Owasippe Scout Reservation
Owasippe Scout Reservation (OSR), located in Twin Lake, Michigan is the resident camp operated by the Chicago Area Council of the Boy Scouts of America. It began in 1911 as Camp White on 40 acres of land on Crystal Lake donated by the White Lake Chamber of Commerce. It is the United States' oldest and longest continuously operating Boy Scout camp.[1] At its peak of use the reservation covered 11,000 acres (45 km²) and served over 10,000 scouts per summer, but the overall decline in scouting nationwide has seen yearly attendance fall to approximately 3,800 campers. Previous property consolidations has left the camp at 4,800 acres (19 km²) in size, and the council is now attempting to sell the camp but with stiff resistance from the local community, scouts, leaders, families, and staff alumni.
Location
Owasippe Scout Reservation lies within the boundaries of Manistee National Forest in Blue Lake Township, Muskegon County, West-Central Michigan. The Northeast border of the camp is formed in part by the White River.
The watershed of Cleveland Creek, a tributary of the White River, is completely surrounded by the reservation's boundaries and is purported to be the only watershed in the Midwest where this occurs. The Gus Kopp Dam of Cleveland Creek creates Lake Wolverine which is surrounded by the camps of Owasippe.
Owasippe shares Big Blue Lake with YMCA Camp Pendalouan and camp Pioneer Trails. The reservation's eastern border is shared, in part, with Gerald R. Ford Council's Gerber Scout Reservation, and to the south is Blue Lake Fine Arts Camp.
Campers are able to go into the town of Whitehall to enjoy non-camp activities such as mini-golf, movie theaters, beaches, etc. Muskegon is close by and offers many stores and restaurants to enjoy. A theme park, Michigan's Adventure, is also nearby.
Notable Places
Administration Center
The Administration Center, or "Ad Center", houses the support services for the reservation's section camps. It includes the administration building itself, a softball field, the maintenance building, the food preparation building, the main trading post, warehouse, E. Urner Goodman Scout Museum, and Health Lodge. While summer camp is in session, all units staying at Owasippe arrive at the Ad Center first before proceeding to their respective camps for the week.
Quaking Bogs
The wetland known as the Quaking Bogs is an area of great environmental importance. The bogs, which are actually a fen, are an area where vegetation and soil a few feet deep have covered over a small lake. As such, the ground bounces slightly as one walks upon it. Also near the bogs is an area of natural quicksand. The Bogs are located East of Camp Reneker.
E. Urner Goodman Scout Museum
Owasippe is home to the E. Urner Goodman Scout Museum, which is housed in the old Blue Lake Township hall. It contains many artifacts and memorabilia from the history of Owasippe itself as well as scouting as whole. The museum is part of the Administration Center complex.
Paradise Valley
One of the few locations on the Owasippe property that has never been clear-cut, Paradise Valley is home to the most-visited of the reservation's freshwater springs. The Red Trail, which starts in nearby Camp Blackhawk, travels the length of the valley alongside its spring-fed stream. The stream itself empties into Cleveland Creek at the Western end of the valley.
Wildlife
Species of note within Owasippe include the Karner Blue butterfly, Bald Eagle, Eastern Box Turtle, Blanding's Turtle, and Eastern Massasauga rattlesnake. As is typical with most wilderness camps, deer, possums, raccoons, mice are prevalent.
In 2002, the Nature Conservancy organized a BioBlitz to catalog the species of flora and fauna on the Reservation, and later produced a report listing the various species that were found. Owasippe is known to be one of the last locations in Michigan which hosts the oak savanna, a rare ecosystem, and the coastal plain marsh, which hosts unique flower and fauna dependent on acidic soils.
In early 2006 The Nature Conservancy further noted that the BioBlitz of 2002 was not the definitive work on the species within Owasippe. It is reasonable to assume that other species, not particularly evident during the two weekends of the Bioblitz have been missed in the accounting of species.
Section Camps
Early Years
The original Boy Scout camp was established in 1911 at Crystal Lake outside Whitehall, Michigan. Accounts differ concerning the original name with consideration being given to Camp White and Camp Owasippe. The first documented reference to Owasippe in relationship to the camp was in 1916 when Camp Master James P. Fitch originated the "Tribe of Owasippe" for those scouts who had attended camp one or more times since 1912.
