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Friday, July 25, 2008
Burt Prelutsky :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Not So Great Outdoors
by Burt Prelutsky
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Having been born in Chicago and raised in L.A., taking a short cut through an alley or across a vacant lot has always been my idea of hiking. And although I saw in “The Yearling” that even wise and noble Gregory Peck could find a good reason to shoot a deer, “Bambi” convinced me that until one of those critters actually threatened to destroy my family’s food supply, my policy would be to live and let live.

My attitude towards camping was equally level-headed. Just as I felt that any six or eight-legged varmint that flew or crawled into our home was fair game, and was just asking to be swatted or squashed, anybody who chose to venture into the wilderness had no one but himself to blame if he got himself mauled or eaten. But you know how it is with peer pressure when you’re fourteen and two of your friends, Steve and Barry, both of whom had scouting experience, suggest venturing into the woods for a couple of days of high adventure. Or, to be more exact, as it turned out, two days and two nights in the bowels of hell.

Frankly, I don’t recall what I expected, but, for openers, I didn’t expect it to be as sweltering as it was. Hot weather and no air-conditioning is not a good combination. Air-conditioning, my favorite invention, by the way, is the one thing that truly separates us from the lower forms of animal life, including the French.

One of the most vivid memories of that camping experience is that from the moment that Steve’s mother dropped us off in the foothills all I wanted was a peach. I had always liked peaches, but no more than apricots or plums. But over the next 48 hours, I craved a peach the way nobody before or since has craved anything. I remember distinctly thinking I would gladly trade my entire baseball card collection for a single ripe peach.

The only sustenance we had were packages of dehydrated food. I had never before had experience with survivor fare. For those of you who have been spared, it is powder to which you add water, thus turning it -- voila! -- into wet powder. The way you distinguish one meal from another is quite simple: you read the label on the package.

The first night in the woods, I found to my surprise I was able to fall asleep quite easily, even though I had never before slept in a sleeping bag or under the stars. At some ungodly hour, I was rudely shaken awake by Steve, who announced in hushed tones that we had to climb onto a large boulder, where, in the moonlight, I could see that Barry was already perched. Annoyed at having my sleep interrupted, I wanted to know what the problem was. “It’s a skunk,” Steve whispered, pointing at a harmless-looking animal standing about a dozen feet away. I told Steve that it wasn’t bothering me, he was. I just wanted to go back to sleep. But he and Barry were so darn insistent, they left me no choice but to join them atop the big rock.

From that vantage point, we got to watch the skunk rooting around in the cardboard box that contained the food packages. Not being able to read the labels, the poor beast had no choice but to tear open half of them. After about ten frustrating minutes, he discovered what I already knew -- namely, that there was nothing even remotely resembling food to be found midst all that tasteless grub. Perhaps because it was my first foray into Mother Nature’s realm, I found it somehow comforting to discover that the skunk and I, coming from two such different worlds, were alike in thinking that if it came down to having to dine on powder, perhaps survival wasn’t such a big deal, after all.

After a while, totally discouraged, he wandered off, I suspect, in search of a peach.

The next day, just when I’d assumed things couldn’t get much worse, as is so often the case, things got much worse, indeed. By a majority vote, it was decided that I’d be the one to go up the hill to the stream that fed the nearby pond to collect a pail of water. So, like Jack without Jill, off I went. Collecting the water was no problem at all. However, as I made my way down the rather steep and narrow path, I heard a sound that stopped me in mid-step. Immediately, I knew it could only be one of two things. It was either Carmen Miranda shaking her maracas or a rattlesnake. Being aware, as I was, that Ms. Miranda never went anywhere without a fruit salad perched on her head, accompanied by six guys strumming guitars, I worked it out by a process of elimination. And elimination was what I figured I was facing.

At first, I was afraid even to call out, terrified that the snake might take offense at a loud noise. Finally, I managed to holler down to my friends that a rattler in the underbrush had me trapped. One of them, as I recall, yelled back what even at the time I regarded as a piece of very sound advice: “Don’t do anything to annoy him.”

