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Campfires and other things that kids notice much later
By Edward Ordman
AUGUST 28, 2003
Parents often wonder if their children appreciate
the contortions parents go through for them. Watching our
daughter deal with her children recently reminded me of an
adventure I had with my own father.
Beverly and her husband, Bob, and their three kids were
staying with us. One son had a birthday and his parents
promised hot dogs and marshmallows cooked over a campfire.
Rain was threatening, but Bob got the campfire going and the
hot dogs cooked. Rain looked even more threatening as a few
marshmallows were cooked. As the rain began, the kids piled
quite a bit of wood on the fire, "to be sure it wouldn't go
out," and retreated to our screened porch. The fire grew into
an impressive blaze, and the steady rain grew harder.
With two families of enthusiastic kids on the porch (cousins
had arrived), Beverly was soon ready to retreat from the
noise, and she had an idea: She'd cook the extra marshmallows.
She set out, umbrella in hand. I followed her a few minutes
later, camera in hand, to see how she was doing.
She reported that the noise of the rain, and of the fire, was
successfully drowning out the party sounds. It made a
memorable picture. The fire was too hot to get close, but
she'd settled into a beach chair, protected by a large
umbrella, six feet from the fire, roasting marshmallows on the
end of a very long stick. The kids very much enjoyed the
resulting s'mores, even if they hadn't been the ones to roast
the marshmallows.
The photo of Beverly reminds me of when I was the same age my
grandson is now, just about 50 years ago, and my father was
the one located an odd distance from the campfire.
My Boy Scout troop had decided to go camping one February. We
went to Elizabeth's Furnace, near Front Royal, Va. My father
came along to drive and supervise.
My father did not love camping. My mother had been a leader in
the Campfire Girls (and, like Beverly, a summer-camp counselor
during college). As a child I'd been a mascot for my mother's
Campfire groups. When my father asked if I planned to be a Cub
Scout, I said no, I wanted to be a Blue Bird. Blue Birds, I'd
been reliably informed, had more fun.
My father decided that I was through attending meetings of the
girls' groups my mother led, and should become a Boy Scout
instead. This sentenced him to some years on troop committees
and coming along on hiking and camping trips that he did not
always enjoy. We owned a station wagon, so he was often
drafted to drive, in addition.
We got to Elizabeth's Furnace, pitched tents, and got a
campfire going. The temperature began to drop. My father
announced that it was too cold to sleep in a pup tent, and he
wasn't going to. He knew it wasn't safe to sleep in a car with
the motor running, but surely he could warm it up first. He
ran the heater in the station wagon, got it very warm, spread
his sleeping bag in the back, turned the engine off, and fell
asleep. He kept the breakfast supplies - premixed pancake
batter, orange juice, and milk - in the car with him.
None of us boys slept very much. We fed the campfire and
huddled around it all night, turning constantly to try to keep
warm on all sides. At one point during the night, the
thermometer read 6 degrees F., when we held it close enough to
the campfire to read.
When my father woke up the next morning, the milk and other
supplies were frozen into solid blocks. We made a breakfast,
somehow, struck the tents, packed, and came home earlier than
planned.
All was well until about two weeks later, when my father
happened to get up during the night to get something to drink.
He looked into the refrigerator, and noticed that the milk was
not frozen. He suddenly realized that the car he'd slept in
had been much colder than the refrigerator. He started
shivering and returned to bed. He spent the next 24 hours in
bed shivering, suffering from the cold two weeks after the
fact. It was one of the very few times he ever took sick leave
from his job.
But my mother didn't believe his story, that he'd never
depended on our campfire for heat. She pointed out that my
shoes had come back muddy, but basically intact. The toes on
his shoes were so thoroughly scorched that they never shined
up properly again.
That 6-foot-long pole that my daughter used to cook
marshmallows in the rain shows that she understood the meaning
of a hot campfire. My father had not. But his presence on
those camping trips meant a lot to me, his lack of camping
skills notwithstanding. It may take a while, but children do
eventually notice.
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