Welcome
to the Boy scouts
“Well have a good week,” my father
said while shaking my hand as my
camping gear remained scattered on
the ground.
It was the first time I ever recall
shaking my father's hand and I think
on some subconscious level, it
marked a moment where I was no longer a
boy, but starting the process of
becoming a man. But at that moment in
my life, I just wasn't ready for
that stage. I saw my father walking back to
his truck and tried calming my
nerves because it was going to be hard without him.
It was July of 2007 and I was
11-years-old and was spending my first
summer at Boy Scout summer camp in
the American fork canyon.
Along with five other boys, I had just crossed
over from
a Cub Scouts pack that was run by
mothers to a Boy Scout troop that was
run by fathers. Now along with the
other five newest Boy Scouts, I went
from building pinewood derby cars
and selling popcorn to going on 100
mile hikes, long canoe trips, and
learning how to start a fire with out
matches.
I was very shy but ready to make friends;
with short hair and striking good looks ;)
, I was nervous of the thought of
spending a week in a foreign
place without my family. And I was
even more cautious of the older,
mean looking high school boys I had
just met who were already beginning
to surround and harass some of my
friends like vultures on fresh
road kill during a hot summer day.
It still amuses me how the older boys
were able to reassure the parents of
the younger campers they would
keep an eye on their children. They
would always act the part of the
caring older scout so well and even
put on a fake smile as the parents
returned to their cars feeling
confident there son was going to be
watched over by a mature older boy
who had their best interest in mind.
But as I found myself nervous of the
week that was about to start, I
did have my friend troy who I had
just met a year before in my fifth
grade homeroom class at our
elementary school.
While Troy and I had a lot in common
such as our taste in music, school
activities, and sense of humor, I
always enjoyed having Troy as a friend
because he was more talkative and
confident than I was at that stage in
my life. And having a friend who was
able to make friends with others
better than you could meant a lot to
an 11-year-old who is just trying
to fit in with the crowd.
With our parents now gone and our
brand new camping gear still on the
ground, Troy and I learned the tent
we were going to be assigned
wouldn't be available until the next
day when summer camp officially
began and the commissary would be
open. Troy and I had arrived at scout
camp a day early just as the older
boys had arrived following a 100
mile hike from our hometown which
was a tradition in our Boy Scout
troop. But our scoutmaster at the
time, a man named Jaren, who was a
tall, older man with thinning brown
hair and dark glasses, offered to
stay in his son's tent so that Troy
and I could use the scout masters
tent until we received ours the next
day.
For most of the afternoon, Troy and
I attempted to settle in to the
campground by exploring the woods around
us. But most
importantly, we were trying to
remain low on the radar from the older
boys especially Jon, a husky Irish
farm boy with beady dark eyes who
had the reputation of being the
ringleader when it came to hazing the
new younger scouts.
But as the evening approached and
darkness began to fall over the
canyon, the wind also began to pick
up and the air began
to seem a little less humid and more
cooler as all of us new scouts sat
in a tent reading ghost stories out
of a book.
“Well, it’s getting late,” Troy said
to all of us. “It's time we call it a
night especially since it’s going to
storm soon. Okay Ryan, lets head
back to our tent.”
As Troy and I walked out of the old
army tent and began walking back to
the tent we were going to use for
the night, we looked around the
campground which had become
deserted. No longer were the scout fathers
and the older scouts present, but merely a dying fire was starting to
become extinguished from the raindrops that were beginning to fall from
the dark eerie looking sky. And with the wind beginning to pick up
speed, the canopies over the picnic tables began to flap loudly as the
strength of the poles holding them up remained in question.
Just then there was a bright light and a loud boom.
“Holy crap!” I said as Troy and we made a run for our tent. Suddenly we
felt as if we were in a fight for our lives as we dashed across the
dirt ground and leaped into our old army tent and tied the front down
as a way to keep out the rain.
Sitting on our beds, Troy and I reassured each other this storm would
quickly pass as all summer storms tend to do in Western Pennsylvania.