It was, as I say, sound advice, and, yet, like most of the advice I’ve ever been given, entirely useless. Clearly, I had already annoyed him. I’d probably awakened him from a sound sleep. And from my own recent experience, I knew just how aggravating that can be. On the other hand, the snake had annoyed me, too -- annoyed me in fact into a state of near-paralysis. I was even afraid to breathe.

In the meantime, maintaining my position on a steep incline while the sun beat down and the pail of water seemed to double in weight every few seconds, reminded me that I could not impersonate a statue indefinitely. I strained to hear him slither away, but so far as I could tell, he, too, had stopped breathing, and was just lying in wait, poised to strike.

Finally, I made a carefully calculated decision. I decided to run as fast as I could, figuring I had the element of surprise on my side. Besides, if worse came to worst, my friends, I assumed, would carry me back to civilization, from whence I silently swore never again to roam.

By the time I safely reached the bottom of the hill, Barry wanted to know what had taken me so long. I couldn’t believe my ears. I exploded: “Did you think I invented that rattlesnake?”

“He only rattled because you’d frightened him. I guarantee he was gone in two seconds.”

“Well, I wish he’d taken a moment to say good-bye.”

The next 24 hours were relatively uneventful. I spent most of the time reminding myself how much I was hating the experience, so that, if, say, 20 years down the road, somebody suggested another such adventure, the first words out of my mouth would be, “I’m sorry. I didn’t really mean to bash you in the head with a baseball bat.”

The oddest thing of all is that the following afternoon, just as the three of us trekked out of the woods to find Steve’s mother waiting for us, I found I didn’t want a peach. I was dying for a hamburger.

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About The Author
W. Burt Prelutsky is an accomplished, well-rounded writer and author of "The Secret of Their Success: Interviews with Legends and Luminaries."
 
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McManus rocks!!!
How about "A Fine and Pleasant Misery" or "Never Sniff a Gift Fish"?

-Ray
NRA Life Member

author
Sounds like he has been reading Pat McManus. If you want similar, even funnier stories about the outdoors, look up Pat McManus. But Pat McManus likes the outdoors, which makes the stories better.

Sorry
That last was pointed at ProFromDover

Burt & Wrat Wrangler
If it were possible, I would give you 7 stars for this one. HILLARIOUS!! Note there were probably dried apricots in the dried fruit. I know, NO JUICE!! Welcome back big guy.

Wrat Wrangler......I know tastes like CHICKEN!!! Ha,Ha,Ha They are good though.

Wrat Wrangler
On a field problem while in the 82nd Airborne, down in the Florida swamps, we camped in an aread loaded with rattlers. Since every man in the company had seen combat in Nam, nobody gave a hoot one bit.

All of us NCOs used our pistols (.45 cal. Colt autos), and popped a slew of them for roasting (and to clear the area).

After gutting them, leave the skin on and cut them into sections about 8 inches in length. Take some wire (we used commo wire) and wrap them around a stout branch and roast them over an open fire, turning them slowly. After about 15 to 20 minutes, peel the skin off and season. Our cooks were on site so they gave us some butter and garlic to use along with the salt and pepper we had in our C-rations. It's "knock your socks off" delicious. I'm not kidding, you'll love it.


Wish I could love camping
like I used to -- but one gets to an age. About the best I can do now is a cabin with no hot water and a very hard mattress. ; )

For Doc and the Pro:
You guys are making me look up the recipe for rattlesnake tempura I got from an old Jarhead from 'Nam name of Dave McCracken. Can't find it. DURN!!!! Sounded tasty.

-Ray
NRA Life Member

shells1
"He's a He Who Shall Not Be Named supporter."

Voldemort?

Is he running?

Green (Reptile) Party mayhaps?

Anne
Did I miss a Vito: Memoirs of a Nazi Post?!

He got flagged already? Dang, I'm actually making a collection of his works and sending them to the admins here for booting. Sure, I'm all for free speech, but lunatics need not apply.

