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Tag Archives: Camp Trail Blazer.

Learning Life Skills: Part Four.

18 Sunday Oct 2015

Posted by Yu/stan/kema in Article., Photos, Poetry, Psychology, spirituality

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Article by Yu/stan/kema., Camp Trail Blazer., Decentralized camping., Learning life skills., Photo by Yu/stan/kema., Pinterest photo- campfire., survival skills, Trail Blazer Camp song.

The long, yellow buses full of excited campers swung into view. I sat with the other counselors, filled with anxiety and excitement. Did I know enough, I wondered, about children? My co-worker and I would be responsible for eight children in the wilderness who had very little exposure to the woods. Eight little strangers and two counselors would form a family unit working, sleeping, relating in a small camp with the basic necessities of life. No TV, no radios for three weeks. We would depend on each other for protection, safety, food, water, bedding, shelter, and fire to keep warm at night. My co-worker and I would teach them essential knowledge for living, and develop in them a sense of belonging and loyalty, and the desire to give so that every one could feel cared for, and respected by the others. It seemed like a lot to accomplish in a short period of time.

The children got off the buses and we were all divided into small camps of ten people. We listened to an introduction speech and had our campers carry their suitcases out to small camp where the tepees stood. It was fascinating to watch their faces when they saw where they would live for weeks. Our camp was called Awanasa. We gave them time to acclimate to their surroundings and then we led them to the campfire circle, the hub of the small camp. I looked around at these little beings and was fascinated by their diversity. Two Black children came from Harlem. Several were Italian. One was Irish, one Polish, one Puerto Rican, and one was from New Jersey.

Taken by Yu/stan/kema in 1969 at Camp Trail Blazer.

Taken by Yu/stan/kema in 1969 at Camp Trail Blazer.

They were tired, lonely, and homesick. We introduced ourselves and asked them what bothered them most or what frightened them at that minute, and we gave them answers and reassurance that all was going to be ok. They could rely on us to help them. We went over our routine for the next day and took them to the Dining Hall for a hot meal. We hiked back to the small camp, helped them get ready for bed, took them to the latrines, and got their beds ready for the night. We huddled around a campfire and taught them camp songs, told stories, identified night sounds, and said something positive about the day, and went to bed.

At dawn we got up, dressed, took them to the Dining hall for breakfast, and spent the rest of the day in small camp: learning how to cook, clean-up, chop wood, look for firewood on the ground. We learned to work together, sing together, and live as a family. We had our tough moments, but most of the moments were filled with laughter, affirmations, affection, patience, and acceptance. I learned that children will learn anything if you make it fun, amaze them, and do it with them. They learn best through stories and moving their bodies. They respond to honesty, openness, and kindness. They will do difficult things if they respect you. If you are genuine and real to them, you will win their hearts forever and they will fill your own heart with joy and love.

I came to love these kids like my own and I still think of them from time to time. They were incredible human beings who had courage and the ability to be kind and caring to others. I spent five summers as a camp counselor and those years encouraged me to become a teacher, and a social worker in the years that followed. I have not forgotten the survival skills I learned back then. I still have a love for the outdoors and sing the camp songs, only now I sing them to my dogs as they settle down for the night. The values of that magical place still live within me. The attribute of giving remains with me always.

Yu/stan/kema                                                                           

Found on Pinterest on 10-10-15. Campfires.

Found on Pinterest on 10-10-15. Campfires.

Camp Song at Trail Blazer Camp

Where my caravan has rested,

Flowers I leave you on the grass.

All the flowers of love and memories,

You will see them when you pass…..

Learning Life Skills. Part Two

17 Saturday Oct 2015

Posted by Yu/stan/kema in Article., Photos, Stories

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Article written by Yu/stan/kema, Camp Trail Blazer., Decentralized camping., Google+ photos, Learning life skills., Nature lore., Photos from scrap book., survival skills

14-1-cardinals.Nov.23,14. Found on Google+

14-1-cardinals.Nov.23,14. Found on Google+

The next day, I woke up to the sounds of the forest.  I heard Cardinals calling out “cheer” to each other, and a  Rufous-sided Towhee bird say, “drink your tea.”  I heard a Wren shaking a box of bird notes in its throat.  A Hermit Thrush made  flute-like sounds. Chipmunks were rustling underneath the dead leaves that lay on the forest floor. Squirrel’s raced down trees to hide near by. I threw back my blankets and got tangled up in my mosquito net. I got free and slipped my feet into my shoes and ran to the latrine. Cold air hit my backside, and I shivered in the early dawn. So many interesting objects surrounded me. I laughed because I was standing where I had always wanted to be, in a forest.

