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The Arrowhead

Camp Nebagamon's Monthly Newsletter

Volume XCI

Number 6

October 2019

Return to Our New Style

Readjusting to the “Real World”

Readjusting to the “Real World”

By Adam Kaplan

I have to admit, this is one of the more challenging times of the year for me. It is really difficult to go from spending nearly 100% of each day outdoors, spending tons of time in nature, and being engaged with hundreds of children and adults nearly every minute of the day, to spending nearly 100% of each day sitting in my basement, spending time sitting in front of my computer with not a soul around to roll their eyes at my hilarity (I am told that the eye roll is more flattering than the deepest belly laugh…..right?) Admittedly, each year, during these first few weeks of being back in Boise after a summer in Lake Nebagamon, I find whatever excuse I can to get myself out of the basement and find something to do upstairs or about town.

This is very similar to the experiences that so many parents recount to me about their son’s reintroduction into home life after a summer up at camp. These boys go from living in a room with ten other people, to living in a room by themselves (or perhaps a sibling). They go from an environment in which they are playing outdoors nearly all day, to an environment in which they spend nearly all day in a classroom. They go from a place where their exposure to electronics and video entertainment consists pretty much of ONE movie a week (which most of them eschew in favor of an evening of four square, tennis, or ping pong), to a world in which televisions and computers are around every corner and the only thing that limits their exposure to these things is their own self-regulation (and perhaps a rule or two around the house!). They go from a world in which each day they choose exactly which activities they will engage in, to a world in which they have far fewer choices. They go from a place where they are one of 200 boys, to a place where they are one of very few (or maybe even the only) kids.

This is very similar to the experiences that so many of our staff members recount to me about their reintroduction into their other lives as well. For most of them, they shift from a world in which they are asked to serve as role models for hundreds of boys, to a world in which they are asked to keep up to date with their assigned readings and write lots of essays. They move from a world in which they are given tremendous responsibility for the health, safety and happiness of other people’s children, to a world in which they are often reminded that THEY are considered children.

Without a doubt, for each of us that spent a month or two up at camp during the summer, the transition from camp back to our other homes is a significant change. The lives that we lead at camp are dramatically different from the ones that we lead at home. It should come as no surprise to any of us that this transition can sometimes be a jarring and difficult one. All of us can relate to this challenge. How many of you have gone red faced after having shouted “HOW!!” in your classroom or at a social gathering? (I did it at my children’s school production just last week!) How many of you have been sitting at the table during a meal at home and found yourself humming a camp song that we used to sing in the Rec Hall? How many of you have been walking home from school, suddenly feeling the call of nature, and NEARLY pulling up to that big oak tree next to the sidewalk. These are the humorous sorts of situations that we all experience as part of our transitions to home. Then there are the times that you find yourself just sitting in your room, feeling melancholy, and just missing it. Missing your friends, missing your counselors, missing the singing, missing your cabin, missing swimming in the lake….missing camp.

Certainly these transition times are challenging and difficult, and, as anyone with even a little bit of life experience would tell you, a natural and inevitable part of life. All of our lives are punctuated with periods of transition. We all experience the childhood transitions from infancy to elementary school, the transition from elementary school to middle school, the transition from middle school to high school, the transition from high school to college, or the transition from a carefree college life to the world of “what are you going to do with your life?” So too, many of us will experience or have experienced the transitions from single life to family life, family life to empty nesting, empty nesting to…..well you can fill in the rest.

Among the many lessons that we learn from our experiences at camp are the ones about how to cope with and accept transitions. We learn that we can in fact work through these tough times and that there is nothing wrong with struggling with it a bit. It all works out…

Well, enough of this basement for now, I have to get outside for a few minutes…

The Nebagamon 2019-2020 Roadshow!

The Nebagamon 2019-2020 Roadshow!

NEBAGAMON’S 2019-2020 ROADSHOW

One of the more fun tasks of the off-season is creating the travel schedule for the upcoming year.  Every year, we traverse the country meeting and reconnecting with members of the camp family to give them a little taste of the North Woods during the school year, just to keep them going!  Here is the tentative schedule for the 2019-2020 year.  We look forward to seeing you at one of these reunions!

