Sunday, June 10, 2007

Bears over Bugs please!

Friday afternoon I headed up to Girl's Camp for the night with our YW President. Can you believe this gal forgot the camera. Eeek! I'll tell ya - camping in the backwoods of Tennessee is significantly different than camping in the mountains of Idaho.
1...Bugs (they are GIGANTIC here). I hardly slept at all for fear there were creepy crawlers on me. We even stayed in a cabin which had been bombed the week before. But the sight of dead buggies was not comforting. And we had a moth the size of a large grapefruit attempting to get in our door. Yes - we shrieked and our president sprayed it with hairspray to try to scare it off. I'm sure we were quite a sight. But I do have to report that I didn't get a single mosquito bite which may be good evidence that my Clean & Fresh OFF! worked.

2...Humidity & Heat. In Idaho we wore heavy coats at night around the campfire and we drank hot chocolate. We bundled up in our sleeping bags and took Wool blankets. In Tennessee we borrowed a huge fan from the lodge and opened all the windows and hoped for a cool breeze. It was too hot for a blanket. And there were no campfires if you can even believe that. What is camping without nice yummy smores!

3...Food. In Idaho we cooked our food as a ward over a fire or dutch ovens. Half the time we probably burned it, but it generally was semi-tasty. At this camp in Tennessee they had a kitchen with cooks who prepared all the meals. It was interesting to have lasagna, toasted bread, grapes, and salad for supper.

4...Camping? I admit that having A-frame cabins(due to the Idaho bear population), a swimming pool (dirty as it was), potties and showers isn't exactly roughing it, but it was semi-camping I suppose. At this camp in Tennessee, they had a water moccasin infested lake, canoeing, horse-back riding (cool huh!), archery, potties and showers, and a lodge. Does anyone learn lashing or tieing knots anymore??? We need MaryLou to pass on this tradition.

But despite all the differences really - it was fun to go up and see the girls so happy and silly. We had the bishops for dinner and they had a testimony meeting which was super. So, I'm glad I went, but was reminded why we are not a camping family at this point in time. If I ever decide to be a camper, I think we'll have to invest in a trailer or a cabin in the Idaho mountains where there are fewer bugs and it is cooler. But you've gotta love girls camp with all the silly songs and smiles and love. Yodelah-ee-doo-ee-doo-ee!

3 comments:

Amy D. said...

nice comparison and contrast to idaho girl's camp!

Wade said...

Welcome to the way the other half does summer camp. Think of the bugs as just curiosities. Except for a few very devious species, most of them have no idea where they are going and happen to wander into your territory. I had a wasp living in my house for a whole day: my first impulse was to devise a method to smash it before it knew what was going on, but I would have damaged the blinds in the process, and might have missed. So I waited, and it waited. Then at lunch time today it became restless, so I opened the door and it left. Om.

Wade said...

Have you read _Life of Pi_? It will change your view of most creatures.