Photo taken by Yu/stan/kema in 1969 at Trail Blazer Camp. Mosquito net on a cot.

Photo taken by Yu/stan/kema in 1969 at Trail Blazer Camp. Mosquito net on a cot.

Photo taken by Yu/stan/kema at Camp Trail Blazer, 1969. Forest.

Photo taken by Yu/stan/kema at Camp Trail Blazer, 1969. Forest.

I breathed in the forest smells, and loved the coolness of the wind against my cheeks. I dressed myself in sturdy leather shoes, jeans, a long-sleeved shirt, and a sweater. Later, when the day warmed up, I would be removing a layer of clothes, to pull on some shorts. I made my bed to keep the insects and small animals from nesting in the sheets. The mosquito net also protected the cot I had slept on.

I and the rest of the counselors walked up the long winding trail to the dinning hall for breakfast. We ate a lot of food and started orientation on small camp living: cleaning chores; things to build before the campers arrived; how to swing an ax, saw wood with a Swedish and Bow saw; how to stack and store wood for cooking, campfires, and drying out wet clothes; how to plan menus, make out a grocery list, find and buy the food at the camp store; how to pack the food and get it out to small camp; and how to set up a place to store food until cooking it. We learned how to make structures out of tree branches, saplings, and binder’s twine. We made a dribbling can out of a big tin can with a hole in it and a whittled piece of wood. It was an important piece of equipment for a small camp. We had soap to wash our hands and the dribbling can to rinse them and other surfaces that needed cleaning. We were given chemicals to clean the latrines, and brooms to sweep the floors. Every thing was to be kept clean.

We learned the skills necessary for survival and the campers would learn the skills from us. The Big Dipper and the Little Dipper were for showers. The lake was for swimming and fishing. I was not good at fishing, or unhooking slimy fish. I certainly did not want to kill  them. I let other people do that. We learned quickly that raccoons could unscrew lids on jars. They loved jars of peanut butter, and honey, We hoisted them up in the air or built structures to keep the raccoons out. ( Continued in Part Three.)

Yu/stan/kema

Found on Google on 8-12-15.

Found on Google on 8-12-15.

Learning Life Skills, Part One.

11 Sunday Oct 2015

Posted by Yu/stan/kema in Article., photo, Stories

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Article written by Yu/stan/kema, Camp Trail Blazer., Kittatinny Mountains in New Jersey, Learning life skills., Outdoor skills., Photo by Yu/stan/kema., Small camp living.

Found in my scrapbook. Taken by Yu/stan/kema in summer of 1969.

Found in my scrapbook. Taken by Yu/stan/kema in summer of 1969.

My experiences as a camp counselor in New Jersey were very valuable to me. It was there that I learned all kinds of life skills. I had lived a very sheltered life from ten to eighteen years of age. The only place I had traveled to was a college in Oklahoma. It was a Christian college. I had no car and rarely left the campus.

When I traveled on a bus to Port Authority in New York City, I was truly on my own and totally free. It was strange to taste freedom after all those years. From New York City, I traveled by car to a Camp in the Kittatinny Mountains of New Jersey. It was nestled in a forest by a lake. My luggage was lost on the way. I was dressed in a dress and shoes not suitable for hiking in the woods. The camp staff took me to a storage room and outfitted me in slacks, shirts, poncho, and sturdy hiking shoes. I was given a “ditty bag” made of canvas to carry only the essentials: a big pocket knife, a compass, a tin cup, and a pen. I left my own belongings in a storage box. From there, I was taken to the lodge to meet the Director and the other counselors for orientation. We were assigned to small camps and for two weeks, we lived as the campers would live, close to nature with the bare essentials. We slept in tepees, round-tos, covered wagons, and lean-tos.