Oh, he's not a liberal. He's a He Who Shall Not Be Named supporter.

Lolo1 et al

Bicycle sales and scooter sales are soaring, while Airplanes and cars are parking.

Tent sales will begin to increase as more and more people will be losing their homes.

Canned and packaged food will be taking the place of fresh food, vegatables and fruit.

Houses without windows will be remodeled as air conditioning becomes obsolete.

Camping will be a way of living instead of a recreation.

China and India are building more coal fired electrical plants that will more than double whatever we save by doing away with the American lifestyle.

Liberals, many of whom are used to the 'hippie' lifestyle of living in a volkswagon bus and bathing and washing clothes every other month have no problem with this.

Obama wants to spend billions on bike paths and walking routes so people can commute to work.

Those who are physically disabled or elderly would have been a burden to Universal Health Care anyway - so when millions die from heat and starvation it will help the Obama marxist plans.

Times they are a changing.

AliveinHim,
My DH and I camped as newlyweds too. We actually kept a tent in the car so that we could camp impulsively on weekend drives. And we spent a lot of time playing cribbage in the rain too. :D

I'm an accomplished camp cook so that probably helped give us a positive approach.

But today I'll take a nice motorhome because I don't like sleeping on the ground anymore.

Retired Geek
You stinker!

Your post #49 beat me to the punch!

Have a Super Fantastic Day!

Okay...
I don't know what is funnier this column or the posts!

You guys are a hoot!

For the record though I still love camping! Admittedly it isn't for everyone.

Burt is not a joyful traveler

Sorry Burt, I know you don’t like to travel, so just ignore my posts today!!

Retired Geek Location: VA
Reply # 50
Date: Jul 25, 2008 - 2:57 PM EST

Thanks for your compliment, and sure I will share the web site. There are a couple of thousand pages of stories and photos, including about 80 pages about my life in the old computer days.

I was making my living in computers years before Bill Gates was born. He made the money, with my Sweetie, we had the fun.

http://www.travel-tidbits.com/

I can’t resist showing this story.

Is RV travel worth it, you ask?

Can you imagine camping at Chamonix, France at the foot of Mt. Blanc; in Fiesole, Italy, high over the Arno River Valley with the domes and towers of Florence spread out below; on an island in the Rhône River with the floodlit Le Pont D’Avignon and the Popes’ Palace on the far riverbank; with le Mont St. Michel (northern France) out our window one night, the Rock of Gibraltar (southern Spain), or the Parthenon (in Athens) on another; next to the wall of the Crusades city of Aigues-Mortes, and the double wall of Carcassonne, France; on the bank of the River Seine in Paris, the Neckar in Heidelberg, the Vltava in Prague, the Rhine and the Mosel at Koblenz, and the Danube in Budapest; on Lido Island across the lagoon from Venice; along the Adriatic near Dubrovnik; and hundreds more. Visiting these spectacular destinations seems almost a dream.


Jim from CA et al

I really enjoyed your website and the stories and pictures that you and your wife shared RVing around the world.

I am sorry that you lost your wife to that dreadful disease that took my Mother.

I don't know if you are willing to share the site with all posters here or not but if so I can attest that all will enjoy it no matter their political preferences.

Your photographs and short stories are excellent.

I especially was moved by the pictures and story about the death camps.

Interesting life you have lived sir!

We all better get used to roughing it!

Camping has been one of the better things my family and I have enjoyed over the years.

Our first camping trip was in a tent at the Outer Banks of North Carolina - I do not advise it. The first night of our 17 day camping trip saw 40 mile an hour winds and a blinding rainstorm. The tent looked like a flag blowing in the wind. We quickly graduated to an RV.

I decided to change vocations in my mid-forties and my wife and I traveled the US in our RV for a year while we decided on what I was going to do.

After settling on computers, the next year was involved in educating myself about computers.

I sold my first computer program that year and spent the month of December back at the Outer Banks - this time in an RV.

