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The Arrowhead

Camp Nebagamon's Monthly Newsletter

Volume XCIV

Number 5

May 2022

Return to Our New Style

The Nebagamon Through Line

By Adam Kaplan

Since 1929, Camp Nebagamon has consistently striven to execute its mission. Now I know that in the modern world, the modus operandi when it comes to mission statements is to make them short and to the point. Essays are not de rigueur in the world of missions. But anyone who knows me is well aware that I absolutely refuse to say in a few words what I can say in many! Apparently, I am not alone in this propensity to both discard convention and use lots of words when articulating our mission at camp. I have been going through some of the mission statements from the previous directors and have found that words are not used sparingly at all! There are lots of historical mission statements to sift through, and lots of words in all of them! Which of course makes sense since we do SO MUCH at camp!

But, in truth, they have all said the exact same things. The mission of Nebagamon has remained the same since 1929. In short (I know… I have already admitted that I can’t do anything “in short”….except for, obviously, my stature!), our mission at camp is to provide boys with life-changing experiences that will teach them about independence and interdependence. We nurture an environment that teaches ethical behavior, one in which people are accepted and accepting of others’ beliefs and backgrounds. We are here to provide a place that allows boys to discover who they are, to gain competence, and to take safe risks. We are committed to fostering an appreciation of nature and the determination to respect and protect it. We are an institution that fosters connections and friendships that are truly enduring, stabilizing, and supporting. And oh yeah, we are a place that exists to create a tremendous amount of plain old summer fun!

No matter which set of directors wrote up that mission and however they articulated it, that core mission has remained the same…for nearly 100 years.

Sure, there have been some alterations to the program over the years. It used to be that Nebagamon was open only for eight-week sessions. It used to be that all boys arrived at the beginning of the summer by train to a nearby town, and a parade of folks from town would pick up the boys and ferry them to camp (can you imagine!?!?!). It used to be that our summer daily schedule was significantly less structured. There used to be no climbing wall and no waterskiing. It used to be that the Rec Hall was a MUCH quieter place during meals than it is now (sorry about that one Sally, Nardie, Roger and Judy…I am a loud guy and the noise just follows me!) The list of alterations and improvements to camp in order to keep it relevant to its era (and to put together the best camp program possible) is a long one.

These changes have often caused some angst when introduced. (Want to hear the one about my bringing two new songs to camp, from the previous camp I ran, when I started directing at Nebagamon? Want to see the emails I received from unhappy alumni about my dangerous changing of camp?!) But each of them was only adopted by the directors with the sole intention of better delivering on the mission of Nebagamon. Still, every time something new is introduced at a place so steeped in tradition, a camp that has been delivering on its goals for so long, it makes some folks uneasy. I get it.

But the truth is this: NONE of these changes really altered anything about what Camp Nebagamon is. None of these changes altered anything about what Camp Nebagamon strives to accomplish. None of these changes altered anything about how camp FEELS to the boys who call it home every summer. And amazingly, whenever alumni visit camp and spend some time walking around and soaking in the place, they ALL come to the same conclusion. They say, “It’s amazing! I cannot believe how much this place is just like I remember it!” This quote is repeated by folks who have been gone for five years…and for fifty years. They all say it…they all feel it.

So, admittedly, Steph and I were a bit nervous about our big announcement last week. We were nervous that folks would fear the alteration in camp’s “back of the house” structure. But we have been truly humbled (and relieved!!!) by the numerous expressions of support from so many corners of our community. At the same time, we want to be clear, we understand if you are feeling some of that nervousness. It is totally natural, especially given how much Nebagamon means to so many of you.

The transition of Camp from private ownership to a non-profit organization run by an alumni board is just like every other alteration made in Nebagamon’s history. It is being done to further our mission and to ensure that we are delivering on this mission for as many kids as possible and for as long as possible. The camp experience, that every camper and every staff member enjoys while spending a summer at camp, will not change, and this transition will ensure that kids get to experience it in perpetuity.

