Allan's Photoblog

Another Hike (Echo Mountain)

We went on a Boy Scout hike up Echo Mountain.  Not as hard as Goat Whiskers, but I was still wiped out when I got home.


Two weeks — Universal Orlando (Part 3)

Rather than spend the entire week at Disney World, we decided to take a day to spend at Universal Orlando and the Loews Royal Pacific Resort, so we left Epcot and the Boardwalk Inn after dinner at Monsieur Paul and Ubered our way to the Loews resort.

After the upgraded room at Disney’s Boardwalk Inn, the comparatively tiny room at Loews Royal Pacific was a let-down.  I suppose it would have been nicer had we gone in the opposite order, and it was quite nice compared to my usual hotels for work.  W refused to sleep in one of the two queen beds with anyone, and without a pull-out sofabed, he arranged a chair and ottoman into a makeshift bed to his liking.

Our primary goal was to visit the Diagon Alley addition to the Wizarding World of Harry Potter at Universal Studios, which was not available at our last visit in 2013.  With the Hogmeade and Hogwarts (Forbidden Journey) attractions available now at Universal Hollywood, we have half of the equivalent Wizarding World of Harry Potter available to us locally, so really Diagon Alley was it.

In my opinion, Universal did an even better job with Diagon Alley than they did with Hogsmeade, whch was already excellent.  With the buildings built pretty high, Diagon Alley is an even more immersive environment than Hogsmeade, comparable to Cars Land in Disney’s California Adventure.  Once inside Diagon Alley, views of anything outside of it are entirely blocked.

Stores and other sites from the book are present in Diagon Alley — including Gringotts Bank, Weasleys’ Wizard Wheezes, Ollivanders (which isn’t supposed to be in Hogsmeade), the Leaky Cauldron, and other stores.  There’s even a Borgin and Burkes in Knockturn Alley, a side-alley.

The Escape from Gringotts ride is the main attraction, and we got to Diagon Alley early enough (with our early entrance pass from the resort) on Saturday to ride it twice.  It’s another 3D projection ride similar to Forbidden Journey (at Universal Hollywood, not in Orlando, surprisingly), themed on scenes from the 7th book of the series.  The dragon features in the ride, and it’s surprisingly shorter than Forbidden Journey.  I don’t know if it was a design choice or if it was a design constraint due to limited space.  However, the bank was entirely immersive, and the ride was enjoyable.

A few times a hour, this dragon spouts flames.

The rest of Diagon Alley was basically a large number of shops for buying Harry Potter merchandise.  J bought another wand, this time an interactive Dumbledore wand, so he could wander about the Wizarding World and wave the wand in front of various displays, activating some interactive part of the display.  He covered the entire Diagon Alley, while W and Hsuan went off to the Mummy ride outside of Diagon Alley.  After having some ice cream, J and I rejoined them for another ride of the Mummy.

By early afternoon, I was feeling wiped out.  The week of Boy Scout camping followed by most of the week of Disney World had left my legs, hips, and knees in some pain.  I think the main problem was the hike down Goat Whiskers and all the pounding my joints took, and with the rest of the campout and Disney World, I hadn’t yet had tiime to recover.

So, we spent most of the afternoon walking around Universal Orlando, seeing the Terminator show (which I slept partly through), skipping Transformers and Minion Mayhem (both of which we have at Universal Hollywood), walking through Simpsons land, riding Men in Black, and stopping by Lombard’s for some seafood for lunch.  I really needed this restaurant, for the sit-down service and air conditioning.

Finally done with Universal, we rode the Hogwarts Express from Universal to Islands of Adventure.  The Kings Cross station was very impressive and realistic (if unrealistically clean — unless they keep it spotless in London), and the ride from Universal to Islands of Adventure was probably pretty impressive and seemingly realistic — at least that’s the impression I got from W and J; I slept for the entire ride.