In 1912, the first of a continuing legacy of "Family Camps" was established for families visiting Scouts at camp. The accommodations were located at a farmhouse about two miles southwest of the camp.
In 1920, pressure was being felt by the Chicago Council for the operation of a camp for each of the Districts of the Council. In addition to the North Shore District camp on Crystal Lake camps operating for the Scouts of the other Districts included Camp Keesus at Grand Haven, Michigan for the Hyde Park and Woodlawn Districts, Camp Checaugau at Palatine, Illinois for the Northwest District, and Camp Shabbona on the Des Plaines River in Illinois for the West Side District.
In 1922, Camp West and Camp McDonald were established at Crystal Lake, Michigan and the original camp name was changed to Camp Beard. At that time the collective properties were known as the A. Stamford White Owasippe Scout Camps.
For most of its history, Owasippe has been an evolution of semi-autonomous section camps. It is common for each section camp to offer the standard summer camp program. However, differences in location, food preparation, program activities, and swimming accommodations contribute to the unique atmosphere of each former and current camp. Each camp also has their own song(s) and multiple program areas such as handicraft, aquatics, nature, scoutcraft, shooting sports, and adventure-patrol (first-year Boy Scout campers).
Camp Blackhawk
Camp Blackhawk is primarily used as a summer camp by units staying for one or two weeks. There are twenty sites within Blackhawk. Sites 1-8 are known as the Wilderness sites, which are so named as they used to form Camp Wilderness before the current Dining Hall was built. Camp Blackhawk is the only camp on the reservation to serve meals in a dining hall, although the meals are prepared at Food Prep. Situated on Big Blue Lake, the camp is also the only one to have its swimming area in a lake rather than a pool, and is home to the Steve Fossett Sailing Base.
Camp Crown/High Adventure
Camp Crown, named after Robert Crown, is used as a base for the council's high adventure program. High Adventure, or "Hi-Ad", includes Astronomy Outpost, C.O.P.E., Horse Corral, and the Manistee Quest trek program. Campers are able to partake in these activities while stationed at any of the section camps.
C.O.P.E.
The Charles Nagel C.O.P.E. Course is the reservation's Project COPE facility. Also at the C.O.P.E. Base is a 30 ft. high climbing wall known as the Chris Hill Climbing Tower. The Climbing Merit Badge is also offered at this area.
Horse Corral
Owasippe's equestrian programs are housed at the Horse Corral, also known as the Diamond-O Ranch. There are many routes and trails near the corral which are used for trail rides and for teaching the Horsemanship Merit Badge to scouts. Also available is the Wrangler Outpost, which gives scouts a cowboy-like experience learning lessons of how to care for a horse, eating a steak dinner, and sleeping under the stars.
Manistee Quest
The Manistee Quest is a guided off-reservation backpack and/or canoe trek program utilizing a 100-mile section of the North Country Trail that traverses the Manistee National Forest and intersecting navigable rivers. Crews of no more than 10 older Scouts and adult leaders go on a week-long excursion fully equipped with all provisions for that time frame on a wilderness route planned and organized by their youth leadership.
Camp Reneker
Camp Reneker, sometimes known as Reneker Family Camp or simply "Family Camp", is the premier camp for families at Owasippe Scout Reservation. It is named after Robert and Betty Reneker, who were devoted scouters. Early in its history, it was mostly attended by the mothers and daughters of families with their sons and husbands at one of the Boy Scout camps. Eventually, this tradition ended as there are many families today that attend Reneker with no correlation to any Boy Scouts.
At the heart of Reneker is a rocket-shaped pool with a 10 foot-deep end (being the "end" of the rocket). It was built in this style because it was made during the time of the Space Race and was a way for the camp to show its patriotism and interest in space exploration. Also within the camp is a trailer which doubles as a storage area and a trading post. Previously, a lodge stood near where the pool currently is. Due to arson, it was burned down and is now only an area of sand. The perpetrator was never caught. Since the destruction of the lodge, the tennis court has doubled as a place for the camp to congregate (under a giant circus tent with picnic tables).
