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The Arrowhead

Camp Nebagamon's Monthly Newsletter

Volume XCV

Number 3

March 2023

Return to Our New Style

Spring Break-ing the Routine

By Adam Kaplan

Happy March, everyone! I suspect for many of us, the onset of March is a very optimistic time. For some, it indicates that winter is beginning to release its icy grip on their lives and that warmer weather is right around the corner. (Well…except for us upper Midwestern folks. With a temperature reading of -9 degrees this morning, that hopeful calendar page-turning moment is actually June…but I am talking about people that live below the Arctic Circle!) For some, the beginning of March means that spring training baseball games are about to begin, and that means that once again, the Twins could maybe, just maybe, have that magical season. I mean, after all, nobody has a better record than them…yet. (Yes, I am attempting to adopt the local historically hapless team. After years as a Cub fan, I am used to haplessness!). For others, the arrival of March hearkens back to a hopeful time in ancient history in which the reign of Julius Caesar was ended and the era of Augustus began signifying major changes in the Roman Empire. (Ok…not many people fall into this category, but I didn’t want to leave anyone out!) Nonetheless, for virtually all of us, the arrival of March means that right around the corner is SPRING BREAK!!

I am not sure what it is about Spring Break, but there is just something extra celebratory about this vacation. Sure, the break over the holidays during the winter is a big deal, but Spring Break has a significantly more jubilant vibe to it. (And in fairness, MTV’s television programming during the 90s perhaps contributed a bit to this sense of euphoria…but we will set that aside for the purposes of our summer camp newsletter!) In my experience, Spring Break takes a backseat only to the last day of school in terms of kid excitement.

Obviously Spring Break looks different for different families, but, no matter how you slice it, Spring Break marks a break in the routine. And, occasionally, breaking the routine is important to do. Oftentimes, it is during these breaks in our routine that our most indelible memories are created.

As a camp director, I am well aware that it is imperative to quickly establish a predictable routine for the entire group up at camp. Our newest boys, nervous about leaving home for the first time, need to feel secure, which is facilitated by knowing what to expect on a daily basis. Our returning campers need to know that their second home is, in fact, still their second home; things have not changed and it is still the same place that has become so important in their lives. Our staff need a predictable framework to most effectively enable them to help our campers grow and have a great time. With all of this in mind, we work very hard at the beginning of camp to establish a very stable and reliable routine for all.

While the establishment of this routine is important, it is also really important to shake up that routine sometimes so that camp life is not static. Camp needs to be dynamic. It is with this in mind that our Wednesday Cruiser Days were invented. On those days we cancel our routine activities and engage in totally different and creative days planned by our amazing staff. So too, there are special days, and special evening activities peppered throughout the sessions. Whether it be Paul Bunyan Day, or The Grand Pursuit, or turning the Upper Diamond into grass tennis courts for our own Wimbledon tournament, or Guinness T. Nebagamous, or All-Camp Capture The Flag, or whatever brand new activity we come up with this year (!), these events serve to break up the routine, and also provide us all with truly unique opportunities to have fun and make memories that really last. SPRING BREAK!!!

For my family, this year marks a unique sort of Spring Break. The Spring Break dates of each of our three children have zero overlap. It is indeed a bummer to not be able to get our family completely together this year, but I guess this is just part of the cycle as kids get older. So, we have had to get creative and figure out how to still get a break in the routine, albeit not all at the same time.

So, with the arrival of March and Spring Break right around the corner, let’s all be sure that on some level we seize this opportunity to do something different, something out of the ordinary, something to break up the routine and make some memories. To be clear, this doesn’t have to be a massive and expensive vacation. Rather, that routine can be broken up in many other ways. Engage in new topics of discussion at dinner, eat different foods, play different games, explore a new part of town. There are so many possibilities to have a different experience than what you have been doing in the preceding weeks…or maybe years. So many new memories waiting to happen.

Enjoy!!

News of the Camp Family – March 2023

Compiled by Louis Levin

As you may have seen on our social media, last week Stephanie, Briggs, and I attended the American Camp Association National Conference. In one session, we heard from psychologist Dr. Kira Mauseth from Seattle University, and of the many great things she taught us, she made clear to me for the first time a real benefit of camp that I hadn’t fully recognized until that session. Dr. Mauseth made the point that one negative impact of the pandemic on schools was the loss of peer modeling at school, particularly in children that missed transition years from one school setting to the next (e.g., elementary to middle school). In other words, 6th graders couldn’t learn what it means to “be” 6th graders from the 7th and 8th graders at their new school. This lead to 6th graders returning for 7th grade in 2021 or 2022 and exhibiting behavior that we wouldn’t consider “age appropriate,” not because they missed important classes or because they watched one too many episodes of Tiger King, but because they had missed out on valuable interaction and relationships with students from different age groups.