At Islands of Adventure, we hung about Hogsmeade quite a bit, getting in line for Forbidden Journey right before a big rainfall hit the area.  I stayed awake for the ride, and it was done by the time we got out.

W and I rode the Dragon Challenge roller coasters, while Hsuan and J went around Hogsmeade a bit with his new wand.  For security or safety, the ride staff made me take off everything (fanny pack) and empty my pockets.  I was supposed to store them in the free lockers, but I gave them to Hsuan instead.  Universal and Islands use free electronic lockers that lock and unlock with fingerprint identification, but Hsuan and those machines simply don’t get along.  They like my fingerprints far better, and sometime during the stay at Universal, we switched from her fingerprint to mine, but I still didn’t like storing stuff in the lockers.

W and I had a good time on the roller coasters, but after the second ride, we had both had enough.  All four of us rode the Flight of the Hippogriff, and by then, W and I decided that we’d not ride any more fast rides.

J wanted to hang out in the play area of Jurassic Park, so we had dinner there, and then the boys ran off to play.  After I used the restroom, Hsuan went after them, and I dozed off at the entrance while waiting.  When I woke up when the boys returned, J was drenched, apparently from some water battle they had had.

We tried riding the new Skull Island King Kong ride before the park closed by using the single-rider line, but after a short while, the line stopped, and announcements were broadcast about technical difficulties.  After a few minutes more, another announcement was made about a possible 40 minute delay, so we left the park and returned to the hotel.

——

Rather than pay a full day (or the second half of a two day admission) at the parks, while spending only part of Sunday there before going to the airport for our return, I decided in conjunction with the boys and Hsuan that we’d instead spend all of our remaining hours on Sunday at the pool.  The boys wanted to swim, and Hsuan and I didn’t mind not spending the money to go back to the park for only half a day.

We had check-out at noon, but the hotel allowed us to use the gym locker room and showers to wash up before leaving.  So, we spent a relaxing day at the pool, with breaks for rain and lunch at Emeril Lagasse’s Tchoup Chop.  The pool itself was nice, and local ducks and ducklings sometimes went for a swim, too.  We got to watch some lifeguards in training, or in job evaluation, which was a little unusual (plus, the pool was nowhere deeper than about 4’ 8”).

Around 4 PM, we left to go to the locker rooms, where we enjoyed the whirlpool room and the steam room before taking our showers, getting our luggage, and Ubering back to the airport.

Two weeks — Disney World (Part 2)

Our previous tradition of alternating big annual family vacations, usually during the summers, between Hawaii and Disney World took another switch this summer.  Despite going to Hawaii this Spring, Hawaii last summer, and Disney World last Spring, we again went to Disney World (and Universal Orlando) last week.  We departed early Sunday morning, the day after we returned from Boy Scout Camp.  In addition, I was so busy doing some home things like paying bills, and some work things like submitting an AGU abstract, and packing for the trip, that I didn’t actually go to sleep Saturday night.  The drive in the dark to LAX was more than a little frightening, given how tired I was, and we arrived at LAX too late to check in our luggage on our American Airlines flight.  In the end, we missed our flight while standing in line, and we wound up flying standby on the next flight to DFW while arranging standby for a later flight to MCO than what we were originally going to take.  However, when we got to Dallas, we managed to get on our original DFW-MCO flight, trusting that our luggage would get on Disney’s Magical Express to our room, despite going on a different flight.

This year, we booked a Concierge level room at the Boardwalk Inn, on Crescent Lake right across from the Yacht Club Resort and the Beach Club Resort where we had stayed during our last two Disney vacations.  All three resorts are Deluxe resorts within walking or boating distance from both Epcot and Hollywood Studios, and this resort area has become a favorite of mine and Hsuan’s for its proximity to Epcot (and its world-class cuisine).  W and J like the Yacht Club and the Beach Club for their shared swimming pool complex, which really is nicer than the Boardwalk’s, but we couldn’t get the rooms we wanted there during our scheduled vacation time.