We have had many good memories camping and traveling where when the blinds were closed and the lights were out 'we were home'.

Air conditioning and RV's will be a memory as our politicians have decided to take those things away from us by not pursuing energy resources.

We all had better get used to roughing it - times they are a changing.


Signed up twice for camping in school
Both times (once in mid-spring 1973, other in mid-winter 1975) it was in cabins...the latter campground also boasted an ice-rink.

Closest I've come to camping since then:
(1) LEF summer retreats since 1996 (one week each August...in cabinned campground, unheated cabins) in Sebring, OH (FYI, the weather there in early August oft ranges between crisp and nippy on my scale--and I was raised in Calgary)
(2) napping/sleeping in car (with engine off) at Rest-areas or Service Plazas (if in PA or OH)

Signed up also (but failed to get in due to spelling mismatch between ID and birth-certificate) to do a third stretch of "camping" (through officer basic training--which would involve some REAL camping: tent, flavour-pouched meals, ...) in Canadian military in mid-late 1980's.

LeftRudyRight
Instead of a hammock, we dug out a "trench" to fit out bodies, and cocooned ourselves that way. One less thing for us to carry!!

And yes, Cayey and Luquillo areas are probably the best places on the island. Of course, El Yunque tops everything else. Nothing like going to sleep under a thick canopy of trees, and waking to sunlight pouring softly down!

That's it. I HAVE to go look for some sugar cane!!!!

I can't imagine
...not camping. Now that I am old and retired, I head for the Big Horns about once a weeks or every other at least. I don't much care for campfires so bagels and granola bars with a couple of thermoses of coffee will take care of hunger pangs.
Nothing like watching a cow moose or elk and calf grazing in a meadow or waking up to the sound of sage graouse strutting. I just hope I never outlive my ability to camp.
Pretty funny column though.

Sorry, Burt
It's a shame that you did not take to camping. I can think of no better night's sleep than one had in a hammock (probably not so good for the back) breathing in clean air under an open sky (YLG, I'm thinking Guajataca, around Cayey or somewhere in El Yunque maybe even on Culebra!). I only wish I could get out more than I do.

PS- Edgtho- I've got a shipment of Stone Ruination and Ommegang coming in from liquidsolutions!

jim:Nice! So have a million other people
.

some people call modern camping

I don’t remember sleeping on the ground, except in the US Army, but we did a bunch of what some people call modern camping, that is in a small RV. In addition to 43 states, and Canada from coast to coast, we enjoyed Europe for nearly 1,000 nights, in nine trips over 25 years.

The campsite in Paris is on the Seine River, in Bois de Boulogne, almost in sight of the Eiffel. Holds 5,000 people at least, on a summer night.

We have eaten lunch in our RV
on a Norwegian fjord;
beneath the Eiffel Tower;
just below the Parthenon;
within sight of the Coliseum;
within the arms of the Louvre;
across the Tiber from St. Peter's;
right next to the Brandenburg Gate;
across the street from Windsor Castle;
across the river from Le Pont D' Avignon;
with the Rock of Gibraltar out our window;
and hundreds more.

And then there is Vito......

Poor Vito... what he lacks in a sense of humor, he certainly makes up for as a bigot!

Actually Vito, each and every one of YOUR posts is complete waste of bytes and bandwidth.. (disk space... don't think so.)

And, another thing... a sense of humor is absolutely essential for good emotional health and well being.

But then as a lib, you wouldn't know what good emtional health and well being is.

Camping is for getting away from
the cares, stresses and craziness of everyday life. I and my family love to go on a two ar three day canoe trip where we just get in and go. Find a place along the way and set up camp. Stay away from the popular rivers - too many people. I like to go camping/hunting/fishing salt and pepper. I am very much the outdoorsman. Five stars Burt, I know the outdoors isn't for everyone and it usually is very funny to watch the ones that don't know the outdoors in a camping environment.

Since it was dark,

how were you able to determine it was a Liberal " … … rooting around in the cardboard box that contained the food packages."

