray-Stark

14th – Luis Edgar Ruiz-Gomez, Nate Strauss, Sam Branstad Phillips

15th – Matthew Hooper, Noe Alvarez

16th – Henry Burns, Rollie Cohen

17th – Luis Muntadas-Prim, Ryan Crean, Teddy Lockwood

18th – Drew Malk

19th – Ben Polonksy

21st – Micah Stone

22nd – Hadley Goldsmith

23rd – Logan Segal

24th – Nathaniel Kehrberg

25th – Emmett Brown

26th – Evan Smith

27th – Eitan Kaminsky

28th – Judah Gladstein, Nathan Starhill, Tanner Toback, Toby Shapin

29th – Holden May

30th – Ruben Perez Angel, Zach Levitt