I was assigned to the small camp of Awanasa and lived in a tepee for three months. I slept in a single bed covered with several army blankets, a pillow, sheets, and a mosquito net that hung down over my bed. I would discover the nights were cold and the mosquitos plentiful when dusk fell. I shared the tepee with other counselors. I drank from a tin cup I carried in my “ditty bag.” Drinking water was stored in a large tin can that had a hole drilled in the side of it, close to the bottom. A whittled stick was pushed in the hole. When I wanted a drink, I went and pulled the stick in and a stream of water dribbled out. It was called a “dribble can.” If I needed to go to the bathroom, I used a latrine. It was a small wooden structure with a door. Inside was a wooden seat with a hole in it. The first night was spent around a campfire. I was taught how to identify the sounds of animals in the forest, what the names of the stars were, and how to orient oneself if lost in the woods. I learned campfire songs I would later teach to the campers when they arrived. They were positive, inspirational songs. I went to sleep hearing the birds settle down for the night. The sounds of the locusts and frogs filled the air. (To be continued in Part Two.)

Yu/stan/kema

Special Tribute To A Special Lady I Once Knew.

11 Sunday Oct 2015

Posted by Yu/stan/kema in Article., Photos, spirituality, Stories

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Tags

Camp Director., Camp Trail Blazer., children, Kittatinny Mountains in New Jersey, Pictures taken by Yu/stan/kema, Pinterest photo- campfire., Tribute to a lady.

Found in my scrapbook. Taken by Yu/stan/kema in summer of 1969.

Found in my scrapbook. Taken by Yu/stan/kema in summer of 1969.

A long time ago in the Kittatinny Mountains of New Jersey, an Executive Director of A Camp for Disadvantaged kids sent out a call for people to apply for a camp counselor job. A young, unexperienced kid from Kansas sent her application in. She had never left Kansas except for traveling to Oklahoma to go to college. She knew a lot about nature, and the psychology of children. She hopped on a bus to New York City that summer in route to Camp Trail Blazer in New Jersey.

She arrived at the camp in the pouring rain and walked across uneven rocky ground to the lodge where other counselors were waiting to start orientation. She met the Director who was tall and looked part Indian. Her face was weathered, and freckles were sprinkled across her cheeks and nose. Her eyes were dark as midnight and they snapped with mischief and good humor. She smiled a very gentle smile. She carried an air of authority that was mixed with a liberal dose of compassion. Her love for the camp and her respect for us was very clear. One got a sense that she was very wise about nature and human nature. She told us all about the camp and its mission: to help children learn survival skills, learn team work, develop healthy relationships with others, and develop character.  The children would be exposed to Nature and learn all kinds of things about hiking, taking care of burros, cutting down and chopping wood with an ax and saw, making campfires, building things out of saplings and binder’s twine, and how to survive in the forest if you were lost. They were also encouraged to develop their own idea of spirituality. Eight campers were distributed to each small camp- one being a camp with tepees. They warmed themselves with campfires they built and learned to shop for food, prepare, and cook it, and serve it. Other campers washed dishes and cleaned up.

Found on Pinterest on !0-10-15. Campfire.

Found on Pinterest on !0-10-15. Campfire.

The children and counselors would sit around the campfire and discuss chores, give affirmations to one another and share any problems they might have. Spiritual songs were sung, star constellations pointed out, and the sounds of animals in the darkness were explained and fears eased.

Every person pitched in no matter what the task. Campers and counselors were family. They had responsibilities in the small camp. They learned to accept each others flaws, how to forgive, and how to trust and love. Every one grew emotionally and spiritually. The Camp Director, Lois, built campfires, chopped wood, and did other chores too. The children adored her. She would read poetry to them around the fire at night and every one would be mesmerized by the experience. The camp counselors loved the wild flower hikes with her, and she would tell us all about the history of the mountains, the trees, birds, and other aspects of nature.

Picture taken by Yu/stan/kema in 1969. Kittatinny Mountains in New Jersey. Lessons on wildflowers, taught by Lois.

Picture taken by Yu/stan/kema in 1969.
Kittatinny Mountains in New Jersey. Lessons on wildflowers, taught by Lois.

This lady reinforced my love for the outdoors, encouraged my love for poetry and writing, and she increased my beliefs about goodness, fairness, respect for others, and hope for the future. She was a Christian, and she lived her religion in all that she did. The love of God flowed from her into others. She died a long time ago, but she had an incredible influence on my life. I was fortunate to have her life cross mine.

Yu/stan/kema

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