When I want to rough it, I just turn the electric blanket on low.


funny...
Burt: "Air-conditioning, my favorite invention, by the way, is the one thing that truly separates us from the lower forms of animal life, including the French."

E: using the subject of camping to bash the french. heh heh heh. good one.

On the subject of camping, if one never ventures into the wilderness, one never gets to eat huckleberries. Fresh huckleberries are worth facing black bears, wolves, and wildfires. Some like fresh caught fish, I like sourdough pancakes, fried in an iron skillet on the fire with fresh huckleberries. yum yum.

Camping when we were kids....
...in "up north" Michigan (as Michiganders say), where I'm from, was our primary activity. At the age of about 12, our parents allowed us to head into the woods and camp for a couple of days making pit fires, and cooking spuds, carrots and the occasional squirrel or rabbit we shot with our .22 cal. rifles. We also caught trout from the streams. Dee-lish!

Boys from our area learned to shoot at very early ages.

Then it was camping in both the winter and summer, the former in canvas wall tent. Still a major blast for a kid. After dropping a Whitetail deer, it was a feast for all. Venison roasted on an open fire is wonderful.

Then it was the army infantry, Vietnam, where sleeping in the jungle on the ground was always a blessing since one is always exhausted. When it rained, you just pulled your helmet over your face. There were enormous rats, vipers and especially boas, the last, a reptile who sometimes liked to curl up to next to your warmth.

You get used to it, and if you had time to roast one, a boa tastes very good.

Returning home and being assigned to the 82nd Airborne, we slept on the ground in all kinds of weather in all parts of the U.S., Canada and in northern Europe. Waking up in a mummy bag covered by a poncho with 8 inches of snow covering your entire package was common.

As the saying went back then, a military man in any branch of the service can sleep on a bag of walnuts.

For years now I've been "camped out". My idea of roughing it today is a Holiday Inn with a black and white TV.

Great column, Burt. Good having you back.

Wrat
I’m with you, early spring and late fall are the best times to go camping for real, although a can of Deepwoods Off will take care of most of the critters. Even that is funny because when I was kid I could go into the swamps fishing in the Summer and the skeeters didn’t bother me a bit. After I went away in the Navy and came back I couldn’t get close to a skeeter anymore.

One other way for some good camping is a party barge (pontoon boat). If you get it out far enough from the banks the skeetrs will not get you and you can sleep out there and fish early.

From the looks of the posts here it confirms something I already knew about camping….it’s a guy thing.

Great column, We missed Burt
I spent most of my married life [40 yrs] working at getting a gourmet kitchen, comfortable furniture, etc. Anyone who thinks I'm taking a vacation away from comfort would be better off tackling the skunk. If I want to cook and clean, I'll stay home. I've done my share of camping while a teen, been there, done that, moved on. Those who enjoy it, I'll be gracious, and this citiot will stay out of your way. Remembering times past are so much fun. Thanks, Burt.

Wrat Wrangler sayz
You take your bow or muzzleloader in the fall and go for a weekend eating small game and fish.

I am with you there partner.
Fred Bear black bear compound set on a 60 lb. draw. Richland Arms 50 cal, long gun. Sears and Roebuck .22 single shot hex barrel rifle. And believe me people, there is no better taste in the world as squirrel or rabbit cooked over an open spit. Even if you don’t have the salt and pepper with you!
As the man said in song, a country boy can survive.

http://www.immigrationshumancost.org/text/crimevictims.htm l
Free Ramos and Compean


Wrat Wrangler: Wait! You mean that

Central Park ISN'T a forest??? :-)


Nam65-66 (#11) wrote
"Twenty years in the Infantry will cure you of any urge to 'go camping'".

Will it actually take that long?

Also an anecdote from Manick Sorcar: an Indian immigrant couple goes camping; the wife tells the husband "Ok, please explain why you moved us from the village to Bombay, then migrated to more prosperous America--and now you want to go out into rural boonies to 'rough it'; it seems we could have saved much time by simply remaining in the village".