The room we got at the Boardwalk Inn was far more spacious than any room we had had at Disney World before, with a regular bedroom area and an additional sitting area with a pullout sofa bed and an additional television, along with a balcony that faced the Boardwalk and Crescent Lake.  This was a significant step up from our previous rooms which usually had “garden views”.  We found out later that we had been upgraded, without the resort telling us.  This was a big bonus for W, who is old enough to want more privacy.  (If only we could afford a suite…)

Better than our last vacation, I had planned out lunch and dinner reservations and FastPass+ reservations for the entire week, Monday through Friday.  We had Park Hopper tickets, but that option was just for flexibility, just in case our plans changed.  Monday would be at the Animal Kingdom, Tuesday at Epcot, Wednesday at the Magic Kingdom, Thursday at Hollywood Studios, and Friday back at Epcot.  I was unable to get FastPasses to the new Soarin over the World, but I tried to get some previously unavailable dining reservations as well as attend at least one attraction that we’d not seen before — the Jungle Book show at Animal Kingdom.  I had dining reservations at Teppan Edo, La Hacienda de San Angel, breakfast at Be Our Guest, lunch at the Sci-Fi Dine-in Theater restaurant, and dinner — of course! — at Monsieur Paul, our favorite, as our final dinner at Epcot on Friday.  The Sci-Fi Dine-in reservation was special because we had missed lunch or dinner there for several vacations.  Since I was uncertain of our morning on Friday, I canceled a lunch at Be Our Guest and also another lunch reservation, made later, at Tutto Italia in Epcot.  We had dinner upon arrival at Trattoria al Forno on the Boardwalk, making canceling Tutto Italia easier.  (We also got to see a couple of “street” performers on the Boardwalk, and J got to participate in the juggler’s show, before dinner.)

——

Monday was our day at the Animal Kingdom.  One of my goals in planning the vacation was to ween J off of staying away from rides that frighten him but didn’t frighten W at the same age.  I’m getting tired of splitting up the family during theme park visits because the boys want to ride different rides.

So, at the Animal Kingdom, we got J on Expedition Everest, the park’s only roller coaster.  In fact, since we got there early, we rode once without our FastPass and another time with it.

We also rode Kali River Rapids and saw both the Finding Nemo Musical (which gets me choked up with every performance that I see) and the Festival of the Lion King (twice), and we saw the Jungle Book show, which combined singing and dancing based on the new, live-action movie, but also projections of the movie onto water screens in the lagoon.  I really enjoyed the songs, especially the remakes of the classics from the animated movie.

——

Tuesday was our first day at Epcot, with lunch at Teppan Edo and dinner at La Hacienda de San Angel.  Upon entering the park, we made a beeline for the Soarin ride, to see the new Soarin over the World version.  We didn’t have FastPasses, but we got there early enough to ride it twice, while playing the geography trivia game presented to the people in line.

Throughout the day, we did the usual rides and attractions — Spaceship Earth (which I slept through, almost entirely), Mission: Space, Test Track (without FastPasses, we used the single rider line and rode separately), and Illuminations, my favorite Disney fireworks show.  However, in keeping with my intent to try new things on this vacation, we also did a few new things, particularly in the Italy pavilion:  We saw an Italian flag tossing performance, something I had never seen before and which I found impressive and very entertaining.  We also stopped by the Tutto Gusto Wine Cellar for a pre-lunch snack of desserts and a Grand Tour wine flight.  I was pretty buzzed by the time we went to lunch at Teppan Edo...

We covered a number of other things throughout the rest of the day, including the Seas Pavilion, the Journey into Imagination, the Pixar Shorts Festival.  We had FastPasses for Illuminations, so we got a good view of the fireworks and the water show.

