Sunday, November 9, 2025

Discovering the outdoors as a Boy Scout in the 1950s

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BY DAVE FOLEY

Growing up in Grand Rapids,

Michigan I wanted to get out of the city and camp in the woods. When I turned

11, I became a member of Boy Scout Troop 234 and began working on my Tenderfoot

badge. During weekly meetings we'd learn knot tying, Morse code and work on

memorizing the Scout Oath and Law. We diligently applied ourselves to these

tasks, but what we lived for was the monthly camp outs.

On those Fridays a dozen or

so kids, along with Scoutmaster Bob and a couple dads, would meet at the church

parking lot. Although sometimes we'd go crosstown to Camp Lion, often we'd just

drive out into the National Forest and set up camp at the end of a two-track

road near a river or lake.

Our tents, heavy canvas ones,

leftovers from World War ll, were virtually indestructible but not necessarily

waterproof. Only a fool would dare touch the inside wall during a rainstorm,

knowing that where your finger met canvas, water would come seeping through.

With no mosquito netting or tent floor to keep nature at bay, we might be

sharing our sleeping quarters with a foraging raccoon or skunk. During mosquito

season, the open tent became a bug sanctuary. Our only defense against insect

pests was liberal applications of 6-12 repellent.

It was dark by the time the

tents were up, and a fire was needed. 

Heading into the woods, guided by flashlight beams, we looked for wood.

We had an ax and we intended to put it to use, so we'd pass by ready-to-burn sticks

and branches lying on the ground in favor of a piece big enough to chop. Then

we'd begin swinging. Chips would fly everywhere. Occasionally the blade might

carom off a log, coming within inches of an arm or leg, but we weren't worried.

This was the 1950s.  Since we didn't know

anyone who had been maimed with an ax, we assumed no one would be hurt.

Our campfires were bonfires

with flames shooting high into the sky. That made for crispy blackened

marshmallows and occasionally scorched leather shoes for those who pushed their

cold feet too close to the fire. Minor calamities aside, we would sit by the

blaze enthralled by the sheer amazement of what we had created.  

When we'd told all the ghost stories we knew – the scariest one ending with “And the next day when they came back there was a bloody hook hanging on the car door,” we'd head for our tents. Although nothing lay between our sleeping bags and the hard ground, we weren't uncomfortable - just cold - as the chill from the earth  seeped through our flannel sleeping bags. If there was moisture around, those bags sucked it up. Even if you were in a dry tent, the humid air plus body sweat made the interior of the flannel sleeping bag feel like you were wrapped in a banana skin.  

Sleep didn't come quickly.

Lying in the dark, our minds, already primed by ghost stories, would imagine

creatures lurking just beyond our tent as our ears strained to interpret the

meaning of even the slightest rustle in the woods. As our repellent lost its

effectiveness, we'd be distracted from the terrors outside by the buzzing of

mosquitoes trying to use us as feeding stations.

Well before dawn, everyone

under the age of 15 would be up feeding kindling wood into the ashes of last

night's fire. Then we'd light a match and touch it to the tinder so we could

start getting warm.

Eventually a sympathetic

adult would appear and set in motion the preparing of a pancake breakfast.

Although our scout leaders

encouraged us to work on mastering campcraft skills and nature study to

complete requirements for our next scout award or merit badge, we were easily

distracted. If a tree hung out over the river, we'd have to climb it and logs

bridging creeks had to walked. Into every stream or lake we'd throw logs or

sticks and then bomb them with rocks as they drifted by.

By noon appetites would be

raging. The midday meal would either be tinfoil dinners baked in the fire or

hunter's stew cooked on the big green Coleman stove. We'd dice potatoes,

slice carrots, cut up celery and weep while we chopped onions. If it was to be

stew, we'd fry up hamburger and dump that, with all the vegetables, into a pot

of boiling water. Invariably growling stomachs trumped patience and we'd pull

the stew off the stove too early and be eating bowls of burger pieces and  semi-cooked vegetables. Tinfoil dinners,

depending on the meal's proximity to the cooking coals, consisted of food

pieces ranging from raw to scorched. Our hunger cured even the pickiest eaters

and all of us ate until there was no more.

After lunch we'd wash dishes

in the creek or lake, load up the scout trailer and start the drive back home.

Usually within a few miles, the nearly sleepless night, and all our running

around, caught up to us and most everyone would fall asleep.

Next month we'd do it again,

pitching our tents in another wooded locale, a group of city boys getting

another dose of the great outdoors.

I stayed with scouts for

several years achieving the Eagle Scout rank and later served a year as an

assistant scoutmaster. Probably as much as anything, my experience in scouting

nurtured my love of the outdoors.

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