I hope that you are all looking forward to YOUR visit to camp, whether that be in a couple of years or in a couple of decades. I hope you are looking forward to wandering the grounds and soaking in the sights and sounds of children playing and growing and thriving. And I hope you are looking forward to saying, “It’s amazing! I cannot believe how much this place is just like I remember it!”

ICYMI: A Letter From Adam and Steph

To The Camp Family:

One of the best decisions Stephanie and I have made in our lives was when we chose to buy Camp Nebagamon and serve as its stewards beginning in 2004. The opportunity to carry Nebagamon forward in its mission to help children be themselves and reach their potential, have fun, and make lifelong connections has been an incredibly rewarding life experience.

As the years have gone by, we have thought deeply on how best to ensure that this nearly 100-year-old institution continues to exist and thrive for the next hundred years…and beyond.

Nebagamon has been incredibly fortunate in its leadership with four sets of committed directors. (Three of which were as talented as any directors I have ever seen in this business…the jury is still out on the fourth!) Nonetheless, Stephanie and I have come to understand that the private ownership model of camps has always been a risky one. Although each set of Nebagamon’s directors have conscientiously protected Camp, and the institution remains on solid financial footing today, there is little doubt that if a private owner were in an untenable financial situation, their hand could be forced to sell the property, and the future of Camp, to the highest bidder. Stephanie and I personally lived this fear when the pandemic hit. Fortunately, we only missed one season and Camp survived 2020 just fine, but that experience only furthered our belief that we needed to create something more indissoluble for Camp Nebagamon’s future.

With this goal, we have contemplated, researched, and selected a new organizational model – the transfer of Nebagamon to a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization run by a board of directors – a model we believe to be the best option to secure Camp in perpetuity. This model works; there are many similar camps around the country that employ the non-profit model and are thriving. In fact, the camp that I directed, prior to Nebagamon, operated under this very same model and has been incredibly successful.

Stephanie and I, together with an amazing, dedicated small group of passionate Nebagamon alumni, worked through how to make this a reality. Importantly, all former living directors – Nardie and Sally, and Roger and Judy – enthusiastically support this idea and agree that it is truly the best way to protect the place that we all know and love so much.

To be very clear, we expect the camper experience to remain the same in the new model. In fact, that is the point. Nebagamon will still do EXACTLY what it has been doing so well since 1929, honoring tradition while staying flexible, upholding Nebagamon values while always seeking improvement, doing it all while staying laser-focused on what is best for the children who walk through its gates.

We believe that transferring Nebagamon to a non-profit structure is the best way forward for many reasons:

  • The combination of skills required to be camp directors is relatively unique. (After all, you have to be able to operate a business, oversee a staff, take care of children while enriching their lives, sing AND plunge toilets!) Additionally, camp has become a very expensive business to purchase partially due to the significant appreciation of lakefront real estate in northern Wisconsin. Having to meet both of those bars makes the potential private owner/director pool exponentially tiny. This move will allow the Camp Nebagamon board to seek out and hire the best possible professional camp director(s), independent of their personal access to wealth.
  • This structure would make it much easier for Nebagamon to weather any crises that might arise. As we already mentioned, the pandemic is a case in point. Timing is everything, and had this sort of event happened when Stephanie and I were new directors, before we had built up a financial cushion and the relationships that buoyed us through that difficult year of closure, it is hard to say what the outcome would have been for Camp. A non-profit structure will remove, permanently, the possibility for any private owner to sell the property to developers, whether as a way to recoup a financial investment or address unforeseen challenges. Furthermore a non-profit structure would benefit from the ability to raise additional funds for a special need or emergency, so that, no matter the crisis, Nebagamon would be better equipped to withstand it.
  • Camp is currently profitable. While fiscal responsibility will continue to be vital as a non-profit organization, all excess revenue will be invested into Camp. In addition to operational revenue, the nonprofit organization could generate more funds to pursue large capital campaigns and have more resources to accomplish its goals.
  • We all know and love Nebagamon. We love the place and its traditions. Yet we are all aware of the fact that Camp has always needed to evolve in order to stay relevant, while still maintaining its core values and important traditions. As a non-profit, Camp will ultimately benefit from a committed board of directors with camp’s best interests at heart, and a broad variety of volunteer skills and expertise from “the real world” that will be a built-in resource. We know the board will bring added intelligence and perspective to future strategic deliberations and critical decisions.