Funny enough, at camp every summer these valuable interactions happen every single day, and last year we saw a really cool example of them. At camp last year, when campers tested positive for COVID they moved into Club Med, which unlike our normal cabins at camp was an all-ages affair. These campers participated in activities as a group regardless of age, all-day every-day until they returned to their age-sorted cabin. Something special happened for those kids in Club Med who were living together and going through a challenge at camp all at once. Younger kids developed deep friendships with and learned from campers a few years older than them, campers who had been around the Rec Hall once or twice. And older kids got an opportunity to model everyday age-appropriate behavior, helping and mentoring and also laughing with campers a few years younger than them. While these campers were dealt a hard hand last summer, I do believe they all came out the other side with something really valuable, something they had been missing at school for the past few years. They came out having learned what it means to really act their age.

As for news of the camp family, we just finished off our reunion tour for this winter — those tours are our main source of Arrowhead news! If you have something you’d like to share next month, please send me an email at [email protected]!

IT MAY INTEREST YOU TO KNOW… In California, we have a ton of athletes moving into their spring season. Danny Schottenstein is playing club basketball for the Tigers, Hudson Soofer is playing club lacrosse, and Ryder Meisel is playing point guard for his club basketball team. Leo Susser and Ishaan Balaji are on their respective school’s tennis team, Noah Penson is an outfielder for his high school’s baseball team, and Ben Hall is playing basketball and hitting the trails on his mountain bike. His brother Miles Hall is a two sport athlete, playing both tennis and baseball, and speaking of brothers Matan Radwin and Ori Radwin are both rowing crew. Matan runs track and cross country, while Ori is active in his local chapter of BBYO. Evan Friedman is working hard to achieve his Eagle Scout rank with his local troop, and he’s almost there! Jacob Carlin is portraying Kevin G in his school’s production of Mean Girls the Musical and Nate Rothman is taking photos of birds and mountain biking — hopefully not at the same time! Matt Wilhelm and Sean Kennedy are both artists in residence at the Cobb Mountain Art and Ecology Project, and Drew Smith is Student Body President of his High School this year, as well as captain of the tennis team.

 

Good boy Stanley!

WHERE ARE THEY NOW… Ben Kersten (Los Angeles, 2003-’09, ’10-’12) is working toward a graduate degree in Art History at UCLA. Greg Minisman (Boulder, 1984-’86, ’89-’91, 2003) is a life science researcher with Google. Brayden Levy (Walnut Creek, CA/San Francisco 2006-’11, ’13) is an engineer with Garmin.

IN THE BIBS AND DIAPERS DEPARTMENT… It’s a boy, Leo Murphy Hutchence, for Bailey Aro Hutchence (Duluth, 2008-’10, ’12) and Joe Hutchence (Preston, UK/Duluth, 2007-’12).

IN THE BARKS AND MEOWS DEPARTMENT… Joining us for his first summer at camp is Stanley Briggs! Stanley is very excited to spend his summer running around camp and living out on the range with Joe, Katay, and Hannah! I don’t think our baby onesies will fit Stan…

 

Caretaker Joe’s Bewildering Winter

By Joe Crain

Is it just me or does anybody else get the impression that February, the shortest month of the year, often seems to pass the slowest? Is it just its location on the calendar as the third month of hard winter that make it seem like its mere 28 days last forever? Could it be that, after making it through the harsh transitional weather of December and the brutal cold and blizzards that always seem to come with January, we are at the end of our metaphorical rope when it comes to dealing with all of winter’s challenges?

Is it just a geographical phenomenon? Do those of you who live in areas of the country that don’t experience the harsh realities of winter in the form of cold and deep snow, below zero “cold snaps”, and harsh wind chills, wonder what I could possibly be talking about? Are those of you who live in the warmer geographical spots of this vast country wondering where has the little month of February gone so quickly? And what’s with this caretaker guy! He needs to poke his nose out of his igloo a bit more often! Can’t he see that February is obviously a fast, tidy little month of only 28 days, two days shorter than four of the other months and a full three days shorter than another seven. And even during a leap year, that odd calendar balancing phenomenon that happens every four years and adds to it a day, it is still but a runt of a month!

