Blog
Blog

Woodchuck — Mount Washington and More

Good evening from the Realm! Today we had a few exciting trips leaving camp. First, the saxons and scribes woke up early to embark on one of our favorite traditions, climbing Mount Washington! They left at 6:30 in the morning and spent the entire day on the mountain. Even though there were clouds and wind, the sky brightened as the Saxons and Scribes made their way back down the mountain. This evening, after arriving back to camp, they enjoyed a splendid pizza dinner. They jumped off the busses feeling happy, accomplished, and also maybe a bit sore!

While the scraxons were out climbing, we also took our eight youngest groups to the Sanford Mainers’ baseball game in Sanford, Maine. We all boarded 10 vans and one big yellow school bus and travelled to the ballpark. The kids were able get fun snacks while watching the minor league game. It was a great game, and the highlight was when our co-head of boys camp threw the first pitch. Everyone cheered him on as he walked up to the mound to officially begin the baseball game. He was a celebrity!

We are so happy to be able to get the campers out of camp again, having fun in every corner of New Hampshire and Maine. Spirits are high after another amazing day in the Realm.

Goodnight from CRH!

 

Woodchuck — Today in The Realm

Today was a sunny day packed with activities here at the Realm! We started the morning with the Jesters, Bards, and Shires setting off at 9:00 am for a few rounds of mini golf. Our 13 and under boys tennis team departed at 9:30 for Camp Birchmont. The boys had a victorious day winning the singles tournament, the doubles tournament and both consolation brackets. They will have their names inscribed on the Lakes Region Championship Trophy. Basically this is our Wimbledon! In other news Robin Hood hosted our annual !5 and under boys basketball tournament today. Robin Hood beat Kenwood and Wigwam and then lost in a very close final to West End by three points.  They are our biggest rival. The campers are always chanting BEAT WEST END in the dining hall. Now we will just have to practice harder and go beat them in their own facility when we play at “The House” very soon! Gymnastics was the featured activity on the quad today. We had crash mats and balance beams and uneven bars spread out in the sunshine for the kids to enjoy. They had so much fun tumbling in the fresh air. The waterfront was rocking and we had lots of kids skiing and swimming and sailing, but the highlights there today occurred during evening activity when the arrows did a pyjama jump and the scribes enjoyed a sunset paddleboard.

The highlight of my day today had to be the arrival of a few of our alumni with babies in tow. I remember when their moms were campers and it literally seems like yesterday. We got to catch up, play a little, laugh a lot, and it was just what the doctor ordered!! I know that it is a matter of time before I look at a group list and their names will be on it. Then they will be participating in all of the milestones at camp – being in the junior camp talent show, then playing in the big West End game, writing Scribe and Saxon speeches, becoming first year aides and group leaders and color war captains. And then I will blink and they will be starting their own families. Time simply flies by! Every year at the start of the season I hang a few more pictures over my desk of the babies that were born in the “off season”. I love looking up from my computer and seeing their little faces smiling down at me. That is what this is all about – lifelong friendship, beautiful memories, and even more beautiful little people who I hope to get to see for two months every year for as long as I possibly can!

Sweet Dreams from the Realm –

Michelle

Woodchuck — Robin Hood Gives Back Day

 

Today was give back day in the Realm, and boy did our kids enjoy giving back!  The idea behind this day is to take some time to reflect on how lucky we are to be able to enjoy all that camp has to offer, to enjoy each other,  and to get immersed in our little world where we can quite easily forget the real world and its issues for a little while. As we have done every summer since 2012 we celebrate and call attention to the notion of giving back to our community and to the world in many different and creative ways. This year Matt from World of Change came over to help us with all of that. He arrived with his custom pick-up truck that has a little chalet-style coin depository on the back. There are six individual coin slots on the back representing six different charitable categories including food, housing, health care, animal care, education and  play. He made his way to the stage and in a very engaging manner he talked to our kids about the difference every one of them could make with their spare change. He told us that Americans have  millions of dollars of spare change in their homes. He told them that one in five children suffered from food insecurity in the United States, and that a quarter could buy one of them a meal. Matt talked about how we can help provide backpacks with school supplies for children in need with their spare change, buy beds and help provide housing, provide access to health care and even help animals in shelters. He got them thinking about what kind of a charity they would donate to, if they had the opportunity. Then we armed them with hundreds of quarters and let them do just that! They decided which category they wanted to fund and began. They were very deliberate in their choices and honestly put a lot of thought into it as they put the quarters in the slots. We were so proud of them. At one point a little boy dropped a quarter on the ground by accident. His friend picked it up, handed it to him and said “Hey that’s a meal you just dropped on the ground!” The message had definitely landed well. They all received bracelets from World of Change with the email address printed on it in the event that they would want to get the World of Change van to come to their school for a community service opportunity at home.  In the event that you would like to know more about WOC here is their website https://www.worldofchange.world. I am so grateful to be part of this process that inspires and empowers kids to help others, even in small ways, like with their spare change. I am a very proud camp mom today.
Love,
Michelle

Woodchuck — A Return to The Realm

When you get a phone call in January asking you to return to a place that is held most dear in your heart after almost 22 years, a lot of things go through your mind. “What will it be like there?” “How much has it changed?” But the most pressing question for me was clear from the moment I agreed to return and coach baseball for Robin Hood: “What if upon my return, somehow, I discover that the memories I hold so dear are more wishful remembrance than reality?”

For almost 7 months prior to camp opening for season 96, up to and including the 11 ½ hour drive from Cleveland to Freedom, I found myself filled with so many emotions–excitement, anxiety, uncertainty and most of all, hope. Amazingly, the moment I made the left hand turn onto 65 Robin Hood Lane, every bit of nervousness and stress vanished. Driving past Friedman Field then the main soccer pitch made the greatest years of my life rush back to me in an instant. By the time I reached the office, I was a child again in his most sacred of places on this Earth!

Within hours I was walking around meeting new people. I found myself staring directly into faces that I knew. Not because we had ever met before, but because those were the exact same faces I went to camp with, just one generation further down the line. 

The Boys Camp, still in the bunks I had slept in, still have our names on the cabin walls.  Girls Camp, of which I was a camper during its creation, is now thriving in every way possible. Those original ladies of 1987 “who dared” must be so proud!

My first evening I met several campers who were very homesick, just as I was as an Archer in 1986. I assured each one that when I check back with them in a few days, it is going to take the army to get them to leave this place. 

Once settled in, it was time to get to work! With 6 activity periods a day, we got groups attending baseball and softball. All ages and skill levels were coming. WIthin days I observed campers who had never held a bat hitting line drives to the outfield and boys and girls who didn’t know how to put on a glove making phenomenal catches! I saw smiles, teamwork, increased self confidence, competitive spirit and above all else, young men and women making what I assure will be lifelong friends. 

When Peter asked me a few days in what I thought regarding camp, I could only think of one way to describe it: “somehow Robin Hood is completely different, yet it is exactly the same.” The campers I attended with are gone. Only a small handful of staff from my days remain. Some new structures have been erected while some familiar ones have been repurposed. But in the end, none of that matters because somehow, someway, against all odds, the Magic In The Trees is just as strong as it ever was when I was one of Robin Hood’s “Merry Men.” 

P.S. By the way, those homesick campers I mentioned earlier? It would take a great plastic surgeon and a lot of money to remove the smiles from their faces 10 days in! As suspected! The Magic In The Trees!

David “Perly” Perlmuter