Burt sayz:
And although I saw in “The Yearling” that even wise and noble Gregory Peck could find a good reason to shoot a deer, “Bambi” convinced me that until one of those critters actually threatened to destroy my family’s food supply, my policy would be to live and let live.

Burt, Burt, Burt.
I think you have never tasted one of the critters because they are to me what a peach is to you, or the bottle to wobbiehal. And even tho we disagree on something for the first time I can remember, I am still going to give you five because as always, funny, very funny!
I heard that a rattler bit a code pink member one time and the snake died. Anyone know if that’s true?

http://www.immigrationshumancost.org/text/crimevictims.htm l
Free Ramos and Compean

Shells
I just came back from a trip to Boston, and the hotel I stayed at had a spa.

OhmyeverlovingGod......After my four mile hike to see the Old North Church, the masseuse worked MIRACLES!!!

From now on, that is a pre-requisite to any hotel stay!

YLG
I'm craving Salmon on an open fire! Oh, the good old days. See ya later!

SSGT2
Good morning!!

I think this column is right up there with the "mom cooking" column back in November!

Now that Burt's column made me reminesce, I am craving sugar cane.....

;-)

The most common mistake
Is to camp in summer or in the early spring. In June the black flies are BREEDING. Stay our unless you want to be dinner. Summer is a problem unless you're experienced and use a lot of freeze-dried or dehydrated food and STAY AWAY FROM CAMPGROUNDS!!!! Walk the Appalachian Trail or hike the White Mountains where there are lean-tos built for your use. Most folks camp in the summer on SUMMER vacations. WRONG! Summer vacations are for Disney world. In the Fall and winter you can keep warm easily and the bugs are GONE. So are most reptiles as well.

Unless I lose my mind and hunt black bear in Canada in spring I am not worried about being a buffet for black flies. NOT having a Starbucks, Barnes and Noble or Mickey D's next door is NOT a hardship. SHEEEESH!!!!

-Ray
NRA Life Member

YLG
I did that too!!!! I left and made reservations at a hotel the next day, and I felt no guilt whatsoever!

And while they wanted to go hiking and schleping through the brush and bugs, I ended up driving to the nearest casino and played video poker for 8 hours in air conditioning, LOL.

Hey, it was survival at its best!


Shells
You are a riot!!!!

I must admit, your way of camping is very attractive, especially if the "camping area" has a spa available.

THAT is a great way to go camping!!

A Camping Honeymoon?
I'm a citiot and proud of it! You go, Burt!

When we were engaged, my DH-to-be (an avid former boy scout who still loves cold showers) suggested we go camping for our honeymoon. Not really "roughing it" -- what he had in mind was an unheated cabin, with only cold running water and an outdoor toilet. None of that sleeping outside on the ground for our honeymoon!

Happily, I won that battle... if not, we probably wouldn't have gotten married! Since then we have taken our kids tent camping about once a year and I actually enjoy it for the 3 days/2 nites I agree to.

Jenners


Once Was Enough For Me Too!
When I was asked to camp in the wilds, I actually imagined the wilds. Out in the middle of nowhere, isolated, and all you can hear were the leaves on the trees and birds chirping.

Nope.

Camping in Illinois meant pitching a tent right next to someone else's tent, who was next to someone else, who was next to someone else. It was a gravel and grass strip of field flooded with drunks with fireworks, vans, RV's, and all were playing crappy heavy metal music.

This was camping?

I didn't see the allure of grilling sweaty hotdogs and holding moist bread, being face raped by flies while trying to eat.

Give me a swank hotel with a hot tub, room service, and bring up my Eggs Benedict, and I'll catch you guys later.

What a citiot!!!!
That's the outdoors/sportsman's term for those clowns who are so pampered they think Central Park is a forest!! I love to camp, hike and canoe. So do millions of other Americans and I do NOT mean just the long-haired maggot-infested dope smoking Sierra Club aging hippies either.

