Staff Photo
 
 
In the early day of camp the open part of the field became the archery range for Frank Bailey’s afternoon classes as well as the athletic area for Spud Nason’s groups taking Athletics and Personal Fitness Merit Badges. A sawdust-filled jumping pit was created below the Boone pump house and below that, just to the left in the woods, was a pit used as a burning dump. Every day the troops would transport the burnable trash from kitchen and campsites to this spot in two trek carts (two-wheeled wagons), where it would be burned.

According to Anna Collins, who was the long-time owner of our neighboring Camp Kokatosi (now Kingley Pines), this open area, which she knew as Ephraim Jordan’s pasture, once extended through all of what is now Ridgway campsite, and to the stone wall seen on the east side.  When she walked this area in the sixties she was amazed to see how the landscape had changed and didn’t recognize it at all. The tall pines in Ridgway  had sprouted up as “pasture pines” once the field was abandoned, filling that space in so thickly that by 1952 it presented a solid wall of pine, a great place for stalking games, since no Scout could see further ahead than his extended arm.

The field was used as a scoutcraft instruction area in the 1980s when the adjoining campsite (now West) was the Scoutcraft area.
 


(Click on any photo below to see it larger)
Archery - 1931
Archery - Late 40's
Scoutcraft as seen from Ridgway
1986
Scoutcraft as seen from Boone Cabin
1986
Jumping Pit




Page design and layout by:
Dean B. Zaharis
Created: October 3, 2010
Last Update: April 3, 2011
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