Maybe I should blame this temporal dysmorphia I experience each February on the odd events that take place on the second day of the calendar’s shortest month: that peculiar obsession with weather prognosticating rodents. Could the singular event of whether a Groundhog (also known as a woodchuck, or my personal favorite, a whistle pig) sees its shadow or not place so many delightful thoughts of spring inside my head at such an absurdly early part of this stunted month make the snow I am forced to shovel, seemingly over and over again, off of the same stretch of walkway, year after year, cause this time elongating phenomenon? (Is it just me or can any of you here Sonny and Cher start to sing the song “I got you Babe”?)

Maybe the time dilation I experience each February is merely a psychological artifact caused by the tedium of being stuck mostly indoors for each of the month’s not-so numerous 28 days. Put in medical terms, maybe it’s just “Cabin Fever.” Hmm, a quick check of the internet and my trusty, go-to health website “Facty-Health”; “Cabin Fever is not an actual medical diagnosis, however the effects of this non-illness are real!” Let’s see, the symptoms of “C. F.” are depression, anxiety, restlessness, and loneliness. No mention of Temporal Dysmorphia or Time Dilation… so I guess it’s not “C.F.”

Well whatever it is that causes me to experience the impression that February, the shortest month of the year, often seems to pass the slowest, it is nearing its inevitable conclusion due to the fact that at long last, March has arrived. You know, March, the month that seems like it should be part of spring but in reality, this far north, is just the 4th month of winter!

Cue Sonny & Cher singing: “They say we’re young but we don’t know. We won’t find out until we grow….” Having the weirdest day, it’s Caretaker Joe At Camp.

Feeling discombobulated?

We’re Hiring!

We’ve got a great lineup of staff for 2023, and we still have some available jobs for the upcoming camp season so you can add your name to that list! If you or someone you know is looking to change campers’ lives this summer, have them reach out to Louis at [email protected] or 847-987-9464 to learn more.

Job openings include…

  • Senior Cabin Counselors
  • Junior Cabin Counselors
  • Wilderness Trip Staff
  • Seasonal Caretaker
  • Office Assistant
  • Promotional Photographer
  • Nurse’s Assistant
  • Climbing Instructor
  • Waterskiing Boat Driver/Instructor
  • Film Photography Instructor

We’d love to send a 2023 camp T-Shirt to our alumni and camp family members who recruit a new staff member for the year of 2023, so let us know who you want to work at Nebagamon this year!

First Look at 2023 Staff

That’s right, it’s the moment you’ve all been waiting for — the first staff list for the summer of 2023! Have fun searching for your favorite counselors, and if you don’t see your name below and would like it to be added, well you’re in luck: we’re still hiring! Reach out to [email protected] and we can get the ball rolling for our 94th camping season!

At the helm for 2023 are our returning directors, back for their 20th season, it’s Stephanie Hanson and Adam Kaplan (surprise surprise!). We’ve got a full suite of village directors to boot — returning as Swamper Push is David Sachs, as Axeman Push is Matthew Wilhelm, and as Lumberjack Push is Noah Stein. The team is rounded out with first time village director Ric Best in the Logger village.

We have a great variety of new and returning cabin staff for 2023. Returning Senior Counselors include Jason Shacter, Joey Rivkin, Eric Portillo, Ethan Pittham, and Jesse Herzog, who will be joined by first time senior counselors Jashua Sanabria, Soloman Wexler, Benjamin Dammeyer, Callum McGinn, and Joel Matthew. Returning Junior Counselors include Nelson Mendels, Nick Fleisher, Aidan Capes, Josh Marcus, Adam Eberhard, Ben Hackney, Nathan Starhill, Anthony Gutierrez, Andrew Condrell, and Emmitt Gerstein. New Junior Counselors include Jacob Lutsky, Jonah Rontal, Max Kennedy, Ben Wolf, Griffin Scissors, Jasper Braunschweiger, and Sam More.

Leading our Trip Program are Trip Director Jason Yale and returning Assistant Trip Director Jonah Domsky. Packing out trips this summer is returning Quartermaster Jon Star. And Bill Hensel, Ron Gaare, Amy Mack, and Gordon Schreiber will all be back in the driver’s seat as trip drivers this year. Wilderness Trip Leaders this summer include returners Isaac Schiff-Lewin, Salma Schwartzman, Billy Galpern, Jesse Chan, Trent Flegel, and Henry Burns. They’re joined by newcomers Louisa Goltry, Ben Kessler, Tenille Flegel, and Jaden Beltsman.

