Camp Hitaga

For six years, while I was in college and graduate school, I spent my summers working as a counselor at a Camp Fire Girls camp near Cedar Rapids, Iowa.

I knew I didn’t want to go home after my freshman year in St. Cloud. There were no jobs for me in North St. Paul. I would have been a lousy waitress. I wasn’t certified to be a life guard. The few businesses in town weren’t hiring. And although I passed my driver’s test, I really didn’t know how to drive a car.

Ah, ha, I thought. Maybe I can work in a summer camp? I like being outdoors. How hard can it be?

The application process was easy. Back then there were no background checks. I’m not sure I even had to submit a letter of reference. 

I was accepted almost immediately. I later learned that the director wanted counselors with a music background. She hired me to be on the nature staff, not because I knew anything about nature, but because I could play the piano.

Camp Hitaga turned out to be a good fit for me. The camp director, Noel Newell, and the culture she promoted completely transformed my life.

Noel was a kind, gentle, gracious, quiet woman. I have no idea how old she was. She had beautiful white hair, so we all assumed she must be really old. She was a music major, who ran the camp like a choir. We sang all the time. We met at the flagpole and sang patriotic songs. We sang at meals, on hikes and canoe trips, in the shower, walking along dusty paths. 

Every night, the counselors met around a campfire. We sang in harmony, accompanied by guitars. Folk music by Peter, Paul and Mary and Bob Dylan drifted from every hilltop as counselors sang their campers to sleep. After the girls were sleeping we slipped away to the kitchen, searching for ice cream and dessert left-over from dinner.

Being on the nature staff allowed me to be outside all day. There were two of us on the staff plus a head counselor, who was a real biology major. We worked in a small cabin, filled with plants and animals ~ including an eight-foot bull snake that terrified me. I led nature hikes in the forest, where we identified plants, met for early morning bird hikes (supplied with peanut butter and jelly sandwiches) and late night star-gazing lessons.

The picture at the top of this page is of three campers building a bird bath. I don’t know whose idea that was. Probably not mine. I always learned far more than I taught.

One day, on a hike to the mail box, there were cows in the field next to the road. And one bull. There was mating going on but I was so clueless, I didn’t know what was happening. 

One of the campers asked, “What are they doing?”

“I’m not sure,” I answered. “I guess they are playing a game. It looks like they are having fun.”

I loved they campers and the other counselors. I’ve lost touch with all of them, except for one fine woman, a previous camper with whom I’ve shared a lifetime of friendship.

It was an idyllic time for me. I went from being a very shy, completely non-athletic young woman to someone who enjoyed social encounters and being physically active.

I spent every minute soaking up sunshine, in the company of like-minded women who were smart, funny, creative and energetic. Because this was the early 60’s, most of us went on to teach school and raise families. 

Noel guided us with a gentle hand, even though none of us were as quiet and well-behaved as she would have liked. She recognized that each of us had something special to offer, something that made us worthy, something that made us capable of being leaders of this new generation.

I never went back home again.

 

8 Replies to “Camp Hitaga”

  1. Great story! I was a Campfire girl too! I remember my Dad had to buy most of my candy as I didn’t like selling door to door. I went to Rainbow Trail Lutheran Camp for a few summers. I stayed in the Chipmunk cabin. Great times and fellowship!

  2. Idyllic is a perfect description! Sure took me back to simpler times and the wonder of being a young person with so many interesting paths ahead. Thanks for prompting those memories.

  3. Being a farm kid, we did not have Camp Fire Girls nor Girl Scouts. But we did have 4-H, and I fondly remember 4H Camp. I think it only seems a simpler time in reflection. I remember girlish worries like “will that cute boy ask me to partner at the square dance social” or “will ANYONE ask me to dance?” (They did).
    I also remember making a (cheesy looking) leather belt that I proudly wore for years. And KP duty, and horse rides. .. …
    Thank you Lynda for your own personal growth story at camp.

  4. Nice job, Lynda. You captured a lovely shot of a part of camp I didn’t know – the counselor’s part. I remember how that snake frightened you! Ha. You captured one of the great pleasures of the camp – girls and young women getting along in literal harmony in the absence of male influences and at a time of deep important personal growth for each – camper and counselor alike. The music was the best part. Nice nod to Noel too. Sweet.

  5. Great memories! I was never a counselor but enjoyed Camp Fire camp for many years (Camp Ellowi at Cedar Hill, Texas – named for the founders, Eloise and Louis Wilson). We wore the navy shorts, white blouses, and our red Camp Fire neckerchiefs, and I too remember that we were always singing.

  6. As you know I am from Iowa. One of my best friends lives on an acreage near Cedar Rapids. I have visited her a few times there. I remember a Lutheran camp I went to a few times at Lake Okaboji. Yes, life seemed much simpler then.

  7. Love it! Noel was such a lovely, caring person. In high school creative writing, I wrote about Mrs. B – turned out the teacher was a friend of Mrs. B! Mrs. B and Noel were such awesome parts of Hitaga, and complemented each other so well – I can’t even imagine Hitaga without them.

  8. Great memories. I remember being a camp counselor in Connecticut–a Florida girl in the northeast. I remember the navy shorts and white blouse; been a long time since I had thought about that!

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