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Camping, the early years….

duflochy

Bronze Member
Site Supporter
Every summer when I was a young boy my family went camping..Papa had a pair of mules, old Jake and Dan………

When all the crops had been laid by and there was no more weeds to pull and cotton to chop we would load up a two horse wagon and hitch them mules to it and off we would go

Of course there was more to in than just going…We took feather bed mattresses and a pen of live chickens, plenty of eggs and flower….The only way to keep fresh chicken was to keep it alive until the day we were going to eat it …Then there was Sister Bessie, our cow…Sister Bessie had to be milked every day anyway so we took her too…It was my job to walk her down to the campground, letting her stop at every patch of green grass on the way…and get a little bite to eat…

We wrung a chicken’s neck every day and had fried chicken, peas or butterbeans and squash that Mom had canned the year before….Papa always killed a couple of hogs in the fall and we cured most of the meat in a huge salt box and smoke house so preserving it wasn’t a problem….We let the milk down in the big open well at the campground in jugs to keep it cool…..We made our own butter from the cream that rose to the top after it cooled over night in the well…After the cream was skimmed off the top of the milk the rest of the milk was discarded, it was called “blue jon” and was not considered fit to drink…..now days it’s sold as 0% fat free milk…..Biscuits were made three times a day from the flower and lard we got from the hog killing… A chicken was fried every day at lunch because we never knew when the Preacher would stop by for a meal….Everybody knew the Preacher liked chicken…..

The campground was a place of religious retreat only that wasn’t what it was called, It was simply known as campmeeting….Our family had a Tent…..The tent was built out of rough lumber and covered with tin and slabs from the sawmill…It had 8 bedrooms and a cook house separate from the rest of it……Wooden windows and wood shavings adorned the floor……Mosquitos, gnats and flies were always present….There was about 25 of these Tents erected there…. Every family for miles around had built one

The nightly meetings were lively to say the least….I didn’t know at the time but part of the reason they were “lively” was because Uncle Reecy sold a little moonshine whisky out the back room of his Tent…..The Ice man brought 100 pound blocks of ice every day and we buried them in a huge sawdust pile out back to keep them from melting…Uncle Reecy always sold Coke-cola out of a number 3 washtub filled with ice out back of his Tent…He sold it straight or mixed with moonshine, any strength you wanted….

At nite the music echoed across the swamps and hills and it was awesome…..The preacher always started off talking bout Hell and how it was a place you would go if you were bad and ended up talking bout Heaven, a place you would go after all the hardships and pain of this life was over…..One nite Mom had really got into the spirit and collapsed on the sawdust floor screaming and hollering…..I thought she was having a seizure but said she was just “in the spirit”, well it sorta scared Papas mules… they were tied up outside the Tent and got to snort’in and stomping and broke loose and went running up across the graveyard, turning over toomstones and breaking wagon wheels……Papa said they were having a fine meet’in……
 

Dude111

Banned
Ya we used to go camping when I was younger up north to cape cod for 2 weeks.....

It was quite fun...... We did it many years,then my parents started renting houses and when we did that IT WASNT FUN ANYMORE and I really didnt wanna go!!!!!!! (I liked camping IN A TENT!!)

Ah well..........
 

FrancSevin

Proudly Deplorable
GOLD Site Supporter
I remember our family camping from the early years. 1950's. Dad had bought an Army surplus tent. No floor so we slept on the ground. Bad poles so he fashion new ones from some cedar saplings. Always smelled of old canvass and cedar.

He had built a camp kitchen from plywood that held canned goods, coffee, sugar, peanut butter and jelly. The cold food was held in a metal Coca-Cola cooler (I still have), Cooked on a Coleman stove ( I still have) and everything was packed into the trunk of our '56 Pontiac Star Chief I don't have. I wish I did. Beautiful car.

We did the Ozarks, Kentucky Lake, Arkansas, Oklahoma, Colorado and New Mexico.
Later, we bought a J. C. Higgins tent with16 metal poles and a floor. My brothers and I could set that puppy up in the dark within 15 minutes. Straight and true. It weathered many a storm.

Those were fun weekends. Mom spent much of it relaxing as all her "men" took care of everything. We played, she sat in her lounger, drank iced tea, and Dad spent the weekend fixing everything.

Our camping now involves a 40 foot park model RV with AC, TV, microwave, queen beds and a flush toilet. Just not the same.
 
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DAVENET

Bronze Member
GOLD Site Supporter
There is a lot to be said for a tent. At 52 I've had plenty of opportunities (and prodding from friends) to get an RV or pull behind camper. Just couldn't justify it. So, while I still tent, my quality of camping has certainly improved DRASTICALLY over the past 30 years!
 

JimVT

Bronze Member
GOLD Site Supporter
can't remember ever going camping with my father. cows to milk
we did get away for some commercial salmon fishing and stayed at our cabin on the indian reservation a couple summers when my brother was able to run the farm.
 

Bannedjoe

Well-known member
My earliest memories of camping were my folks renting a motorhome, and stuffing us kids into a rather large coleman canvas tent.
To this day, I can still remember the smell of that tent.
 

DAVENET

Bronze Member
GOLD Site Supporter
LOL, because it always got put away damp while breaking down camp in the morning and no way in hell was it getting put back up at home to dry out! "It will be dry before we go next year"!
 
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