This happened in August 1965? at Hillsboro Camp on the west side of the lake.
Some of us went for a walk one evening after supper. Mom, (a.k.a. Aunt Tootie to our cousins, the Crims), Aunt Helen, Richie, Jimmy, Jane, and me (Freddy). Our idea was to walk out to the 'lean-to' on the far side of the lake. We walked up the dirt road next to the lake. The sun, low in the western sky, illuminated the canoe dock and the Mess Hall with golden light. The tall pines on the western shore extended their shadows across the still surface of the water. A frog croaked and a turtle splashed off his log as we walked past.
I'm about 10, Jane is 8, is 6, Harry is 4. Wendell is about 13, Vivian is 11, and Richie is 9?
We left the lake behind and came to the path to the 'lean-to.' It was marked by a big hemlock on the right side of the road. We step up on to the bank of the road and single file, walk around the hemlock and down the hill through the woods. We step carefully across the bridge of logs and boards. On our right is the small inlet from the lake that we crossed the upper part of. We walk on the springy, pine needle covered ground toward the lean-to. In a hundred yards or so we come to the lean-to.
The lean-to is the name of a small camp ground on the west side of the lake that is the destination of cook outs and overnight hikes canoes trips by campers. It is also the location of campcraft work; tables, fire circles, bridge building and brush clearing. At night during dinner the campers at the lean-to would echo songs back across the lake to the Mess Hall.
I poked at the charred sticks in one of the small stone fire places. Jim sat by the sticks tied together with baling twine. Campers had built it as part of camp craft activities at the "lean-to". It was supported between the trunks of two small beech trees.
"Hey, Richie," I call, "look at this!" I skip a small pebble from the narrow shore between the bushes at the canoe landing point. The pebble skips about 5 times in ever smaller hops and sinks into the water.
Aunt Helen, Mom and Jane talking. Aunt Helen , "Let's walk up through the woods along the creek. I haven't done that since I was a camp counselor."
"You used to be a camp counselor?" Jane.
"Yes, and your mother was one of my campers when I was the counselor for Doggie House. Tootie was one of my best campers." Aunt Helen .
"Richie, Freddy, Jimmy," Mom calls, "We're going to walk up along the creek."
Walk up the creek? I didn't know it could be done. We, follow parallel to the top of a large granite rock, covered with bushes and pine needles. We look down into the dark, deep, water of the creek.
"How deep do you think it is here?" asked Richie.
"Its probably about nine feet deep here at this rock," said Mom.
"Hush,... listen." said Aunt Helen. "I heard a paddle."
We all stood quietly listening. A red canoe glided around the curve coming into the mouth of the creek from the lake. Vivian was sitting in the bow with a paddle across her lap.
"Look out Wendy! There's a rock just to the left." Vivian pointed out with her paddle. She reversed the paddle quickly and pushed away from the invisible rock beneath the still surface of the creek. Wendell in the stern, skillfully backed the canoe away from the rock.
I was surprised to see Wendell and Vivian in a canoe by themselves. We weren't allowed to be in canoes by ourselves yet.
"Wendell, Vivian," called Aunt Helen. "You're not supposed to take wood canoes up the creek.! Only aluminum canoes can come up the creek!"
"OK, Mom. We were just coming up to the entrance to the creek. We wanted to catch you guys at the lean-to so that Viv could walk with you," Wendell said.
"Where can I get off Wendy?" Vivian said to Wendell.
"Do you see that tree laying down along side that rock?" Wendell pointed south with his paddle. "Maybe you can climb off there?"
I turned back into the bushes and worked my way down and around to where Wendell had pointed. I pushed through the bushes and found my self on a small animal trail. I leaned over and pushed my way to the water. I could hear Richie following me. Behind Richie, I heard Jimmy crashing through the brush.
"Hold onto your branches Richie, they keep hitting me in the face!" Jimmy said.
I came to a tree leaning out over the water. It was a small hemlock, it's trunk about as big around as my leg. The lakeside roots have lost their grip as the water eroded the bank. The landward roots , clung precariously to the rocky shore and buried themselves in the dirt and needles between the rocks. Part of the reason the tree fell over was that it was growing on a granite rock that dipped into the water. It didn't have a firm grip on the soil.
"I'll nose the canoe right up there alongside the tree trunk. Viv, you grab a branch, put your foot on that rock and you're on shore," said Wendell.
Vivian slid her paddle between the thwarts and set it gently in the bottom of the canoe. She put a hand on each gunwale and leaned forward.
"Wendy, nose the canoe in." She said in her southern drawl.
"Don't let me hit that rock Viv," said Wendell.
"I'll grab the tree and put a foot on the rock," said Vivian.
I watched in awe as Vivian grabbed a branch with her left hand, extended her left foot out onto the tree trunk, pulled herself up out of the canoe, grabbed another branch with her right hand, lifted her right foot out of the canoe and swung it forward onto the rock to recover her weight before the tree sagged into the water under her weight.
Wendell slid the canoe backwards with a deep, powerful, back stroke.
Vivian stepped lightly onto the path.
"I'll see you guys back at camp," Wendell's voice carried clearly over the evening water.
"Wendell, be careful paddling back," said Aunt Helen. She could barely see him through the bushes from where she was standing.
"Oh Mom," said Vivian, "Wendell passed his tippy test a long time ago."
The tippy test was a test everyone at camp had to pass before they could take canoes out on the lake by themselves. In the tippy test, you paddle out, tip the canoe over, climb back in, and paddle to shore.
"I just don't want him to get wet is all," said Aunt Helen.
We threaded our way through the trees and rocks, staying as close to the edge of the creek as we could. At times we were single file, at other times the kids scouted out unusual trees and rocks. Mosquitoes began to bite us. We'd all put on bug repellent, 6-12 brand, before our hike. The repellent was weakening and the mosquitos in the damp woods of the upper creek were getting thirsty. Thirsty for our blood!
We continued to explore our way up the creek by land. Slapping at mosquitos, pushing through occasional barriers of shrubs and bushes, standing on the shore and watching the minnows swim upstream against the slow current, sharing past times in conversation. Near the banks of the creek the shade of the forest was speckled with golden patches of illumination from the setting sun shining through the tops of the trees.
"Hey kids, these are all blue berry bushes!" said Aunt Helen.
I looked back and saw her examining the leaves and small berries on a branch she had pushed aside.
"Richie, we could come back in a couple of weeks and pick a lot blue berries," said Aunt Helen.
"Can we pick them?" said Richie. We was struggling past some bushes a few feet behind his mother.
"They're not ripe yet," said Aunt Helen. "We could come back in about 10 days and pick them. No one knows about these blueberries but us."
Richie was swatting his ankle. Mosquitos were biting through his socks.
As I looked back at the group, I could see everyone's hands in constant motion, swatting mosquitos away from their faces and pushing branches aside at the same time as they stepped carefully across fallen branches and over moss covered rocks.
Richie pulled his sweater up over his head. It was a button up the front sweater. He was looking through a small gap between the buttons in the front. He had his walking stick poking from this gap, holding it like a probe in front of him. His fingers held the probe and expanded the space between the buttons so that he could see his way. The empty sleeves of his sweater flopped around as he walked.
"Richie, you look like a giant mosquito!" said Jane.
"That's right, he does," said Aunt Helen.
"Richie's the MOSQUITO MAN!" said Jimmy.
Richie responded with a loud humming sound and poked at Jimmy with his stick.
"I've got you now Jimmy!" said the Mosquito Man.