2019-2020 TENTATIVE TRAVEL SCHEDULE

St. Louis

November 2nd

Washington DC

TBA

Memphis

Early November

Minneapolis

TBA

Atlanta

November 6th

Chicago

TBA

Cincinnati

   November 7th

Los Angeles

TBA

Detroit

November 8th

San Diego

TBA

New York

TBA

Please contact the camp office with any questions!

This year, Adam and Adam will be driving the same car that took campers to camp in the 30’s!

News of the Camp Family – October 2019

News of the Camp Family – October 2019

Compiled by Adam Fornear

Objects in picture may be closer than they appear

I am truly jealous of our campers and wilderness trip leaders every time they load up in the van (with canoes in tow) and head north for an adventure in Boundary Waters. Now, while I cannot head out on trail during the summer due to my responsibilities as the Wilderness Trip Director, I do manage to get out too many of the same locations during the off season. I love getting to these places just as much as our campers do – and also hovering over the whisperlite stove brewing hot water for coffee or whipping up a great dinner over the fire in the Boundary Waters.

Fornear says he saw some live moose too… Sure, Fornear!

At the end of August, I had a great four-day fishing trip out to Isle Royale. I motored out on my 20’ fishing boat at about 30 mph, getting me there in under 45 minutes… just a bit quicker then when our campers take the Voyageur shuttle. Sure, we had coolers with ice on the boat, steaks, real milk, and of course fresh Lake Trout every night, but it was still great to get out to Isle. The scenery is amazing, moose everywhere we looked, and most importantly amazing night skies of stars and a Milky Way so vivid you feel like you can walk on it. As I sit here typing, I’m also thinking about my Boundary Waters trip next weekend. Most importantly…the food. If you’ve ever been to a trip physical the night before a trip, the one thing that the kids are most interested in is the menu. Well, it’s no different when you go on a Boundary Waters trip with a bunch of retired trippers from the early 90’s. Hardly any talk among the grew about gear or a route…just what are we going to eat! Funny thing is though is that we have the same meals year after year. First morning out will be egg glop (it’s delicious), first night supper is mock duck stir fry and loads and loads of cookies. Lastly, at the end of the month I will be packing up the fly rods and heading out to Jackson, WY to chase trout. I’ll let you know how that goes next month.

As you can see below, I don’t have a ton of news to share as of yet. Reunions don’t start for a bit and I can only spend so much time on Facebook in the office, so PLEASE help me out and send me news of you!  Please email (fornear@campnebagamon.com), text, carrier pigeon, Facebook (sorry – I don’t tweet…yet) or IM any awards, athletic participation, theatrical roles, or other accomplishments that you want to share, and I promise you will make the next edition of “In the News!” Until next time, get outside and create some mini adventures this off season for yourself!

IT MAY INTEREST YOU TO KNOW that Ryan Mack (Bedford Hills, NY) is staying busy playing soccer for his school and also flag football. Jonah Rontal (Detroit) is competing in USA Climbing competitions with the team from his local climbing gym, Planet Rock. Jonah has also been tearing up some single track dirt trails on his mountain bike. Levi Whalen Stewart (Portland) plays center defensive midfielder for his soccer team.

Noah and ACo laughing their way to Colorado for the winter

IN THE WHERE-ARE-THEY-NOW DEPARTMENT: Noah Stein (Chicago/Denver ’05-’10,’12,’14-‘19) is and Instructional Assistant at the Joshua School in Denver.  There he works with students with autism and developmental disabilities. Andrew Meyer (New Paltz, NY/Bahamas ’05-’10,’17-‘19) is teaching environmental education at The Island School in Eleuthera, Bahamas. Ben Kersten (Chicago’03-’08, ’10-’12) is starting a post doc in Art History at UCLA. Andy Cohen (St. Louis/Breckenridge ’04-’10,’12-’15,’17,’19) is the Dual Property Director of Housekeeping for Vail Resorts in Breckenridge, CO.

CONGRATULATIONS ON THE RECENT ENGAGEMENTS go to: Jeff Schram (Boston’97-’02,’04-‘06) and Natalie Mandel (Boston).