Full time Associate Director Louis Levin will be Program Director this summer, and there’s a bunch of returning and new Specialists helping execute a great program. Leading our waterfront is returning Waterfront Director Isaac Murray-Stark. Staying on the waterfront, Amelie Sadler is back to lead our sailing program, and Theresa Nevins returns as our waterskiing instructor. The Craft Shop is being helmed once again by Sean Kennedy, and both Craft Shop Specialists Nora Starhill and Ellie Friedman will be back to help with all of your tie-dye and watercolor needs! Whipping up new recipes in MOCA is first time staffer Laila Maidenberg. Haley Joy will be joy-ning us to run our climbing wall as a first time staff member. And Simon Topf will takes on a new role as Rangemaster at our Target Shooting and Archery range.

Returning to run our office and operations is full time Associate Director is Joe Briggs. He’ll be joined in the office by returners Josie Hanson-Kaplan, Adena Rosenbloom, and Emily Yale, and Allen Bennett is back for another year as town driver. Our Caretaking team is being led once again by Andy Mack, with year round caretaker Joe Crain, returning caretaker Jair Torres Ponce and returning Big House Housekeeper Xiemena Nava Cervantes. And Amber Burvall is returning to lead our infirmary, with new nurse’s assistant Lindsey Fleith.

We’ve got two cooks in the kitchen — Cody Keys is back for more, and he’s joined by new cook, Sam Roach. They’ve got an all star team of kitchen staff working with them, with returners Alex Fuller, Ruben Perez Angel, Sofia Reyes, Noe Alvarez, Alejandra Rodriguez Jimenez, Marco Torres, Camila Sanchez Garcia, Paula Sanchez Garcia, and Alexa Madrid. And rounding out our kitchen, we’ve got new staff members Erika Cante Ortega, Arley Gutierrez, Alejandro Rodriguez Jimenez, Emilio Tlatelpa Reyes, and Karla Cortes Hernandez.

Join Our March Madness Pool!

Joey has been picking berries and picking national champions his whole life! Who ya got this year Joey?

 

 

 

Think you can pick this year’s national champ? There’s an extra large blizzard with unlimited toppings on the line! See if you can unseat back-to-back 2021-2022 winner, Senior Counselor Joey Rivkin!

Join our March Madness pool here

Joe Briggs’s Third Annual Nature Photo Contest

Compiled by Joe Briggs

We would like to thank everybody that sent in nature photos from your hometowns to make our Third Annual Nature Photo Contest such a success! We got a bunch of entries and it was difficult to just pick a few to feature here. You can click on each photo for higher resolution files. Keep up the beautiful photography, and keep on getting outside in the offseason — see you back up at camp soon!

More Enrollments for 2023!

The summer is getting closer, and enrollments are still rolling in to the office. We still do have some spaces available in each session for 2023. If you know of any prospective new campers, please have them contact the camp office soon to ensure that they can register for the summer. Listed below are boys that are currently registered.

Enroll Here!

2nd Grade Campers: Henry Bader, Sam Kotin, Aiden Naft, River Ryan

3rd Grade Campers: Sam Bernstein, Maxwell Block, Rex Frank, Bernie Goldstein, Reed Hartmann, Henry Hengel, Reuben Katz, Henry Knutson, Arthur Kramer, Spencer Scissors, Philip Slosburg, Max Strasberg, Elliot Tone, Dylan Wolf, Gray Wyler

4th Grade Campers: Zach Adolph, Ari Barnett, Ethan Barnett, Darren Bell, Troxler Brodsky, Emmett Brown, Jamo Cunneen, Ari Foxman, Will Goldfarb, Ben Hall, Wynter Herron, Eli Kauders, Max Kauders, Max Kotin, Forrest Kramer, Cole Moscoe, Jacoby Naft, Wolf Ryan, Walt Schiffer, Sam Schwartz, Jasper Teuscher, Benjamin Varon, Judah Wachter, Dylan Wilens

5th Grade Campers: David Apple, Louie Bader, Ronen Brandler, William Brandler, Mattias Braude, Ben Brotchner, Zach Brotchner, Levi Budin, Ethan Cardenas, Jack Chait, Grant Cowens, Nate Feldman, Sid Grenon, Grant Hall, Mika Halloran, Heath Hartmann, Ben Hoekstra, Henry Hoeppner, Eitan Kaminsky, David Levick, Alex Lyons, Ethan Mack, Sawyer Noel, Brandon Pineda, Daniel Portillo, Micah Reiner, Leo Seidman, Bryce Shepherd, Henry Sonneland, Rafi Thacker, Jonah Tone, Mekhi Vante, Angel Veliz