——

On Wednesday, despite having an afternoon FastPass+ to the Seven Dwarfs mine train, we arrived early enough (right after rope drop) to ride the Seven Dwarfs first thing in the morning and get in line for a second try, until the line was stopped because of “technical difficulties” with the ride.  After waiting a brief time, we went to Be Our Guest for our breakfast reservation, only to return to the ride right after breakfast just as it re-opened.  Bonus!

Our day at the Magic Kingdom wasn’t notable for doing anything new.  We rode Big Thunder, Splash Mountain, and Seven Dwarfs (for a third time) on FastPasses.  Our Splash Mountain FastPass was scheduled right before lunch, but it, too, had technical difficulties, and the system rescheduled the FastPass to any time later in the day, and allowable on several different rides.

We also rode Haunted Mansion and Pirates of the Caribbean.  An interesting thing happened on Haunted Mansion:  The end-of-ride ghosts who appeared in the mirrors held up signs saying “California, here we come!” as we rode by.  Clearly, there was some RFID technology in the doom buggies that read our Magic Bands and identified us as from California.

At Gaston’s Tavern, we stopped by for a light lunch/snack of Lafou’s Brew and some ham and cheese stuffed pretzels.  After I paid, the cast members found out that they were out of the ham and cheese stuffed pretzels, so I agreed to wait at a table for the food.  They called me in 10 minutes for the food, and as we sat eating, another cast member came out and gave us a huge cinnamon roll, “from Mickey”, in thanks for our patience.

Soon after we left, rain came down hard (as it did several times during our stay in Orlando), and we got soaked, so after buying new ponchos, we went back to the hotel to dry up and rest.  I used the hair dryer to dry out our shoes and the iron and ironing board to dry off my wool socks (a lucky clothing choice on my part that morning).

After we returned to the park, we decided to ride Splash Mountain.  Hsuan and the boys have noticed how I usually look “cool” (rather than screaming and hysterical) on our ride photos, and J and W have taken to trying to look cool, too.  So, this time, I decided to up the coolness factor and strike a pose during the big fall at the end of the ride.  See above.  Serendipitously, and entirely unintentionally, I blocked W’s face as he tried looking cool and relaxed.

I made reservations earlier in the day for dinner at the Jungle Navigation Company restaurant, which is themed after the nearby Jungle Cruise.  The food was Asian/African/American fusion, or some such thing.  In any case, I had Char Sui Pork.  Our waitress was dressed like a Jungle Cruise skipper, complete with chipper behavior and jokes.

We watched the Wishes fireworks show, although our viewing location wasn’t the best we could have wanted.  We spent our last couple of hours in the park at Tomorrowland, riding everything except Astro Orbiter.  We also passed by Philharmagic, though I slept through much of it.

——

Thursday was our day at Hollywood Studios, and I wanted to do some very specific things:  Enjoy all the Star Wars offerings, which have greatly expanded, eat at Sci-Fi Dine-in theater for lunch, and get J on the Tower of Terror ride, again so we wouldn’t split up the family.

In the photo from Tower of Terror, we’re sitting on the left side (facing the riders), middle row.  W has his hands up, Hsuan and J look scared, and I have a goofy grin like the other two middle-aged guys behind me.  J is holding Hsuan’s and my arms.

We also did the usual things — Star Tours twice, the Indiana Jones Stunt Spectacular (which was cut short due to rain), and the Beauty and the Beast Musical.  I also had FastPasses to Fantasmic, for which I wanted to avoid having to get a dining package in order to get good seats.

There were plenty of Star Wars offerings, including frequent stage appearances by Star Wars costumed cast members from the old trilogies and the new movie, and there was the Star Wars Launch Bay, with more characters and character meet-and-greets, as well as props and starship models.

J got a t-shirt with a stormtrooper on it, shooting and saying “PEW PEW!”

——

We spent Friday morning at the pool, enjoying a slightly delayed checkout, before we had our luggage stored so we could return to Epcot.  We had lunch at Restaurant Marrakesh and enjoyed the belly dancer.