Try a "salt and pepper hunt"!! That's where you take NO food other than a few items to help you cook whatever fish you catch or small game you bag. You take your bow or muzzleloader in the fall and go for a weekend eating small game and fish. Fresh trout in the morning is Heaven on earth so is a nice rabbit on a spit or squirrel stew. Not the "tree rats" of the cities but plump healthy ones.

You need a pack, a sleeping bag or bedroll, a knife, ax, firestarting gear or matches, a few small pots, kitchen gear which is very light if you pack properly and a large tarp or like tent. Except in winter I use a Whelen lean-to tent so I can build a reflector fire in front to throw heat inside.

Summer is not my favorite season cause skeeters home in on me from miles away. Others can stand in a swarm and never get bit.

-Ray
NRA Life Member

YLG
good morning!! I agree with you, its got to be one of Burt's best.

Burt
writes:
"But over the next 48 hours, I craved a peach the way nobody before or since has craved anything."

I'll have to disagree with this statement Burt. I'm sorry, but Hal Doofus Drunkahue's craving for alchoholic spirits is much greater!

Burt,
This is one of your best!!!

I remember growing up in the mountains of PR, and taking off for the river with only a tin cup and a small knife. My friend and I would follow the river up the mountain, stopping only to forage for fruit and sugar cane. We would go all the way up to the source of the river, a spring so sweet it rivaled the sugar cane!

Unfortunately, mom wanted us home by sundown, but since sundown didn't come until about 9 PM, we had all day to explore.

Thanks for bringing back some great memories!!

Thanks, Burt
I laughed out loud several times, reading your column. Memories of camping come back to me, but unlike you, I rather enjoyed it. I guess it was/is the whole adventure/in the wild stuff. Of course, being in Wisconsin, we have to bring a cooler with brats and beer. Maybe that's what you were missing. :-)

Mom in Wisconsin

I did my share of "camping" as a

Girl Scout... but always slept in a cabin.

Life Experiences: Camping-- check! Did it. Moved on.

Now my idea of "camping" is what Farmer's Wife is doing.... in a fifth wheel w/AC (and a microwave!)

Oh, and for the record, Burt, ALL snakes are evil and deadly. And that old saying... snakes are more afraid of us than we are of them.... It's a lie.


OHEO
I belong to an organization called OHEO which stands for Only Hoboes Eat Outdoors. Although I still have two Camping Races (Sebring and Road Atlanta), sleeping in a tent long ago lost its fascination for me, and I agree that roughing it is black and white teevee and no remote.

We spent many happy childhood weekends camping though, at dirt tracks throughout the Northeast where Daddy tried to make the field for the weekend stock car race (pre-NA$CAR racing when 75 car fields were not rare). We stayed in a homebuilt trailer Mama and Daddy had nicknamed Crestfallen Manor, sat on the hitch to eat our cornflakes, and wandered through the pitch looking at other peoples camps to see if they had bacon or sausages to spare (they generally did) as Daddy was Jewish and we did not have such things or the money to buy them probably. When you are 8 years old this kind of thing can be fun. Today the midnight trek to the porta-potty is something I would gladly forego, especially in Italy where even the toidy on the bus is preferable to anything the Italians cn build.

Give the the smell of tire smoke and burning oil over the Fresh Country Air of cows and horses any day. Viva Civilization!

Man Up, Burt!
My dad, a former forestry major turned doctor, took us on numerous wilderness trips consisting not only of packing in and out our own food, tents, entertainment as well as packing out OTHER people's trash so that we left the place better than we found it (that is the difference between conservative/liberal outdoor enthusiasts - we remedy the problem and they complain about the trash but do nothing to pick it up!) Were there blackflies? Yes! Were there snakes, moose and bears? Heck yes! Do I know how to use a compass and read a USGS map? Yep! Did I love the adventure? You betcha!

Guess men aren't what they used to be. Puffta boy.