6th Grade Campers: Jude Alderman, Chase Barnett, Max Brine, Jacob Carlin, Elder Chipman, Owen Deroche, Josh Desenberg, Saul Friedman, Charlie Gilligan, Judah Gladstein, Lucas Goldman, Jake Goldstein, Ben Green, Max Hesser, Walker Karp, Digby Karsh, Henry Kauders, Elliott Kleiman, Paul Korman, Henry Kramer, Kane Moscoe, August Pereira, Gus Potter, Bradley Rittenberg, Lazer Rosenbloom, Nate Rothman, Rome Ryan, Arjun Schiff, Owen Showalter, Grant Singerman, Nate Strauss, Will Temkin, Yorman Veliz, Jacob Wallenstein, Solzy Wasserman, Max Yarbrough, Peter Zeitz

7th Grade Campers: Jake Apple, Zander Aronoff, Holden Bell, Zach Bell, Phillip Bettencourt, Valentino Borracci, Felix Calegari, Chris Chiles, Rollie Cohen, Zach Daskal-Koss, Jack Fink, Jake Finkelstein, Gabe Fisher, Evan Friedman, Milo Gilman, Ryan Glickman, Max Goldfarb, Will Grant, Isaac Hamilton, Landen Hudson, Norbert Isbell, Alex Levin, Nathan Massel, Eli More, Tejay Reddy, Hudson Rufi, Samuel Schaffer, Julius Schatz, Grant Shepherd, Brett Sholiton, Sagiv Siegel, Jacob Solomon, Dylan Varon, Kavi Vishnubhakat, Owen Walker, Alistair Wolkoff, Felix Yessian

8th Grade Campers: Athens Aschaffenburg, Ben Bernstein, Aaron Brine, Ace Burvall, Sam Cohen, Marcus Dowd, Nathan Eiserman, Tate Gell, Miles Hall, Charlie Heist, Ari Held, Ben Hesser, Eli Hoffman, Logan Hoffman, Aidan Huberman, Clay Isaacs, Namon Jones, Riley Kaminsky, Gibson Kapp, Eli Karp, Gus Karsh, Chase Kornblet, Max Levy, Lev Lippitz, Benjamin Mack, Avi Maidenberg, Coulson McConnell, Ryder Meisel, Oliver Pincus, Felix Popotnik, Bokai Portis, Matthew Puin, Linus Quinn-Pasin, Matan Radwin, Danny Schottenstein, Arjun Shah, Hudson Soofer, Seth Starhill, Oliver Strauss, Judah Thacker, Tanner Toback, HJ Walberg, Johnny Wallach, Dax Winegarden, Justin Xu, Aaron Zelvy

9th Grade Campers: Ishaan Balaji, Hunter Che, Asher Corndorf, Dash Farbrother, Evan Friedman, Charlie Goshko, Gavin Gray, Jackson Green, Alex Gudgeon, Nicholas Kallos, Milo Karsh, Nathaniel Kehrberg, Sy Kessler, Jonah Kleiman, Stafford Klein, Stanley Klein, Ben Laytin, Cam Louie, Ryan Mack, Drew Malk, Liam Mann, Noah Meltzer, Mason Pedroza, Noah Penson, Myles Rontal, Sebastian Rorsted, Micah Rosenbloom, Syd Rosenbloom, Jonathan Schiff-Lewin, Dylan Scissors, Logan Segal, Benji Solomon, Asher Toback, Sam Vincent, Sammy Waxelman, Jorn White, Charlie Zeeck, Asher Zipkin

10th Grade Campers: Ezra Maidenberg, Wes Schwartz, Milo Solomon, Micah Stone

Congratulations to our March Birthdays!

This month’s birthdays include…

March 1st – Sagiv Siegel

3rd – River Ryan, Drew Smith, Max Strasberg

6th – Mason Pedroza, Oliver Strauss, Kavi Vishnubhakat

7th – Karina Held

8th – Jake Apple

9th – Matan Radwin, Dax Winegarden

10th – Reuben Katz, Amelie Sadler

11th – Joshua Duarte

14th – Jake Goldstein, Hudson Soofer, Dylan Wolf, John Wolfe

15th – Austin Abeles, Walker Karp

17th – Wynter Herron

19th – Wolf Ryan

20th – Reeve Gabele, Matan Siegel

21st – Andrew Aronoff, Athens Aschaffenburg, Austin Evans, Liam Mann

22nd – Cam Louie

25th – Zach Adolph, Ishaan Balaji, Tate Gell, Lev Lippitz, Sam Reichert

26th – Michael Bayer

29th – Owen Goldsmith, Max Hesser, Brady Wolfberg

30th – Alistair Wolkoff, Emily Yale

31st – Jack Chait, Owen Showalter