We used FastPasses to ride SpaceShip Earth (for which I managed to stay awake, almost entirely), Mission Space, and Test Track, so we finally got to ride all together instead of using the single rider line.  We revisited Soarin once.

Finally, we closed out our Disney World vacation with dinner at 6:15 PM at Monsieur Paul, in the France pavilion.  It’s my favorite restaurant at Disney.  W and I both had the Prix Fixe menu, though we chose different items.  I also had the Clarendelle Merlot to complement my steak.

Amuse — beef and mushrooms on a red wine sauce

Lobster tail and lobster soup

New York strip sirloin

Dessert — chocolate sphere around chocolate ice cream


——

At the conclusion of all this (and after our stay at Universal Orlando, which I’ll write about next), as I was importing my photos into Photos for Mac OS X after returning home, from my Nikon Coolpix, my iPhone 6S Plus, and from Disney’s Photopass, I discovered that all three handle dates, times, and timezones differently, causing sufficient confusion to Photos that I had to go through and manually fix a lot of time and date stamps.  With over 200 photos, I had to go from memory as to what event went on when, and even now, I’m not entirely sure the timestamps are correct for every photo.

Two weeks -- Camping (Part 1)

W and Scoutmaster Kelly, working late into the night on duty assignments, tracking rank advancements, etc.  A Troop Friend (camp staff) is consulting with W over his shoulder.

It’s been a very rough two weeks.  During the first week, I went with W and J and their Boy Scout Troop to a week long campout on Catalina Island.  We had well over 60 scouts and about a dozen adult leaders, of which I was one of the senior “experienced” leaders, and we shared the camp with a number of other troops.

W had the honor and the responsibility of being Senior Patrol Leader for the troop, under Kelly, our Scoutmaster, which put W in charge of assigning (or getting scouts to volunteer for) various duties including being waiters for meals at the dining hall, volunteering to clean the kybo (Kybo Warriors), fire chief, and a number of other things.  He was the scout leader with whom the camp staff interfaced, along with the Kelly, and he had daily meetings separate from the Scoutmaster meetings to keep up with activities.  He oversaw two assistant senior patrol leaders (L and V, friends from his regular patrol) and regular patrol leaders in making sure that our various campsites were ready for inspections, that we were at our regular morning and evening troop meetings, that the scouts were lined up properly at the parade grounds before meals, and that the Tenderfoot and Second Class Scout candidates were getting their sign-offs, either from the assistant senior patrol leaders, patrol leaders, assistant patrol leaders, or himself.

W spent the entire week often carrying around a notebook in which he kept track of things.

W, surrounded by M (far left, looking off to the left), A (glasses), L (foreground), and V (partially obscured, right of W), from among the senior scout leadership.  To the right of V is C2, not a senior scout.

I’m very proud of W and how he handled himself during the camp.

I and the other dads were assigned various camp areas associated with our regular patrols at home, which meant I was sleeping in the same tent as J and sleeping in the same campsite as J’s regular patrol from home.  (The camp area with the tents is divided into several campsites, each composed of groups of maybe a dozen tents sharing a wooden deck.  Our troup had four adjacent campsites.  Also, while our troop is composed of patrols of scouts, we had divided our scouts into slightly different patrols at the camp, for organizational convenience, since not all of our scouts went to this camp this summer.)

Additionally, I was assigned as Assistant Scoutmaster not for J’s patrol but for another one of the new camp patrols, and I had A (one of W’s patrol members and friends from home) as my patrol leader, and B as assistant patrol leader.  C, a member of W’s patrol at home, was patrol leader for J’s camp patrol, and he slept in the tent with J1, one of his younger brothers, while J2, the other brother (and J1’s fraternal twin), slept in the adjacent tent with J3, another patrolmate.

John, B2’s dad from J’s home patrol, stayed with us from Sunday through Wednesday, when he went home and was replaced by Eric, J3’s dad.