Steph and I are not going anywhere, anytime soon. After serving as Camp’s stewards for the past 19 years, we are totally committed to the institution and doing whatever we can to “leave our campsite better than we found it.” Nebagamon is truly our life’s work; we intend to see this through completely. With this in mind, Stephanie and I have enthusiastically agreed to become the first directors of Camp Nebagamon under this new structure.

Within the past year, the alumni group I mentioned earlier has done the legal and organizational work to create the 501(c)(3), named the Camp Nebagamon Foundation, and has embarked on a quiet-phase fundraising drive to make this dream a reality. The support from Nebagamon’s alumni has already been, frankly, amazing. In the coming week, you can expect to hear from the Camp Nebagamon Foundation about opportunities for you to be a part of this milestone in Nebagamon’s history, as, together, we chart its course. (For more information, visit www.campnebagamonfoundation.org.)

We cannot adequately express how grateful we are for the Camp Family and we look forward to continuing as Camp’s stewards. We are more optimistic than ever about Camp’s future and the coming generations that will assuredly be able to share in the Nebagamon experience because of what we, all, accomplish here.

Keep the Fires Burning,

Please Return Your Camp Forms by May 15!

With the 2022 camp season quickly approaching, we would like to issue a few reminders that will help to answer questions and make the transition into camp run as smoothly as possible.

Click here to access your camper forms

  • All families should have received our email containing the instructions for completing your camper forms. All the forms need to be submitted by May 15. If your doctor cannot schedule the physical exam until after May 15, that is OK, but please complete the health history form ASAP. We read every form in its entirety, and the information helps us provide a fun and healthy summer for each camper. Please be diligent in filling them out.
  • If your son will be using any daily medication in pill form, please note the due dates for CampMeds, a prepackaged medication service. (May 18 for first session and eight-week campers, and June 16 for second session campers.) This information can be found with the rest of the online forms at the link above.
  • NEW FOR 2022: Camp must have a copy of all prescriptions and doctor’s orders for all medications distributed at camp. The good news is that all prescription medicines fulfilled by CampMeds will arrive at camp with the prescription attached, so there is nothing additional for you to do. However, for all regularly scheduled medications (including over the counter medicines and melatonin), you must have your doctor complete and fax to camp the Doctor’s Orders Form (available in your CampInTouch account). Also, for prescription medications that CampMeds cannot fill (epi-pens, albuterol inhalers, etc.), the medication must be sent to camp with the prescription label attached.
  • Please make travel arrangements as early as possible. If you are using the Official Travel Agency of Camp Nebagamon, Travel One, contact them at 1-800-245-1111.

News of the Camp Family – May 2022

Compiled by Adam Fornear

The excitement is building for enjoying some spring and summer sports! It’s also still building because the winter up here in Duluth continues to go and go and go and go on forever! Luckily there are a few rivers that have shaken their winter ice and allowed us to get out for a paddle. Recently, some friends and I put our boats in the stream for the first time this season on the west fork of the Chippewa River. It was a beautiful paddle upstream meandering through alders and over some newly constructed beaver damns. Birds were chirping, the aluminum canoe was breaking through some skim ice, and local mallards were around every little bend. We were paddling up to a dam that held back the waters of Day Lake. Once we arrived, we beached the canoes and went exploring for whatever we might find. And, despite the frozen conditions, there was plenty to find: some turkey tracks, wolf tracks and deer tracks along the shoreline of the icy Day Lake. We continued our hike out across the lake (there was still 24 inches of ice that day… and as of this writing there is still 15 inches!) and out to the island that we typically paddle to.

We were able to follow the same wolf and deer tracks clear across the ice, so we kept on the trail. Bushwhacking we went, through and around the island. It was such a different perspective, being able to walk out to where we normally would be swimming. We made our way back to the canoes, loaded up, and had a lovely paddle back down the river to the cabin. Just a gorgeous day to be outside appreciating everything that our eyes could see and feel.