WEDDING CONGRATULATIONS go to: Joel Saslawsky (Memphis ’02-’08,’10,’12) and Stephanie Saslawsky (Memphis).

BAR MITZVAH CONGRATULATIONS go to: Leo Susser (San Francisco).

Caretaker Joe’s Stormy September

Caretaker Joe’s Stormy September

By Joe Crain

Down came the rain and washed the spider out!

With this summer’s weather trend I had such high hopes for getting some outdoor projects done this September as family camp was winding down. I hope you all recall this summer season at camp was marked by particularly stellar weather. Hardly any rain fell from the first day of camp right through family camp. It was so dry this summer that the docks all had to be lowered mid-season, to keep campers from walking straight out to the diving platform! But with a day of hard work shared by the caretakers and the waterfront staff, things were put right and it was safe to dive again. We continued to get little rain for a week or so after the dock move day and were starting to wonder if it was going to be a season with two dock-lowerings. But alas, a few late summer storms seemed to stabilize the lake level and the dock height remained good through family camp. And although we had to wake up to some, by southerner standards, chilly mornings in the month of August, all and all it was a very warm summer by northerner standards. Frankly, on those mornings when I was seeing campers in wool caps and jackets, I was happy to get into some long pants and my beefy-t shirt for a spell of coolness because my northland-seasoned body doesn’t do well when the summer temps soar above the lower-80’s. If it were up to me, I wouldn’t let the temp get above 80 degrees all summer long! Well, as I alluded to above, things stayed warm and dry right through Family Camp. But not long after the last of the Family campers and seasonal staff had headed to their respective home bases things took a major turn in the opposite direction in the weather department here in the Northwoods of Wisconsin! The daily temps skipped right over the usual early September offerings of mid-70 highs and mid-50 lows, and instead we were punished with temps 10 degrees below both of those norms… And so much for the nice dry weather. By mid-month we had enough rainfall to make up the whole summer’s deficit! The rain wasn’t satisfied with getting things back to average though and with this morning’s four inches that all fell in about 4 hours, the month is nearing a 12-inch total rain fall! I must add that we did have a few warm days but with only about 6 days of full sun all month, they really didn’t stand out.

Old Rec Hall tired floor…

Now to get back to that sentence about “high hopes” that I left dangling at the top of this article; I had been hoping that this would be the fall that I could get back to replacing more of the old, tired, and rusty screens found on a few of the cabins, and most exciting of all I was hoping to get the last of the bike trails in the CNBT system cut through the woods and a reroute of ‘Maureen’s Crossing’ to the backside of the Axman village cabins. But the continually rainy weather stopped those hopes from ever getting off the ground, though I did get to walk and plan the Maureen’s reroute on one of our few dry days.

…and new!

Instead of being out and about, we ended up working under the cover of the rec-hall for most of the month. We got all of the rec hall furniture re-footed and stored and did the post season floor cleanings. We had so many rain days this month that we were able to replace a substantial amount of cracked and worn out tile of the kitchen floor. It rained so much that I personally was able to pull up and replace 60 square feet of tile. Unfortunately, we also exposed some major subfloor rot in another section of the kitchen, and are still in the process of addressing the issues we exposed. Personally, I’m hoping we have run out of rainy days and we can put finishing the indoor projects off for a while.

Looking forward to getting dry and outside, it’s Caretaker Joe At Camp.

The 2020 Camp Season Will Begin June 18th!

The 2020 Camp Season Will Begin June 18th!

We’re already getting excited for the 2020 season here in our winter office! Although last summer still is fresh in our minds, we’re busy preparing for next summer. Our dates for the 2020 season are as follows:

Session                                       Start                                              End
New Staff Orientation         Thursday, June 11
Staff Orientation                  Friday, June 12                                  Wednesday, June 17
Full Season                            Thursday, June 18                             Tuesday, August 11
First Session                           Thursday, June 18                             Tuesday, July 14
Second Session                    Thursday, July 16                               Tuesday, August 11
Family Camp                        Thursday, August 13                         Wednesday, August 19

Cabin Photos are June 20th – practice your silly pose now!

