Anyone who knows me will tell you that I'm weird in a myriad of ways, more than I have time to document or you have desire to read. But the oddity du jour is this: I am as wired and into technology, etc, as any modern computer geek you will find (limited only by the fact that I can't justify spending too much money on gadgets...), but I have a vicious streak of anachronism in me.
I love old things, and doing things the old way. Things that have, to some degree, become passe fascinate me to no end. I have a drawerful of calligraphy equipment, I just purchased a wooden longbow that I plan to use in favor of my modern compound bow, I pretty much prefer an honest-to-goodness paper book to my various e-reader options... the list could go on.
I don't utilize these things all the time. Most days I write with a modern pen (and very particular ones, different for the whatever I'm doing at the time, thank-you-very-much). But sometimes I like to pull out the parchment and a dip pen and ink- heck I might even go whole hog and wax the missive shut with my seal.
I think for me, it's a connection to the past sort of thing... when I write on parchment with said pen, I can't help but think that this was the exact same way Timothy Matlack scritched out "When in the Course of human events...." One doesn't get that same historical mojo with a disposable Bic and a post-it note... my compound bow is a good sight easier to shoot, and shoot accurately, than a bare longbow. But when I draw that traditional bow, I'm in Sherwood Forest or participating in the Battle of Agincourt.
[caption id="attachment_329" align="aligncenter" width="300"]
The oven at Flatbreads... the pizzas sit on stone shelves to the right and left of the fire, inside the dome.[/caption]
So what does this have to do with camp? Simple. This place is the right place to enjoy old school. The camp and surrounding countryside offer ample opportunities to connect to the past. The thought for this blog came to me as we dined at Flatbreads (an artisan pizza joint in North Conway, NH). I was watching them make the pizzas and slide them onto the stone shelves in the oven with long wooden paddles... and as I stared into the fire of the oven, I loved the utter simplicity and timelessness of it.
Now, I know there are wood-fired pizza places elsewhere. But as I ruminated on that fireplace, I began to realize just how much around here touched that same vein in me: the many covered bridges, the simple farms, the last active human-powered water lock for boat passages in the country... and every year I discover more.
And then there's camp. This place permeates with age and connections to the past.
[caption id="attachment_328" align="alignleft" width="300"]
Just so you know... I have *will not* be shooting my longbow in my skivvies[/caption]
All around the dining halls there are murals depicting young men participating in camp activities... and they weren't commissioned last year, if you catch my drift. One of my favorite places is the Alumni lounge, where a century of Color War results adorns the walls and rafters, a mosaic of red and brown arrowheads pointing backwards, tugging us to the memories generated here.
[caption id="attachment_327" align="alignright" width="300"]
Look closely and you can see Brown has won the last 3 years. My boys aim to change that![/caption]
Generations of family men have come here- Allison and I are housed in an unused campers cabin, and every year on Parent's Weekend, we get people knocking on the door, wanting to show their camper the cabin that Dad stayed in when they were little. (And the same thing happened at Forest Acres the year we were there... mom showing daughter!)
Like the old ways I enjoy, camp is not a constant thing. It comes out when it is needed, and we are allowed to reach out and touch, and feel the vibrations of history, and of things simply done and done well. Whether it's a longbow, or tug-of-war, or young men singing a song about the Saco River, we know that we follow in the tracks of those who have done it before.
Let us revel in it....
I love old things, and doing things the old way. Things that have, to some degree, become passe fascinate me to no end. I have a drawerful of calligraphy equipment, I just purchased a wooden longbow that I plan to use in favor of my modern compound bow, I pretty much prefer an honest-to-goodness paper book to my various e-reader options... the list could go on.
I don't utilize these things all the time. Most days I write with a modern pen (and very particular ones, different for the whatever I'm doing at the time, thank-you-very-much). But sometimes I like to pull out the parchment and a dip pen and ink- heck I might even go whole hog and wax the missive shut with my seal.
I think for me, it's a connection to the past sort of thing... when I write on parchment with said pen, I can't help but think that this was the exact same way Timothy Matlack scritched out "When in the Course of human events...." One doesn't get that same historical mojo with a disposable Bic and a post-it note... my compound bow is a good sight easier to shoot, and shoot accurately, than a bare longbow. But when I draw that traditional bow, I'm in Sherwood Forest or participating in the Battle of Agincourt.
[caption id="attachment_329" align="aligncenter" width="300"]
So what does this have to do with camp? Simple. This place is the right place to enjoy old school. The camp and surrounding countryside offer ample opportunities to connect to the past. The thought for this blog came to me as we dined at Flatbreads (an artisan pizza joint in North Conway, NH). I was watching them make the pizzas and slide them onto the stone shelves in the oven with long wooden paddles... and as I stared into the fire of the oven, I loved the utter simplicity and timelessness of it.
Now, I know there are wood-fired pizza places elsewhere. But as I ruminated on that fireplace, I began to realize just how much around here touched that same vein in me: the many covered bridges, the simple farms, the last active human-powered water lock for boat passages in the country... and every year I discover more.
And then there's camp. This place permeates with age and connections to the past.
[caption id="attachment_328" align="alignleft" width="300"]
All around the dining halls there are murals depicting young men participating in camp activities... and they weren't commissioned last year, if you catch my drift. One of my favorite places is the Alumni lounge, where a century of Color War results adorns the walls and rafters, a mosaic of red and brown arrowheads pointing backwards, tugging us to the memories generated here.
[caption id="attachment_327" align="alignright" width="300"]
Generations of family men have come here- Allison and I are housed in an unused campers cabin, and every year on Parent's Weekend, we get people knocking on the door, wanting to show their camper the cabin that Dad stayed in when they were little. (And the same thing happened at Forest Acres the year we were there... mom showing daughter!)
Like the old ways I enjoy, camp is not a constant thing. It comes out when it is needed, and we are allowed to reach out and touch, and feel the vibrations of history, and of things simply done and done well. Whether it's a longbow, or tug-of-war, or young men singing a song about the Saco River, we know that we follow in the tracks of those who have done it before.
Let us revel in it....