Farm & Wilderness Blog

Trip Week at Tamarack Farm - Farm & Wilderness

Written by Kory Mathis | July 20, 2010

Well, it’s the start of Week 4 at Tamarack Farm and camp is temporarily quiet as eight groups are out on trips. 

Green Mountain and White Mountain are on hiking trips in Vermont and New Hampshire, respectively.  Umbagog is experiencing a canoeing trip on the NH/Maine border.  B&P is on a trip to work with the folks at Bread and Puppet in Glover, VT.  Sugar Shack is building a small building at a farm in Randolph, VT (they carried most of the pre-assembled pieces with them).  Farm Girl Farm is working on a CSA in Egremont, MA.  The Homestead trip (aka the Hard Core Farmers) are tending our herd here and taking day trips to selected small farming operations in the area.  The Mystery Trip (a TF tradition) is an improv trip of sorts, leaving camp on foot with three staff and exploring the local area and being creative, writing journals and producing art.

Over the past week, our TF work projects have included the ongoing re-shingling of our beloved Rec Lodge, cooking (culminating in a camper-cooked supper on Sunday), acting as morning counselors at the Barn Day Camp, doing trip packout, building the Sugar Shack components, making a waterfront bench, pouring concrete pavers for our basketball court by the Dance Barn, building steps in the outdoor space affectionately known as LaLa Land, harvesting and weeding in the garden, and finishing the ‘bridge to nowhere.’

On Saturday mornings, we have a tradition of working together as an all-camp group.  This past Saturday, we hiked up past Peggy’s Pond to the Scott hayfield. We used bow saws and trimmers, as well as cleared some of the brush encroaching on the field.  After an hour and a half of this satisfying work, we admired our efforts while having Silent Meeting looking off to views of Killington and Shrewsbury.

This Saturday evening, we had the rare pleasure of having Frances Moore Lappe (author of Diet for a Small Planet) visit and speak to our assembled group in the Rec Lodge about the politics of food and democracy world-wide.  The campers were fully engaged and attentive. They gained a new perspective on this organic farm where we are lucky enough to live.

And a reminder!

The main Visiting Day at Tamarack Farm will still be at the end of this week, Saturday, July 24th. We’ll begin at mid-morning (10 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.) and extend through mid-evening (9:00 p.m. ). Since Visiting Day for Indian Brook, Timberlake, Flying Cloud and Saltash Mountain will be on Friday, July 23rd, we will make time for any families who are coming to visit other campers on Friday to come visit us as well if they are unavailable on Saturday.

All of the Tamarack Farm campers will be returning from trips either on Thursday or Friday and we have tried to ensure that any campers with Friday visitors will be returning on Thursday.

The general schedule of the day looks like this:

We will  have some time in the morning when parents can participate in the work projects. Then we will join together for a picnic lunch time; we encourage families to bring picnics to share with campers and their friends (we will provide a picnic lunch for anyone who needs it). The afternoon will be is divided into three parts with various activities, including an open waterfront, on either side of “TF101” (a mid-afternoon time when parents meet with the directors in the Rec Lodge to ask any questions you may have.) The later afternoon activity time includes barn chores, lake runs, etc.

Our supper is a buffet on the lawn followed by a Postum House (open mic) evening that can include family members performing. This will end at around 9 p.m., and then campers will transition into Dance Free.

Fingers crossed for good weather and we hope to see you then.

tom’b