Last week I attended our church girl’s camp as an adult leader. Our little group cooked all our own breakfasts and one dinner while we were there. We didn’t use mess kits but instead opted for the ease of disposable paper products. Without the distraction of the dish sterilization marveling, I paid more attention to the food we ate. We cooked toast on a griddle over the camp stove. It burned a bit. We tried to spread the butter on the cooked toast, but it sat in a hard, cold lump. It wasn’t even stored in the coolers, it was just that cold from the elements. (I’m a whiner.) I tried toasting a bagel one morning over the fire pit and it tasted like that smell you get on your clothes when you sit around a campfire. Another morning, the French toast was cooked too well (read burned again.) Instant hot chocolate was the highlight of our culinary feasts, especially when combined with the marshmallows from the s’mores menu or whipped cream in a can.
Now, do I sound like I am complaining? Forgive me for that (especially you, EM.) I’m just trying to paint an accurate picture. When I thought about our camp food, I discovered a phenomenon that has left me almost dumbfounded. We all devoured the food like, well, wild animals. And we loved it! It brings to mind the saying that ‘Everything tastes better when you’re camping.’ Why? We weren’t underfed and, thus, continuously hungry. But our judgment was compromised somehow. Seriously, would you eat burned toast at home? Being out in nature, being very cold at night, working together to fix a meal over primitive heat sources all must change the neuron flow through our brains. Either that, or the Swiss Miss cocoa mix was laced with a mind altering substance.
I have no recipes to share, although EM’s Dutch oven peach cobbler and camp stove grilled orange chicken were more than blog worthy.
So I instead want to leave you with the lyrics of an old camp song from Girl Scouts. (I had to look them up on the internet and found several conflicting versions, but this seems closest.) It’s a fun one to sing and brings back warm, fuzzy feelings from my childhood. I wonder, though, if the song is also a primal expression of the acute delirium one experiences while camping. I’m just saying.
I like the mountains
I love the rolling hills
I like the flowers
I love the daffodils
I like the fireside
When all the lights are low
boom di ada, boom di ada, boom di ada, boom
boom di ada, boom di ada, boom di ada, boom
(repeat and sing in a round)
(I can’t take credit for this nice photo. It’s from an informational website about Ensign Ranch, where we camped.)
4 comments:
Lisa & Karen:
Remeber the girl scout camping trip when the parents were allowed to come? We got in trouble because they were so loud and we had to hike the hike all over again to find some stick. What a lame punishment. Remember we stayed away extra long to worry the leaders and supposedly someone overheard one leader saying to another leader "that's their parents problem if they are lost". Meanwhile we were practicing our skit for the evening show and having a good ole time. They had know idea who they were dealing with!!!
Janet
What a memory you have Janet! Now you've ruined my white-washed memory of girl scouting. I guess I was living up to my 'one of the Sonntag kids' reputation! :)
OMG! So funny! I LOVED camping so much! Now I don't know if I'd enjoy it quite so much... (where would I plug in my CPAP?!! In any case, we do indeed have many wonderful memories. I think Lisa remembers the following:
1. Karen being macho and having to build all the fires
2. Karen being macho and insisting on doing all the cooking for the group
3. Karen being macho and leading the campfire songs
4. Karen being macho and locking the smaller girls in the latrine...
5. Why were you my friend?!
Kar- No one ever realized that I was afraid to start a fire. I was happy to let you be macho and do it! Now as to the rest, that was all just collateral damage.
You made me laugh so hard today, btw! Thanks
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