But as the minutes began to pass and we found ourselves on our metal
cots looking up at our tent that was shaking from the wind and rain
that kept on getting more intense, we both came to the conclusion that
something didn't seem right.
BOOM! POW! CRACK!
Outside the storm continued to roar as trees around us were beginning to
fall and the bright lightening would light up the dark campground.
Moments later, Troy and I saw the picnic table canopies rip right out
the ground and become sucked into the deep woods by the raging wind.
Then we heard what we thought was the sound of a train.
“Let's get under our cots!” I shouted to Troy over the loud roars from
the wind and thunder. It might be a tornado!”
As Troy and I laid on the wood slate with our stomachs against the wood
and held on to the feet of our old metal cots (something in hindsight
might have been bad to do) we looked through the bottom gap that showed
us what was going on outside as our campground became ravished by the
storm.
While I was always quick to get afraid, I began to grow even more
terrified when I saw that Troy, who had a great deal of more confidence
than I did, looked scared out of his wits.
“Do you think we are going to die?” Troy asked me as our tent was slowly
being pulled from the ground and water was now slowly seeping in from
the ceiling and soaking our sleeping bags.
“I don't know. I think so.” I shouted back while trying to keep my head
down.
“Do you believe in God?” I asked Troy between the claps of thunder and
the bolts of lightning.
“Yeah, I do. I mean, you do, right?” he asked back.
“Yeah, Yeah I do!” I said looking over to Troy while the flashes of
Lightning reflected off Troy’s glasses. Looking back, our conversation
about life and death was pretty deep for two 11-year-old boys. Going
back and forth we discussed our love for our families, what it would
be like when we would get to heaven, and what God would look like.
But as Troy and I reassured each other of our friendship in what seemed
to be the final moment for the both of us at the time, the next thing I
can remember was the silence.
“Hey Ryan, are you awake,” Troy whispered as both of us somehow were
back on our cots. “Yeah, but my bed is soaked from the rain,” I
replied.
“Mine too,” Troy said. “All my clean clothes are soaked! Everything is
soaked!”
As I held my dying flashlight over our camping gear, we started to hear
buzzing that broke the silence following the storm.
Suddenly the buzz became a high-pitched sound as I felt something biting
my neck.
“There are mosquitoes in here!” I shouted while slapping my face.
Shinning my flashlight to the bottom of our ravished tent, we saw
Mosquitoes coming up from the wooden slates below us and were beginning
to feast on our skin.
“Ah man, this stinks,” I said. “Let's go tell the scoutmaster. We can't
camp in this tent!”
Walking over to the tent the scoutmaster was sleeping in, (which we
could identify from the loud snoring) Troy and I shook the corner of his
tent awaking him from his deep sleep.
“What is it boys,” he asked us from still inside the tent and in a
groggy voice.
“Our sleeping bags, our clean clothes, and even the clothes on us are
soaked! We can't sleep like this,” Troy said to him.
“Boys, go back to sleep,” he replied before starting to snore again.
Walking back to our tents, Troy and I got back in our water logged
sleeping bags and tried to sleep. However, we spent most of the night
Complaining to each other and regretting going camping in the first
place.
The next morning as we woke up and saw the bright summer sun and older
boys raising the canopies that were knocked down by the storm, we also
saw the assistant scoutmaster surveying the damage. With his US Marine
look complete with his camouflage pants, fireman's T-shirt, and a crew
cut hair style, Assistant Scoutmaster Charlie walked around the
campground surveying the damage while listening to his fire radio .
“Quite a storm last night,” he said to us as we stood drenched and
looking miserable.
“This was a pretty bad one. You two fellas got quite the introduction to Boy Scouts.
Lot different than camping in Cub Scouts with your mothers,” he said.
“Yeah, we didn't think we were going to make it,” I replied.
“Well, you both did. And if you could handle that storm, you can handle
the rest of this week,” he said while brushing his mustache with his
fingertips.
“You're young men now. And welcome to the Boy Scouts,” he said smiling.
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