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Saturday, August 23, 2008
Where Does It All Go?
We have some staff who are part of our
pre-camp or post-camp "work crew". That's when staff either come to
camp early or stay later to help us move all of our equipment into place.
Because CK-NJ is on a college campus, we
have to move most of our program equipment and supplies to offsite storage
lockers at the end of the season. It seems like everything just
disappears because it happens so quickly. But in reality, with the
amazing organizational talents of Jeremy, much of the equipment travels a
few miles down the road (just past our corn fields, in fact) to Locker 615
and Locker 617 in Mansfield, NJ.
You wouldn't believe how jammed full these locker are once Jeremy directs
the crew as to the right packing techniques. Items range from the
extremely heavy skate park pieces to the gazillion fans we use in our dorm
rooms to sports equipment, swimming noodles, art supplies, health center
furniture, phones, chairs, props and costumes, sports trophies,
refrigerators, archery targets, linens, camping equipment, Stu's favorite
pencils that he uses to plan our our Camper Choice programs every day, and
the secret recipe for Frito Pie. |



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There it all
stays until a day in early June when Jeremy rents the truck again and
recruits another work crew to bring everything out and set it up for another
summer at camp. How many days left until that happens?
Tom
Monday,
August 18, 2008
Empty Camp
After the
campers left on Friday and the crying subsided, all the staff worked
incredibly hard to pack away everything and do some final cleaning. We
had a farewell banquet late Friday night, which included a great slide show
retrospective of the summer put together by Jeremy. Then most of
the staff each took a few moments to share what they think will be their
most special memories of the summer. Seeing the slides and hearing the
staff speak was a dramatic and emotional way to realize exactly what we
accomplished here this summer. After a very late night campfire on the
Anderson (sorry, Clifford) field, bagels and juice were served out on the
quad early Saturday morning and it was, unfortunately, time for our
wonderful staff to pack themselves up and head off to their next adventures.
Saturday night we had just a small work crew to finish things up; the crew
completed those final end-of season tasks by late Sunday (including letting
Jeremy talk us into lunch at White Castle), and then it was time for Jeremy
and I to say goodbye to them: Paula, Emma, Stevey and Matt.
Camp
seems so quiet after everyone has left. I stayed here last night, the
only CK person on campus. I went out to the corn field just as
darkness was descending on the valley. Our field is not yet ready to
harvest, so I'll have to come back later to taste the results. This
picture shows "our field", the one we used to measure the passing of time
this summer. I thought it was appropriate to show the field with no
people in the photo because that's how camp is now, empty of camp people.
I then returned to campus to catch a final picture in the quad before the
sun set. And I just sat there for a while, remembering all that had
happened in that quad this summer, all the campers and staff who had spent
many happy days there. And I felt great because I knew it was an
awesome summer.
Now
it's Monday morning. I got up very early to move my last few things
out of our Van Winkle office and I'm about to close up my dorm room and head
out. I'll walk through the quad one last time and drive past the corn
field. I'll remember the practically barren field of early June and
those first few days when we arrived at camp and started to set it up for
the season. And I'll remember the corn field changing dramatically
every week while at camp we kept having more and more fun, making more and
more friends, and wondering how a summer could be any better than this.
The end result out at the fields will be corn to eat and perhaps forage for
cattle. The end result at camp, however, isn't known yet. Even
though we know that we made lots of friends and had incredibly huge amounts
of fun, we don't know completely how camp has affected our lives; just that
it has and it will be a long time, if ever, that we forget the CK-NJ Summer
of '08.
Tom
Sunday,
August 10, 2008
Predictable
Not much of a surprise out
in the fields this week. The corn stalks are about the same height as
last week and the ears of corn are a little longer and a lot fatter.
Just as we knew it would happen. Very exciting, but very predictable.
At camp we had another very exciting week, but it was far from predictable.
We like to think of ourselves as organized the way we run our camp.
But I have to admit that being organized and being able to predict what's
actually going to happen week-to-week are two different things. When
we planned out this summer, who knew which activities would be most popular
with the campers? Who knew what new ideas would come up from the staff
and campers for activities, special programs and tournaments? Who knew
that ga-ga would get an earth shaking new rule? Who knew that we would
learn several fun facts every day? Who knew how the personalities of
the counselors would mesh as they formed their co-working teams for the
summer? Who knew what songs we would sing, what acts we would see at
shows, what artistic creations would spring forth? Besides knowing
that we would have Frito pie every other week and that we would be gathering
around our sundial before every activity, who knew what was really going to
happen this summer?
Nobody. The fun of this summer -- of
every CK summer -- is how unpredictable it is.
But we did predict that it would be fun and we were right. As we
trekked out to the corn fields, Jeremy and I talked about the fact that
there's only one more week of camp to go. We're sad that the end is
now in sight, but we are very happy that this unpredictable summer has ended
up predictably wonderful.
Soon we'll be able to eat those sweet ears
of corn, the predictable outcome of the amazing process of growth. And
when the corn is all gone, we'll think about next summer and be glad that
the farmer will plant the fields and we'll have corn once again. The
story will be the same.
Soon we'll be saying goodbye to this camp season, but the stories we tell
will be different from every other summer. There never was a summer
like this and there never will be again. It's the predictable result
of a most unpredictable summer.
Tom
Sunday,
August 3, 2008
All
the same?
The ears of corn are growing
rapidly. This week they look like they are about half the size they
need to be for harvest. All is well in the fields.
As Jeremy and I gazed at "our field" and looked across the many acres of other
fields in this part of town, I thought about how it all looks the same,
which is kind of cool. It's like huge carpets of corn, lush green with
light yellow tassels. And when the breeze blows, you can see it travel
across the fields like waves. Very pretty. But very hard to tell
one corn field from the next, one row from another, one stalk from its
neighbors.
This summer I've been thinking about how the lessons of the corn fields
apply to camp, but this week I'm thinking how different camp is from this
beautiful uniformity. For we certainly are not an anonymous blend of
look-alike campers and staff. On the contrary, we are each very
distinct individuals; you might even say a hodge podge of different people.
Camp is a place where we actually encourage people to be themselves and to
stand out from the crowd. Take a look at our community when we're in
the quad or gathered for announcements and your eye moves from person to
person, noticing each one's individual traits. It's definitely not a
blend of identical people. Probably the only time we look alike is
when we're on a day trip and we are all wearing camp t-shirts, which is for
safety reasons when we're out in the public. There are camps, which
you may know, that always want their campers and/or staff to be wearing camp
shirts and it does look sort of neat. But I would miss the wonderful
mix of colors and styles if we did that at CK-NJ.
We also have campers and staff with many different interests because we are
not just a sports camp or music camp or whatever. So when you look at
the daily schedule of activities that all the campers have chosen, it's a
great big mixture of everything. And that makes camp lots of fun.
I think we have a beautiful camp because of our diversity. It may not
be as orderly as a perfectly planted corn field, but it's much more
interesting. As we get ready tomorrow to welcome more new campers
we're excited to see all the different types that will step off the busses.
It's going to be a great week at camp (and probably out in the fields too).
Tom
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