So, even though we got our boats in the water, it still is feeling like winter… The following day, Julie and I headed to the upper peninsula of Michigan for the last weekend of lift skiing. It was a bluebird day, with soft snow and the hills to ourselves. A great way to end the season of alpine skiing. And then, last week after work a buddy from town and I headed over to the local ski hill for some late season laps of earning your turns. The ski hill has loads of snow (I’m jealous of the late season powder that some alumni are enjoying out in Colorado) but the only way to use it is to ski down and skin or boot up. I have skins for the bottom of my telemark skis that I put on at the bottom of the run that allows me to slowly ski back up the hill without slipping. Anyhow, we did a couple laps on the hill for some poor snow conditions but a great workout skinning back up. Great evening all in all! It’s a funny time of year… canoeing and skiing, all in one week!

So, with the paddling, skiing and frozen lake hike season still in full swing…I’ll just have to wait till May ??th to get out and enjoy some true spring and summer sports!

Some news is trickling in and I appreciate the help! There is one final Arrowhead to go for the season. I really could use your help in sending me News of You! Please send everything and anything to fornear@campnebagamon.com. Till next time, get outside and do what you love doing!

IT MAY INTEREST YOU TO KNOW THAT Ace Burvall (San Diego) just picked up a new short board for surfing. Can’t wait to see some pics carving some waves! Addison Burvall (San Diego) had a recent ballet performance of Ballet in Box in Scripps Ranch. His performance was Paquita Gypsy Pas de Trois as well as several other Contemporary pieces. He is now rehearsing for their spring production based on the Wizard of Oz, Addison will be the Scarecrow. Amber Burvall (San Diego), our camp nurse, is a RN in San Diego and has also started a woman’s swimsuit line (designing and sewing herself) called Surfmade In San Diego.

Aubrey with Grandpa and current staff member Bill Hensel (’66-’69, ’73-’74, ’16-’22)

WHERE ARE THEY NOW: Joe Kirkish (Houghton, MI ’52-’58,’80) has published (with the assistance of Meg Ostrum) his memoir. It is entitled, Long Exposure: My Life In and Beyond the Copper Country. Joe was camps photography counselor for decades, known worldwide for his photography work and was a beloved professor of English at Michigan Tech University in Houghton, MI. Jack Wineman (Detroit ’12-‘18) is playing juniors hockey for the Maine Nordiques.

WEDDING CONGRATULATIONS go to Sam Barrows (Chicago/Kula, HI ’97-’02,’04-‘06) and Holly Barrows (Kula, HI).

IN THE BIBS AND DIAPERS DEPARTMENT: It’s a girl, Aubrey, for Jaime Hensel (Atlanta/Minneapolis ’05-’09,’11-’13,’17). It’s a boy, Niko, for Eli Fromm (KC/Greece ’06-’10,’12-‘19) and Sophia Gatzionis (New Haven, CT/Greece ‘19). It’s a girl, Hannah Lou, for Joey Notowich (Memphis ’02-’08,’10,’12) and Rachel Notowich (Memphis). It’s a girl, Lucy Eve for Andy Cohen (St. Louis/NYC ’78-’83).

A Few Staff Positions Remain!

We continue to add staff from all over the world — just last week, we hired new counselors from Germany and Mexico. We’ve got a bunch of new trip leaders from Texas and some senior counselors that are returning to camp for their first summer on staff!

We’re very proud of the staff that have committed to the upcoming summer. With that said, we still have a few positions to fill.

That’s a lot of DQ, senior counselors!

Were currently looking for the following:

  • Nurse Assistants – A really great work experience for anyone going into any medical field
  • Kitchen Assistants – Great summer job and you get to do camp activities when you are not working
  • Wilderness Trip Leaders – Spend much of your summer in a tent!
  • Senior Counselors – DQ every Wednesday!
  • MOCA Specialist – Cook, eat and repeat…

We’d appreciate your help in putting the finishing touches on our staff, so please spread the word with your camp friends or anyone outside of the camp family! Applicants can reach out to Adam Fornear at adam@campnebagamon.com. I think we can all agree that working at Camp Nebagamon is an unforgettable experience that will be a part of you the rest of your life!