Housing consists of six staff cabins on staff row (two of which are double cabins). Each single cabin hold two people, while the double cabins hold four. For campers, there is an A and a B side. Each side is fundamentally the same with 20 cabins, a central bathroom/shower area with 6 bathrooms/showers, two washers and dryers, and a playground. Campers are required to do their own cooking and laundry. Each cabin is equipped with 2 bunk beds, a couch, a refrigerator, a stove, and two sinks.
Camp Reneker is run differently than the Boy Scout camps as its program pertains to families with adults and children of varying ages instead of solely Boy Scouts. There are currently five age groups with programs designed specifically for each. There is usually one counselor assigned as an age group leader for a specific group for the whole summer. Most also have an assistant group leader or numerous assistants (depending on the size of the staff for that specific year). Each age group leader, with the help of their assistants, plans the program and activities that they want to do for the week, with minor changes usually occurring through the course of the summer.
3-5 Year Olds Group
The 3-5 year olds consists of swimming and activities in the morning (usually crafts) with the parents picking up their children before lunch. From time to time, the crafts do get messy and the kids are encouraged to wear old clothes. They are typically the last group to use the pool in the morning as it is the warmest at that time.
6-8 Year Olds Group
The 6-8 year olds are allowed somewhat more leniency with what they are able to do. Activities range from swimming, crafts, hikes, and various "schoolyard" games with this program also running until lunchtime. They are typically the second group to use the pool in the morning.
9-12 Year Olds Group
The 9-12 year olds partake in such activities as swimming, crafts, and hikes. As is custom, age allows for more freedom as they are able to do more different kinds of activities than the two younger groups. Various 9-12 year old groups have been allowed to hike outside of Reneker to places such as Turtle Valley, Camp Blackhawk, Camp Wolverine, and Horse Corral (where they have then taken trail rides on the horses). They are typically the first group to use the pool.
Teen Group
The Teen Group have the most freedom with what they are able to do due the higher maturity level of its members (13-17). They do not typically meet in the morning to go swimming but do have a designated "Teen Swim" during the first "Adult Swim" at 2:45 every day. They usually do not do crafts although they have been known to enjoy expressing themselves through finger painting. Other activities include Capture the Flag, cookouts, C.O.P.E., horseback riding, paintballing, rocket building and launching, sleepovers, wall climbing, and water balloon fights.
Adult Group
The adult program runs in the morning while their kids are with their respective groups and consists of activities such as crafts, going for tea or to the farmer's market in town, visiting a ceramics studio known as the "Mud Puddle" (where they are able to paint their own ceramics before having it glazed), and water aerobics.
Also offered every couple of years or so is the "Ladies of the Spoon" initiation, which is a sisterhood organization for girls over the age of 18 to join. It was created as response to the Order of the Arrow established by the Boy Scouts of America. The initiation process is kept very secret and is done whenever the rest of the camp (men and children under 18) is doing some other activity.
General Program
Everyone is encouraged to participate in the general program, which runs in the midday and evening. During this time, everybody at Reneker partakes in the same activities no matter what age.
After lunch at 2 PM (1:30 for lap swim), the pool opens. Campers are able to swim until 5 PM with intervals at a quarter to each hour delegated for "Adult Swim" (18+). During this time of 2-5 PM, the trading post is also open. There are usually special activities planned as well such as BB guns, archery, hikes, storytime, and balloon fights.
The evening program runs after dinner time. Each night brings a new activity such as an ice cream social, pot-luck dinner, scavenger hunt, cookout, movie near the pool, hayrides, and "Family Olympics".
On Friday evening, a campfire takes place in the firebowl with each age group performing a planned skit or song, awards such as the mile swim given out, and counselor led skits and songs as well. At the end of each fire, families say goodbye to their counselors, take pictures, and trade contact information with each other.
Camp Wolverine
Camp Wolverine, like Camp Blackhawk, is primarily used as a summer camp, hosting units for one or two weeks. The camp was originally divided in two - Camp Wolverine North and Camp Wolverine South. In the 1980's, these two camps were combined to form the modern Camp Wolverine. There are twenty-five sites within Wolverine, along with a number of abandoned sites from before the camps were combined.
Meal service at Camp Wolverine is provided to the units in their sites via Hot Packs, which are insulated containers that are dropped off before meal and picked up afterwards. The camp office is located in the Camp Lodge, along with the camp's trading post. The camp's aquatics program features a pool for swimming, as the bed of Lake Wolverine is unable to be cleared. The boating area of the camp is on the lake, alongside the reservation's Fishing Outpost.