As I said, I was one of two “experienced” dads and ASMs on the trip, in addition to Scoutmaster Kelly and former Scoutmaster Ron.  We had a total of 9 dads/ASMs/SMs at any given time, spread through four campsites to work with the scouts; on Wednesday, two dads left and were replaced by two more.

We’d wake at 6 AM, dress up in our Class A uniforms, and prepare our campsites for inspection before going to breakfast at 7 AM.  Then we’d return before 8 AM to our campsites for inspection and a brief meeting and announcements.  Then we’d return to the parade ground in front of the dining hall for morning flag ceremony and additional camp-wide announcements.

On Monday morning, we held our swimming tests.  Nobody was allowed in the water without passing the swimming tests as well as following buddy system rules.  Then, Monday afternoon, the scouts attended merit badge classes.  (W’s first period class, Surveying, was canceled, so he scrambled around to find an alternative that he hadn’t already achieved, winding up with Forestry.)

On Tuesday, Thursday, and Friday, the schedule had regular Merit Badge classes scheduled in the morning, after flag ceremony.  Our scouts tended not to be in Class A uniforms by flag ceremony, because some of the Merit Badge classes right afterward, like canoeing and kayaking, required activewear.  Lunch was at 12:15 PM, after classes, and at 2-5 PM, scouts had free time to take elective merit badge classes, do some shooting at the archery or riflery ranges, spend time at the waterfront swimming, canoeing, etc., or just resting and relaxing as they wished.  Some classes lasted to 5 PM, and with dinner right after, Kelly killed the requirement for Class A uniforms at dinner after the first couple of days.

Wednesday was hike day.  W and many of the senior scouts went on a 17 mile hike over the island, to fulfill their Chief requirement for the Tribe of Torqua.  I went with the younger scouts on a 7 mile hike that included a ~1000 ft hike straight up to a peak called Goat Whiskers — the most-killer climb next to Henninger Flats that I’ve encountered.

J at the top of Goat Whiskers, just as tired as I am

(On Wednesday morning, a scout was being returned to Two Harbors, to go home with his mother after severe homesickness.  His mother was arriving by boat to pick him up, and Ron invited me to go along as a second adult, as part of BSA’s adult leadership requirements.  He knew I was not strong at big hikes.  I agreed to go, but late Tuesday night, I remembered that John and another dad were leaving for Two Harbors at the same time, so I suggested they be the additional adult leadership, and I went on the hike.)

Kelly had said that “it’s all downhill” after the climb to Goat Whiskers, which it was.  That climb took all of the energy I had, though I was somewhat satisfied to note that I was not at the rear the whole time but was closer to the rear end of the middle group.

However, what Kelly didn’t note was that the downhill was very steep and long.  While I was exhausted on the climb, I found my ankles, knees, and hip joints were taking a huge pounding on the descent.  When we got to the beach at Two Harbors near lunchtime, where we met up with Ron, I told him I was spent, and he pointed out how I could take a water taxi back to the camp.  Meanwhile, I took the opportunity at the beach to hold a scoutmaster conference with a scout — more on that below.  And when I got on the water taxi, I met Eric, serendipitously, on his way to the camp to take John’s place.  When we got to camp, I took the time to show him around and tell him about our schedule.

J’s troop is a mix of scouts from two different schools, and I’m very conscious of wanting to get the two groups to mix, so I had J2, C’s younger brother, move out of the tent he shared with J3, to make room for Eric (J3’s dad), and I had J2 move into the tent with B2, John’s son, who is from the same school as J.

——

The big goal of the campout for us was to get our scouts their rank advancements to Tenderfoot or Second Class Scout.  During the first couple of days at camp, none of the new scouts were ready, so instead, we ASMs and dads helped out with sign-offs — instructing them on scout skills and signing their books when they’ve mastered the skills.  Actually, sign-offs are best done by senior scouts, in my opinion, so we mainly spent time trying to round up the SPL (W), the two ASPLs, the PLs, and the APLs to help the younger scouts.  When we couldn’t get enough of the senior scouts — more on that below — we adults filled in the gaps.

