Camping Days

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Lifestyle

My son and daughter in law and another couple are camping near Lake George this weekend.  He tells me after they park the car there is a canoe waiting for them by the shore.   They have to pack the canoe with all of their equipment, and paddle to a small uninhaited island, and that is where they unload and set up camp and stay for the weekend.

 

The last time he went, he said, there were no paddles in the canoe so they had to find some suitable driftwood to use as make shift paddles, and by then it was dark. 

 

There is something the sounds appealing in this, but I am not quite sure.   Years ago I was an avid camper.   I camped in Europe, out west, in national parks, and all over the northeast.   I was fully equipped with a stove, lantern, hatchet, etc.   Josh still has my trusty 30 year old six person canvass tent that we used when he was a little boy.

 

I wonder these days if I am too cranky to go camping.  The cold, the hot, the hard ground, the bugs, and maybe worst of all having to get up and leave the tent in the middle of the night to pee.   Eve will have none of it so I would have to go with the boys.  Or I could stay at the Sagamore.   Let me think about this.

 

 

Comments

Submitted by StephenMichel on Sun, 08/11/2013 - 00:09

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Stephen Michel

I am trying to visualize all 5 of you, with camping gear, in one canoe.
Rona Gura

I used to camp a lot when I was younger. Now "camping" is staying in a hotel at night and going to places where we used to go camping, i.e. Lake Taghonic, during the day. The Sagamore gets my vote.
Shelley Simpson

I'm with Rona. Started camping back in MI and through Canada ... rustic including campfire coffee, then tent and camp stove ... moved on to tent but dinner in restaurants (some pretty good ones) and then hotels.
Fred Klein

I went on a canoe trip once and remember ground being very hard
Corey Bearak

My last camping experience was sitting in for my Dad taking my brother, Robby, to a Boy Scout's outing (Cub Scouts level) when Dad suffered a heart attack. There were bathrooms but no showers. I was not a fan of the experience. I recall helping/ encouraging even the underachieving scouters in Robby's pack achieve all the merit badges they need to become webelos. There was one other outing of that time after Robby became a Scout; I had to rush back the next morning to play Softball at Cantiague Park. The only other adult camping experience was WhiteWater Rafting with friends but there were showers and restrooms.
I feel no need to do that kind of drill; I passed on attending Bonaroo to see Buffalo Springfield (expecting they'd play in NYC but Neil bailed on them to finish his bio project). During High School I camped out to get concert tickets.

Submitted by annecrane on Sun, 08/11/2013 - 12:43

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Anne Crane

I used to camp all the time in the Adirondacks, canoeing to an island. Always wondered why anyone would 'camp" in a camper until I got a camper and then wondered why anyone would camp in a tent. Then my daughter did girl scouts. I like their style of camping - cabins with bathrooms, bunks with mattresses and a gas fireplace. Next week my daughter and I are camping in Maine - in a cottage! Close enough to nature.

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