Of note in the camp is its repurposing of various areas of its two predecessor camps. The Lodge, pool, and boating areas of Wolverine North retain their functions, while Wolverine South's Lodge is now the Handicraft area, the boat docks are now the Ecology-Conservation area, and the pool pumphouse now hosts the reservation's Photography Outpost.
Other Camps
Camps that have been sold off or closed include Camps Bass Lake, Bel-Nap, Beard, Stuart, and West.
Camp Bass Lake
The Bass Lake lone troop scout camp was a single camp on a small (approximately 600 feet wide) lake on the Owasippe reservation. A single troop would take over the entire camp, usually for a two week period, preparing all their own food and overseeing all aspects of the camp life. While active in the 1950s and 1960s, Camp Bass Lake is no longer in use.
Camp Carlen
Formerly known as Camp Sauger Lake, this camp hosts a Venturing Base. It is located on the same path of driving to Camp Crown. It was closed to due to a poor attendance rate of scouts. The camp was renamed upon the building of a dining hall, which has since burned down in a suspected arson fire.
Camp Hiawatha Beach
While technically not a section camp, Camp Hiawatha Beach is a lone troop camp offered for those units who wish to run their own summer camp experience.
Staff Person Of The Year
Staff Person of the Year Awards are given out annually each summer at the end of camp. They are awarded at the final camp banquet for all of the staff held in the dining hall of Camp Blackhawk. Staffers are arranged into two categories junior (under 18) and senior (over 18). Each staffperson votes for two members (junior and senior) of their specific camp to be given the award. It is known as a prestigious honor that represents hard work, dedication, teamwork, respect, and committment. Those chosen are thought to exemplify the beliefs of the Scout Law and Scout Oath. Also awarded is the CIT of the Year Award, which is given to the one CIT who mostly strongly shows what it means to be a true Owasippe staffer.
Camp Blackhawk
- 1992: Ron Derby
- 1996: Ron Derby (Senior)
- 2001: Chase Budziak (Junior)
- 2002: Charles Somerville (Junior)
- 2003: Kevin Shotas (Junior), Pat Loftus (Senior)
- 2005: Kurt Wolff-Klammer (Junior), Graham Carlson (Senior)
- 2006: Franklin Turner (Junior), William Smith (Senior)
- 2007: Nathan Dodd (Junior), Thomas Sniegowski (Senior)
Camp Carlen
- 1998: Andrew Lukasiewicz
- 2000: Patrick Newell (Senior)
Camp Crown/High Adventure
- 2002: Mason Sears
- 2003: Chase Budziak
- 2004: Jenny Carroll
- 2005: Rae Cnossen
- 2006: Ryan Estelle (Junior), Sean Haneberg (Senior)
- 2007: Rachel Rychtanek (Junior), Bethann Egan (Senior)
Camp Reneker
- 2001: Katie Heffernan
- 2003: Caitlin Boline
- 2004: Deanna Chesniak
- 2005: Rachael Belka
- 2006: Laura LeVan
- 2007: Becky Faulhaber
As Camp Reneker is typically the smallest of the staffs (rarely more than 10-15 staffers a summer), a single Staff Person of the Year Award is given out instead of having both junior and senior classes.
Camp Wolverine
- 1994: David Daly
- 1996: David Daly (Junior)
- 2002: Kyle L. Schneider (Junior), Ryan M. Gust (Senior)
- 2003: Joe Nowinski (Junior), Ryan M. Gust (Senior)
- 2004: Ryan M. Gust (Senior)
- 2005: Matt Dorich (Junior), Ryan M. Gust (Senior)
- 2006: Kurt Kinslow (Junior), Nick Johnson (Senior)
- 2007: Jason Roeptke (Junior), Erik Kinslow (Senior)
CIT's Of The Year
- 2002: Robert Radtke III
- 2003: Matt Dorich
- 2004: Scott Wolff-Klammer
- 2005: Kris Dorich
- 2006: Walter Andy Hoskins
- 2007: Russell England
Organizations
An organization was formed when news came out that the Chicago Area Council plans to sell the land [1].
See also
External links
Template:Geolinks-US-hoodscale
References
- ^ "America's Oldest Boy Scout Camps" by David L. Eby