18-hour days
Derrill is the DARE officer with the Heard County Sheriff’s
Department. June Jackson, another volunteer leader, and Ellen
Nowicki, my co-worker, were in the girls’ cabin. Chris Nowicki, a
4-H teen leader, helped us all out.
We had 18-hour days last week, from about 6:30 in the morning
until we got them to go to sleep, which was usually about 12:30
a.m. That makes for especially long days at a camp like Rock
Eagle because it’s so big.
The camp itself is spread out over 110 acres. From cabin 54, the
one farthest away from everything, to the 4-H office, is about a
quarter-mile. And if you travel by the road around the camp,
you’re going to travel about 2 miles.
1,000 4-H’ers at camp
The thousand 4-H’ers at camp, mostly 5th- and 6th-graders, were
assigned to groups of about 15 or so. They changed to a different
class or activity, led by one of about 65 counselors, every hour
or two. So we spent our days going to the different classes and
activities along with the 4-H’ers.
I was with a group of Blue Strings, or the ones who have been to
camp before. We sailed on the 110-acre lake, climbed 45 feet up
into the trees to ride the zip-line at the high ropes course,
worked together to conquer the low ropes course, built a homemade
raft and floated it to “Gilligan’s Island,” went canoeing,
climbed to the top of the climbing wall and caught all kinds of
little critters in the Lake Ecology class.
Two huge swimming pools
And for fun we went swimming in one of two huge swimming pools,
one of which has a water slide.
Derrill was with a group of Red Strings all week. They’re the
younger, first-year campers. Another group is known as the White
Strings. They’re first-year campers, too, but may be a little
older than the Red Strings. Both groups had their own agenda for
the week.
One of the favorite classes of the Red and White Strings was
herpetology, better known as the “Snake Class.” It was a favorite
for the boys because it was taught by a beautiful, blonde
counselor named Devon.
A long, long way
All of these classes and activities took place from one end of
Rock Eagle Camp to the other. And that’s a long, long way,
especially when you have to walk everywhere.
But I learned a long time ago to carry my bike, and I told
Derrill to bring one, too. We rode between 4 and 5 miles every
day keeping up with the campers and counselors, and in our other
duties.
But every day, about 5 o’clock in the evening, when all the
campers were in the cabins meeting with their counselors, Derrill
and I would park our bikes and set out in front of our cabins.
Derrill would get out his guitar, and I’d get out my banjo, and
for the next hour we’d play.
The quarter-flipping
Derrill is a better guitarist than I am a banjo player, so we
mostly played the songs that I could play.
This is where all the quarter-flipping started.
You see, the kids on their way to supper (or if you prefer,
dinner) had to pass by us. And many of them would stop, take a
picture of us and flip mostly quarters into my open banjo
case.
We made all of $3.15 and had a great time.