;)

Burt
Love your politics! But I think your non-political stories are the bomb. Serving 16 years in the Marines brings back alot of fun memories, and some not so fun ones. The best however, was being stationed in Adak Alaska. A 13 mile hump to a stream leading uphill to the Salmon spawning grounds was the best. Just go in and pick the one you wanted for din din. I still will never forget the two young Marines carrying 3 cases of man made brews on their backs. They got to pop open the first ones when we got there. See, I'm not heartless afterall.
Thanks for the read, Burt! Again, good to have you back in the writing saddle.

Cat meat
Kinda makes you realize how much cat meat`s out there when al gore`s moonbats take over the rest of the government and force people back to the soil for a living.We`ll all become amish wear funny hats,no cars,no electric,no running water.wood heat,and heaven forbid no phones.Al of course will still have his private jet and live in his house on a hill.

Good one Burt...
My Friday is getting off to a good start. It just so happens that I am up early today because we are leaving on a short vacation. We will be doing my version of camping, in the fifth wheel w/AC.

I didn't know CA allowed rattlesnakes, figured they had all been banned to Nevada or Arizona.

We have had our roughing it days too and I am glad to now take my bed, bathroom and kitchen with me.

Of course, we don't have to go far around here to encounter a rattlesnake. My son-in-law killed one the other day that was over 5' long. It sounded like about 10 Carmen Miranda's.

So glad you are back Burt and loved reading something that has nothing to do with you know what! 5 stars

Roughing It
My wife's idea of roughing it is slow room service....thank God.

Twenty years in the Infantry...
...will cure you of any urge to "go camping".There is a reason our ancesters invented houses and beds.That reason hasn't changed in all these years.Give me comfort over nature every time!

Perhaps?
Perhaps Burt (ignoring for a moment your devastatingly funny ironic wit), we should pave half the remaining forrests, and install air-conditioning units at easily accesible points. This is so the fat tubs of lard that pass themselves off as 'average', can have a place to cool off just before (and 20 minutes later, after)they experience, "the wild?"

Oh Burt
DH and I used to camp out all the time as newlyweds-we couldn't afford anything else. Many a time we listened to the rain on the tent as we wondered how long it would last, and how much cribbage we could play before it got too dark. As for eating, well, that camp stove came in mighty handy on such occasions so we could at least eat the freeze-dried food we'd brought. :p

We didn't get anything like a tent trailer till after our oldest son was born. That thing was a godsend!

Now being older I find I rather enjoy and frankly prefer a comfortable bed, running water and the chance to prepare or order real food. So for us, anyway, it's cabin camping up at a favorite mountain lodge, with no apologies!

LOL, Burt you should have had your
first camping experience with an adult or at least some older kids.

I used to love camping out in a tent and we didn't take "survival rations". The problem you had Burt was that you were in CA where you can't build a fire in 99% of the camping places. I am surprised that you got hit by the skunks and not the raccoons who are a lot more destructive. They like to play with everything.

But not to worry. From what I have seen lately RV is the craze and people call that "camping". I call it moving a mobile home to a park and sitting amongst a pile of other mobile homes.

Burt, I can SO identify!!
I'm even Chicago-born and LA raised. I can just FEEL my single childhood camping trip bubbling up through your words! DOWN! GET BACK DOWN!! Ahhhhh! There is a REASON we repress memories!

My classic joke that I tell everybody who might mention camping: My idea of "roughing it" is No Room Service!

The Great Outdoors!
Burt! you, roughing it? No way jose, I can't see it. You want a great outdoor experience visit Venice or Zuma beaches around 1 p.m. on a hot July day, all you need is shorts, flip-flops, hawaiian shirt or no, a pair of raybans, and a cooler full of bottled fermented hops a lawn chair with or without towels, find a spot close to the boardwalk and watch the carnage, it beats reality TV hands down.

Thanks
for the laugh

Burt!
My idea of camping is a Motel 6. Great humor! Thanks for the smile...as always!

You city boys are funny.
Thats all I can say.

error
Read: 'spend a night'

camping
Only the threat of Uncle Sam and his guns ever got me to spend a noght outdoors. I haven't gone"camping" since. I'm with you, Burt.
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