By late Tuesday, some scouts had completed their sign-offs, so we ASMs and other dads started doing scoutmaster conferences and Boards of Review.  During the scoutmaster conferences, we review all of the scout skills and other items that they have to know in order to pass their Boards, and if they don’t know something, we instruct them further and then tell them how much they need to review before doing their Boards.  Then they do their Boards, which go over the same material, and they either pass the Board or they don’t.  These meetings are one-on-one between a scout and an adult, although in keeping with BSA rules, they’re always in view of another adult.  Also, one dad can’t do both a conference and a Board for the same scout.

For Tenderfoot at this summer camp, we’re pretty lenient, but we still want them to know their stuff, and they’re usually very well prepared by the scoutmaster conferences, anyway.  Back at home, we require that they really know their material, and by First Class Scout, it’s best if they know everything 100% correctly (though 80-90% is usually accepted).

Because we had so many Tenderfoot advancements, we dads were doing scoutmaster conferences and Boards any time we could find — after breakfast and before flag ceremony, after lunch and before free time, sometimes during free time, after dinner and before evening flag ceremony.  Mike, one of the new ASMs, became really adept at doing partial scoutmaster conferences or Boards during the half mile walk between our tents and the dining hall and even during the Wednesday hike, which I could not possibly have done, panting and wheezing as I was.  I preferred sitting for the conferences or Boards, though during one evening walk with our Troop Friends, a few of us dads (including me) stepped aside on the road to do conferences or Boards.  During one of the after-lunch times before 2 PM, I and a bunch of other dads were occupying outdoor tables at the Trading Post, doing conferences or Boards, some of which stretched slightly into the free time.  And, as I noted above, I finished another scoutmaster conference with another scout at the beach, after lunch during our 7 mile hike.  Sometimes we’d squeeze time in after evening meeting and before 10 PM lights out.

On Tuesday, J got the other experienced dad, Chris, for his scoutmaster conference, and they were taking an awfully long time, so during a lull, I reviewed his material with J and suggested he do a faster conference with John, which he got done quickly and then finished his Board quickly with another dad.  On the other hand, for A, one of J’s friends, I strongly recommended he do his scoutmaster conference with the other experienced dad, since I thought that A lacked some of the seriousness that Chris would be able to bring to him.

——

On a related note, J1, one of C’s younger brothers, is high-functioning autistic with ADHD.  Fortunately, Eric knew him and his family well, so with a lot of information from Eric, I did J1’s scoutmaster conference with Eric in attendance, and then Eric did his Board immediately afterward, while the information from the conference was still fresh.

——

“Old Man” Lange:  The kitchen staff has prepared a delicious…

Camp Staff:  And nutritious!

“Old Man” Lange:  Meal for you this fine day!

…..

“Old Man” Lange:  Troop Friends, will you please join your troops at their places!

Troop Friends:  With our bright and shiny faces!

——


The other dads occasionally spent their free time (“troop time”) with their sons at the beach.  Unlike others, I had two sons at camp, but I found myself pretty much alone, without W or J, as both of whom zoomed off with their friends.  Oh, well.

(I wasn’t entirely abandoned by my sons, though.  Obviously, I slept in the same tent as J and chatted with him each night before lights out, but W also took time out during the occasional lull in activity to chat with me about how his days were going, or to ask a little advice, or to ask me to help organize the scouts for this or that activity.  We once had a private chat between campsites in the dark after lights out about how some senior scouts were doing a great job while others weren’t quite so helpful.  I told him how I was getting J’s patrol to mix better with each other, too.  I think Kelly was a short way off in the dark, listening to us.)

