Stay-overs

There were always a few days between sessions where the girls who attended more than one session “stayed over” and staff had time off. It was a good time to catch up on laundry, drive into Tawas, walk into town, or visit a friend’s nearby cabin.

Only twelve campers stayed over between the sessions and Alice Bishop noted that checkout was very orderly in 1961. Some stayed for the afternoon program, others went to the movies with counselors and a few went out with their parents for the evening.

There was a program set according to Dorthe Balaskas’ 1966 director’s report, which indicated eight or nine staff stayed to help, while others took twenty-four hours off. If they slept at camp, the usual rules applied for time in, boats and waterfront. The staff would have to be back by Sunday at noon for a staff meeting.

Barb Krohn (1970-72) stayed a whole month in her fourth year and slept in the lodge between sessions. “There were not too many of us who stayed, but we would go into town. One of the best parts about going every summer was seeing the same girls.”’

Meg Dahlem, who talked to me about her stay in 1925, thought it was a great treat to be able to walk into Hale for an ice cream during her free time. It was a tradition that continued as long as the camp operated. Penny Mitchell loved the same walks into Hale in the fifties, as did Jennifer Fenton for her favorite bubblegum flavor in the seventies!

Sixties Staffing and Issues #9

The camp aides were Sue PurdueSandra Hines, and Norma Hancock. “It was Super’s first year as a staff member,” she wrote,” and this is not always an easy transition to make from camper especially when your friends are here, but Sue hurdled this part of growing up and did eventually become a full fledge staff member.” She taught tennis with great skill, even for the beginners, and was so dependable and pleasant in the kitchen, doing more than her share easily with her co-workers. Dorthe felt she seemed to enjoy her summer, “in spite of not having the most pleasant or easiest job”. She expressed an interest in coming back.

The junior counselor program in the activity report from 1969 listed three who worked in different areas that summer. They assisted during inventories, repairs and preparation. Sometimes they took over cabins for evening programs if someone was ill, needed rest, or had time off. They had the same amount of time off as the senior staff and were usually free on cabin days unless asked to accompany an outing. The senior counselors always helped the juniors become acquainted with the campers and were described as versatile, since they could float from one activity to the other when needed, despite the fact Dorthe believed the junior counselor program rendered the staff less efficient.

Emmy Host was the crafts director in 1967 and ran the camp store. She was described in the report as organized, and Dorthe never felt she had to worry about her, since she ordered all the supplies and made samples of the items to be made by the girls each summer. She trained two girls at pre-camp for the crafts section.

“She was my sounding board and unfortunately I overburdened her with my woes. She found it difficult to participate in camp activities and to relate to the staff, but she did try and personally felt she had outgrown camp,” wrote Dorthe Balaskas in her report in 1967.

“There was a banquet at the end of the year and all the kids had gone home and just the staff were left. I think it might have been Dorthe’s last year there and we didn’t know it. Her partner Emmy didn’t like being at camp, “ said Ann Carney. “Dorthe called me into her office and said there will be two people speaking and I think Ann Obey was the other one. Then she called me in to read my speech to her. It was a big deal to be in a room with her approving or disapproving my speech. We both cried after I read it. She never stayed for the banquet. She left before I got up.”

Ann Obey served in campcraft and boating and Dorthe found her to be a joy and an asset to the staff with her alumni status. She had cabin two the second session, which was the younger girls, and she treated them with patience, understanding and great responsibility, noted Dorthe, who felt she could always call on her. “Ann’s loyalty to Maqua was very apparent and greatly appreciated.”

Sixties Staffing and Issues #8

528600_2138064229394_189573804_nLaurie Cone was a kitchen aide for the first time in 1966. Her room was in the lodge as a kitchen aide and at fourteen, she was the same age as many of the campers. Laurie’s older sister Tally, was in Senior Village the summer she attended Maqua for the first time. It was 1962 and she was ten years old and she camped until the summer of 1966, when she joined the staff.