Caretaker Joe Celebrates ‘Decempril’

By Joe Crain

It’s been a tough spring for us here in the Northwoods of Wisconsin, due to the fact that we can’t quite seem to shake off Old Man Winter! We started April with about 14 inches of snow still on the ground steadily melting off for the first week of the month. It’s not good to be starting April with that much snow, but it seemed to be on its way out despite our lower-than-average daily temps. Our temperatures early in April should be in the lower 40s, but hey, beggars can’t be choosers, and the mid-to-upper-30ss were doing the job. Soon though, an unpleasant cycle set in and for the next three weeks in a row we were beset by a mid-week temperature plummet and a mid-week snow storm. Storm one deposited six inches on the 7th through the 8th, and our nine remaining inches of snow turned to 15”. Fortunately, things swung warm that weekend and we lost all of those fresh six inches by the end of the weekend. But before we could get the snow shovels back into the garage the weather man told us we had better keep them out; April snow round two was on the way and could be bigger than round one! Sure enough, all of our snow-loss gains were wiped out yet again as eight inches fell for the second storm of the month. Thankfully, it turned to rain mid-week and most of that snow was beat down to a meager six inches when storm number two passed. Well round three was looming in the forecast before round two let up and the next week we saw another four inches of the dreaded heavy wet spring snow fall from the sky! Just over 19 inches of snow fell the first 19 days of April.

I started to tell every one of the few people that listen to me that this wasn’t April but rather Decempril! (We live in the age of the mash-up after all.) I also made a big push to remind folks we had it a lot worse back in the spring of 2013 when that Decempril brought us the still-record snow fall of 54 inches! Well, thankfully, as was pointed out the other day by a local meteorologist, the silver lining is that although we may be 10-15 degrees below our average temps each morning, as the month progresses those averages ARE going up each day. So, the below average this week is warmer than below average last week. Hmmm, not much consolation… but I guess one has to take what one can. So here we sit on Decempril 28th and the snow has gradually receded to just the big piles in the shady spots. Yes, some of those piles are four feet tall and 10 feet around but I’m seeing a lot of brown grass in my yard and the daffodils have started to show their green tips. And the best part is that in the last week of April, we only had a half inch that melted as soon as this week’s sunshine hit, so reason for optimism, right? Unfortunately, any of you who had dates before May in the C/N Lake Nebagamon Ice Breaker contest are out of luck! 99% of the lake is still covered in ice. With the past three twenty-degree mornings and highs only reaching into the lower 40s, I am starting to think there’s a possibility that May 7th’s Wisconsin fishing opener may have to be an ice fishing event this year!

Hoping that Old Man winter will finally throw in the towel for the year, because a Janumay mash up doesn’t roll of the tongue quite as well as Decempril does, it’s Caretaker Joe At Camp.

Congratulations to our May Birthdays!

This month’s birthdays include…

May 1st – Milo GIlman, Milo Karsh, Ethan Mack

2nd – Perrin Griggs, Marc Rosenthal

3rd – Brooks Coyle, Li Kane

4th – Jesse Gell

6th – Alex Gudgeon

7th – Claire Barlass, David Levick, Jose Luna

8th – Sammy Rubinov

10th – Ari Foxman, Evan Friedman, Auden Osburn

11th – Martin Roberson

12th – Jesse Chan, Ian Fogel, Levi Gladstein

13th – Aidan Capes, Rex Frank, Brady Rivkin

14th – Josh Desenberg, Jonah Kleiman

15th – Dylan Johnson

16th – Colin McIntyre

17th – Owen Cornett

18th – Grant Singerman

19th – Louis Levin, Chase Parisi, Solzy Wasserman

23rd – Ikerus Vargas

24th – Ben Palmet

25th – Joe Briggs

26th – Tommy Branstad Phillips

27th – Ben Brotchner, Zach Brotchner

29th – Gibson Kapp, Rodrigo Lozano, Bennett Wiers

31st – Zander Aronoff, Silas Gold-Kessler, Charlie Goshko