How well do you know Camp… during the winter?

How well do you know Camp… during the winter?

At the end of each season our Caretakers, with the help of the Family Camp crew, put camp “to bed.” All sorts of things end up in wacky places — do you think you can identify each winter storage picture? Reveal the answers after each picture!

Climbing wall bench leaning on climbing anchors, located at the climbing wall

Axeman village windmill, located under the Axeman Push Shack awning

Keeper pontoon bench and AK’s (decorative) lifesaver, located in the Herb Hollinger museum

Stacked Rec Hall chairs, located inside the Rec Hall

Covered friendship fire bench, located in front of the Big House

Sunday Service bench leaning on a tree, located in front of the Chuck Hirsch Shrine

C-Scow loaded on its trailer, located under the Target Shooting shelter

H-Dock lane lines, located on the floor of the waterfront shack

Covered old fire bell, located next to the Big House porch

Stacked H-Dock sections, located at the beach

The Project Board, located in the Grundy Undy

Celebrate Another Summer with CFN and CNSF Support

Celebrate Another Summer with CFN and CNSF Support

CAMPERSHIPS FOR NEBAGAMON

Truly Making Camp A Place of Welcome For All

Founded in 1995, Camperships For Nebagamon (CFN) supports children who otherwise would not be able to enjoy a private camping experience. These children, from a diversity of backgrounds, enjoy life-changing experiences and enrich the camp community with their diverse cultural perspectives. CFN aims to support campers for multiple years, giving them sustained access to a summer community in which to build friendships and identity.

Leveraging income from the Muggs and Janet Lorber Endowment Fund and individual donations, CFN currently provides partial tuition for nearly 50 boys attending Camp Nebagamon each year. Since 2002, CFN has also funded partial tuition for girls attending Camp WeHaKee, located in the Chequamegon National Forest of northern Wisconsin. As funds allow, CFN plans to identify other “partner” camps to fulfill its charitable goals.

Utilizing an annual evaluation process, CFN’s board has been heartened by the positive impact of its funding on individual campers and the broader camp communities.

CFN depends upon continued contributions to sustain current campership levels and to be able to increase the aid available each year (both to keep up with the rising costs of private camps and to increase, as possible, the number of camperships provided each summer).

CAMP NEBAGAMON SCHOLARSHIP FUND

A Path Toward Success for Disadvantaged Children

The Camp Nebagamon Scholarship Fund provides life-changing camping experiences for children who live with poverty in their homes and communities, and/or physical, cognitive or psychological disabilities. Contributions to the CN Scholarship Fund support tuition scholarships at non-profit camps uniquely qualified to change the lives of such children through recreation, friendship and experiences that cultivate skills and values needed for success in life.

Thousands of children who face such challenges have attended camps near their homes—near many cities where Nebagamon campers live—thanks to the generosity of Nebagamon alumni and friends. Founded in 1947 by Muggs and Janet Lorber, the CN Scholarship Fund was administered by Nardie and Sally Lorber Stein for over 50 years.

Contributions will benefit both originations and are tax deductible.

For more information visit https://cncharities.org/virtual-keylog/  

Congratulations to our October Birthdays!

Congratulations to our October Birthdays!

October 3rd – Jacob Laytin, Patrick Pierce

4th – William Slaguero

5th – Ben Laytin

7th Jonathan Burbul

8th – Luis Gonzalez-Xochihua

9th – Kai Ruwitch

15th – Jack Connelly, Elliott Egan

16th – Tyler Gray, JT Hornick, Sam Owens

18th – Ryder Meisel

20th – Sam Montag

21st – Jonathan Schiff-Lewin

22nd – Tony Bogolub

23rd – Charlie Steinbaum

25th – Bradley Rittenberg, Noah Swanson

26th – Noah Meltzer, Jake Powers, William Wyden

27th – Jasper Braunschweiger, Peter Kallos, Jonah Rontal, Josh Wells

28th – Patrick Meehan

29th – Evan Friedman, Ben Lindy, Charlie Peters

30th – Ben Bakal