CAMPNEVERAGAIN

When I was a young reporter, in the 1960’s, newspapers were big on first person stories, like spending a weekend at a nudist camp in the altogether.

I didn’t do that one.

I did, however, drive my car around Charlotte after a winter storm, when the roads were iced up, so I could write a story about how foolish it was to drive on ice. I got a good story – I slid off the road and banged up the front end of my car.

I paid a gypsy to tell me my fortune.

I ask the high sheriff to spray me with pepper spray so I could write about how it felt.  It felt pretty bad — that story went way beyond the call of duty. The spray hit me in the forehead and a second later it felt like my face and head were on fire. And, of course, I couldn’t see a thing.

I went boar hunting in the mountains of North Carolina, and saw how you pull a pit bull off a hog.

I rode a canoe down the rapids on Section III of the Chattooga River, the ultimate test, I had read, for an undecked canoe.

And I spent six days and nights, alone, in the woods south of Charlotte with no tent and no food, nothing except a knife, a canteen, a pack of matches and a book called “How To Survive In the Wilderness.”

[I also had the tools of my craft: a pencil, a notebook, copy paper and a typewriter, so I could file a story every day about my adventures. I would write in the late afternoon and then walk half a mile or so from camp and leave my story bottled up in a fruit jar. Another reporter would pick it up early the next morning and take it to my paper, The Charlotte News.]

It was a long six days.
My adventure lasted six long days.

The News named my six-day series “Babe In The Woods,” an apt name. I was a 27-year-old, married, father of three who had lived on a farm as a child but had grown up to be a city boy.  I had never camped in the woods alone. Ostensibly, I went without camping gear or food to see if I could live off the land. The real reason, of course, was to sell newspapers — and get my byline on page 1.

* * *

For the first two or three days I watched every step I took, afraid a snake would bite me. Toward the middle of the week, however, I relaxed. I didn’t care if I got bit, getting bit would mean going home.  I wasn’t going to yell calf rope, of course — not in a 100 years — but a snake bite would have been an honorable way to call it a day. Later, when I knew I would be going home soon and I didn’t need a way out, I started watching my step again, watching for snakes.

CAMPNEVERAGAIN
CAMPNEVERAGAIN

That first day I broke off some small pine trees and built a shelter. It looked good, but it didn’t keep the rain off of me.  I  slept curled up by my fire every night, even when it rained.

I didn’t have an ax so I picked a camp site near two fallen trees, big ones, but not so big I couldn’t drag them a few feet. That was my firewood. I got the biggest rocks I could carry and put them around my fire. The fire warmed the rocks and at night I would snuggle up to that warmth.

My camp was not far from the Catawba River, and so I had plenty of water. How safe it was to drink I didn’t know, so I strained it through my t-shirt and boiled it a quart at a time in a oil can I found beside a Jeep road, left there by hunters, I guess.  I also used the oil can to boil the day lilies I picked every morning, before they opened, and cat tails.  The day lilies tasted a lot like string beans and the cat tails, like corn. And I ate ripe, juicy, blackberries by the handful.   I make a hook of sorts out of the wire in the spiral of my notebook and tried, without success, to catch fish. I did catch a little box turtle, poor thing, and ate him. And I found a bee hive and raided it. I got stung, but I also got some honey – and a story.

* * *

It was a hot, close to 100 degrees in the daytime and rainy some afternoons and evenings.  At suppertime, their suppertime, swarms of mosquitoes came to see me.  For the first few days I didn’t put a dateline on my story, a geographic identifier showing the reporter’s location. Later in the week I began using this dateline – CAMPNEVERAGAIN.

My wife, Donna, welcomed me home.
My wife, Donna, welcomed me home.

It wasn’t all bad, of course. I learned some things.

** I learned that you don’t get but so hungry. If you don’t eat for a day, you’re hungry but if you don’t eat for three days, you’re not three times as hungry.

** I learned that if you don’t have enough to eat, a place to sleep, you don’t worry about your appearance. Or cleanliness.

** I learned that I missed companionship, family and friends, more than I missed the comforts of home.

Coming Friday: Dean Smith: No Detail Too Small

 

The New Covenant

My brother, David Howell Stith, and Mary Kathryn Turk were married on October 19, 1963.   Years passed, life happened, until one day in the fall of 1989 they decided to go their separate ways. They divorced.

Dave and Kathy
Dave and Kathy

Ten years later Dave asked Kathy to marry him  again.  She said “Yes” again.  And when they were married the second time he made with her a New Covenant.

* * *

More than 15 years passed before Dave became a stranger whose name Kathy did not know.  She didn’t know him, but he knew  her and loved her still.  When she could not feed herself, he fed her.  When she could no longer do anything for herself, he did everything for her.

Here is that vow Dave made the second time around.

“God’s word is replete with promises and covenants. One of the earliest ones that comes to mind is God’s covenant with Abraham and then more promises to Moses, Joshua and Sampson.  Somewhere in the passage of time God made a new covenant with his people. It was almost as if He were saying “O. K., the old covenant didn’t work so I will make with you a new covenant.”

“In some similar manner I come this day to make with you a new covenant. I promise to love you but not only you. I promise to cherish you while at the same time cherishing other people and relationships. I promise to honor you while honoring all others who deserve it.”

“I also promise to love you the most, cherish you the best and honor you the highest.”

Kathy died of Alzheimer’s disease one year ago today.

Coming Monday: CAMPNEVERAGAIN