When not doing the occasional scoutmaster conference or Board of Review during free time (which didn’t happen as freqently as it might have), and not spending time with W or J at the beach, I spent my down time either napping in my tent (frequently awakened by J and his friends playing a loud game of cards at the table just outside), having a drink at the Trading Post, or surfing the web on my iPhone when I could find a spot somewhere at camp (usually closer to the ocean) that had cell coverage.

Later, I found that one of the dads in one of our other camp areas had been enabling his son to be coddled and treated like a Cub Scout — or younger.  This dad, who arrived mid-week, shielded his son from being more active, letting him sit on his lap rather than engage in activities, for example, while the son had otherwise been a pretty regular and active scout prior to the dad’s arrival.  This sort of behavior really ticked off the other dads, because it meant that that dad focused only on his own son, and while it’s normal for the dads to pay a little extra attention to their own sons, we were really there to be responsible for every scout.  Later, discussions of this dad’s behavior (which we didn’t direct to him — yet) had Kelly muttering things like “let your son grow a pair!”

This sort of irritating behavior — which I had noticed on another campout earlier in the year — counterbalanced my feeling left out of W’s and J’s free time activity, i.e. each of my sons had a pair.

——

W and his senior scout friends achieved the Tribe of Torqua rank of Chief, and I was able to attend their special nighttime ceremony.  In fact, I was also able to attend an earlier evening Tribe of Torqua ceremony just for the senior patrol leaders from each troop, so that was nice, too.

——

J’s home patrol, coming together for lunch

There were lots of other activities throughout the week — skits by the scouts as well as camp staff, and lots of group singing by the camp staff before meals.  Scouts eagerly earned their Totin’ Chits in order to be allowed to purchase and own pocket knives.  We played highland games (tug of war and other such team games) one night and other games another night.

J and his friends performing a skit.


Kelly and W consulting on rank advancements and on which of the senior scouts pulled their weight and which, unfortunately, didn’t pull their weight during the camp.

On Thursday night, we had an Honor Hike, during which the Troop Friends spoke to us about elements of the Scout Oath and how it applied to us, and afterward, we dads, the scoutmaster, and W got to say a few words.  I thanked the scouts for treating the Honor Hike with some respect, and I also said how personally proud I was of W.

Right after the Honor Hike, back at camp, J had to leave for the night and spend it sleeping in a shelter he and a couple of other scouts built for the Wilderness Survival Merit Badge.

We had a Friday morning of “bad inspection” in which our troop deliberately tried to score a 0 on our inspections (instead of a perfect 100).  Our regular commissioner was losing her voice during the week, so our substitute commissioner — who had been the troop’s commissioner from previous years — really got into the “bad inspection” as he bellowed things like “WHAT am I SEEING, HERE!?!?!” and the like.  A grand time was had by all.  When the results were announced after morning flag ceremony, our result of a “big fat ZERO!” caused some visible bewilderment from the other troops when we raucously cheered our own astonishingly poor showing.  (Seen from the other troops’ point of view, perhaps we were mocking their efforts to get perfect scores on inspection.)

Tying up a patrol leader and blocking the entrance to one of the camping areas for “bad inspection day”


C and W out of uniform and on the deck for Bad Inspection Day.


We drank lots of Slush Puppies and sodas, ate lots of candies, waved away a lot of yellowjackets.  There were more than a few yellowjacket stings.  With the heat and all the walking back and forth, not to mention the hikes, I kept myself so well-hydrated that I had to get up to pee twice a night.

By the end of the camp, I witnessed a lot of our scouts going up to hug the Troop Friends assigned to us, so much so that one of the Troop Friends commented the hugging was getting a little out of hand.  Although the boat ride to the island was rough and stomach churning, the boat ride back was calm and quick.  I did a Second Class scoutmaster conference during the boat ride back, but the scout ended up declining to do his Board of Review during the trip.

W teaching square lashing on the boat ride home.


© Allan Labrador 2015