“I worked the first summer with Sue Kiltie, Chris Varney and a few others. We worked three meals a day for one hundred and twenty campers for $50 for the entire summer,” she said.

Laurie Cone “was indeed one of my rewards”,  said Dorthe, who was thrilled to see a “once camper become a staff member” According to her director,she took her responsibilities very seriously and was an asset to the nature director, as well as her assistance in boating. She had shown her director that her two summers were a true learning experience.

The four junior counselors that summer were Susan Kiltie, Laurie Cone, Ann Obey and Chris Varney. They were used as cabin counselors in various activities, having previously been camp aides, and they were also experienced. They arrived early to help the activity directors, were used in the dining room and kitchen on occasion and were considered the best group Dorthe had ever had!

Sixties Staffing with Linda Doering #7

The second year Linda Doering had charge of Cabin C , but had to be talked into it. “The girls were older and I told them there was no way I could do that. The girls were so close to my age and all I could think of was how was I going to control them or challenge them?” said Linda. “It ended up being a great summer with them and I loved it!

She also was the Boating Director, arranging counselor and class assignments. “My favorite class to teach was rowing for the tiny kids. They had to pass a swim test in order to be able to canoe, and I loved teaching,” said Linda.

“As a cabin counselor Linda was tops,” wrote Dorthe in her director’s report. “The older girls liked her very much and did seem to enjoy camp. We had very little complaints from this older group and I felt Linda planned and kept them busy. She could be rated as an excellent counselor. She spent time with her groups and was always on the job. As boating director I felt she showed growth by the end of the summer and I do not question her capabilities. I do feel however that she is rather quiet and is not as apt to take on a supervisory type of position for she felt her staff were capable and did not need her. As time and situations arose she found that she could be more of an activity director than she had been the first part of the summer. She also took over the waterfront for three days when the director had to attend a family funeral and did a wonderful job. I feel she has great potential as a teacher in many ways and just needs more experience.”

Sixties Staffing and Issues #6

Shy, quiet Linda Doering was even more so at Camp Maqua as a first time counselor in 1967. Her friend and fellow Physical Education major from Western Michigan University, Barbara Haggart, recruited her as the Boating Director that summer. “Beanie” also nicknamed her “Yakky” and the name stuck for her next few years on staff.

Linda had been to a “Y” camp in Grand Rapids as a kid, had experienced the fright of leaving home and a tinge of homesickness, but having a friend along helped her adjust. The feelings she had as a camper allowed her to draw on those experiences as she took over her first cabin of fifth graders.

“I always loved swimming and at the time I had my water safety certification, so I was qualified for the waterfront,” said Linda. “ Some of the girls in my cabin were homesick, but I remembered what it was like and I tried to make each girl feel special. When they got involved in the activities and made friends with the girls in their cabin, they adjusted. I reassured them and kept them busy.”

Sixties Staffing and “Flash”

The older girls were always more difficult to please and no one knew that more than Sue Wiegand, (bottom row on right) who was in charge of cabin C that summer of 1967. Sue was a sophomore at Western Michigan University studying Physical Education, Speech and Drama in 1966, “stewing about a summer job”. Her friend in the same curriculum, Barbara Haggart, asked her to come to Maqua as a counselor. Despite the fact that Sue had never been a camper there, she decided to try it.

“I had the older girls for my first summer and always enjoyed them. I loved to tell them stories. I was known as the “Winnie the Pooh’ counselor since I would stay up reading Pooh stories to the thirteen to fifteen year olds. What impressed me with the older girls was how much they responded to people who enjoyed them. Even reading those stories, they were not worrying about hair, boys or make-up, they were responding like young people who were interested,” said Sue. The second year, she had many of the same girls who had returned, either in her classes or her cabin. (The girls in her cabin were: Cheryl Best, Cathy Cosmenco, Sarah Dennett, Candace Hill, Jeanne Kiltie, Susan Michelson, Ann Pennington, and Sue Thompson.)