Down to the wire!

Things have been crazy here at camp! We have had so many projects come together just as our staff and campers are about to arrive.

First, let’s rewind to fall ‘21 when we lifted, leveled and built new footings for all of our cabins.

It was a major project and we are so lucky that a super experienced carpenter/contractor tackled it. He first calculated what height the cabin should be at and then, with a laser level, figured out how much each part of the cabin needed to be lifted. This had to happen slowly because of the age of the cabins and how long they have had to settle. If he had lifted them too quickly the wood frames could have broken!

With the cabins raised and leveled, he next dug four foot deep holes and poured new concrete footings which he attached to the building with new, craftsman quality wood trusses. That meant not only a lot of digging and pouring new concrete but also removing the old footings which were mostly cinder blocks. All said and done I moved and stacked four pallets of cinder blocks!

I definitely put my truck to work this offseason! I have brought 20 loads of demolition debris to our dump since August of '21! I probably should have rented a big dumpster but that’s what work trucks are for, right?

With the cabins newly level and on solid footing for the first time in decades it was time to tackle the big goal of the offseason, new bathrooms in every cabin. The existing ones were dark, soggy and, truthfully, a bit gross. My goal with the new bathrooms was to create bright, durable and easy to clean spaces for our campers and guests. I was not great at capturing pictures of the whole process but we ripped out all of the old fixtures, cut out and removed all of the walls up to about 34” and then removed the entire floor, subfloor and joists. Our amazing contractor, Trevor, then rebuilt the rooms from the joists up to the ceiling.

The project was super complicated because each bathroom is different so pretty much every floor, piece of trim and plumbing upgrade was custom. They came out so great, though, and we could not be happier to show our campers!

Of course what would a camp project be without some unexpected issues? As we tore apart the bathrooms we found some leaks in the old roof on one of the cabins. With a new roof definitely not in the budget, camp director and master of absolutely no trades, Evan, hopped to action to lay some rolled asphalt roofing over the bad section of roof. A few weeks later we found some leaky areas on another cabin and, in a driving rainstorm, I again climbed up to patch a spot and save the new bathroom!

Interspersed with the other large projects I also wrapped up the renovated dock for our boats. After installing the new floats I also replaced a few broken planks with new trex decking.

And it is awesome to have a dock that is floating again!

As if all of that was not enough, I also rebuilt all of the mulch beds and landscaping around the cabins! It was a long-overdue project and the cabins now look fantastic. I surrounded each cabin with new river stone to help with drainage and also to secure the new lattice from animals looking to make a home. I then dug up all of the old mulch and dirt, uncovered stones to build new rock boundaries and then filled it all in with natural mulch from locally-felled trees.

And seriously, lastly, cabin 5 received all new windows! The old ones were barely functional and the new windows will let in more light while also functioning better (actually opening and closing).

Whew. That was a lot. As we begin our staff training week it is so satisfying to see the camp looking better than ever.

-Evan

Project Complete!

One of my two major projects this season was to completely replace all of the floats on camp’s massive dock. Over the past few seasons I have noticed that the dock had a tendency to…sink so it was time to do some work!

Our dock is three pieces that make a roughly 40’ by 30’ ‘T’ shape. One piece gets pulled up on shore for the winter and the other two pieces live up on the hill behind our local marina. Here they were in December:

The first step was sourcing plastic floats that were roughly the same size as the existing ones. With the ongoing supply chain issues in all sectors this proved slightly difficult but I managed to find some great ones from a dock supply company in Florida. I won’t shock you with how much new plastic floats cost!

The next step was to remove the old floats. They were HEAVY, mostly fully of water, and all of the bolts were rusted permanently in place. Ratchets worked on some bolts but some required cutting, prying or just general banging until they broke free. I used a hydraulic jack to lift the dock frame section by section and slide the old floats out to make room for the new ones.

My work pictures end there because it got too involved to measure, drill and bolt in the new floats with stainless steel hardware. At the end I replaced nine floats using 36 sets of bolts, lock nuts and washers. Drilling the aluminum dock ate up three specialty drill bits. I tore open eight of my ten knuckles fighting with rusty bolts. In all it took around 30 man-hours to get it done from start to finish!

Many thanks to my dad, Wayne, a retired physician who also happens to be super helpful with projects like these and is willing to work for free!

new hampshire lake view

Here is the view from the worksite on top of the hill! Our marina stores hundreds of boats on the hill in super organized lines that stretch for miles!

Check back soon as we complete our other major project this spring…all new bathrooms for each cabin!

2021 season recap

Our 2021 season is just winding down and it was by far our best...the best staff ever assembled, the best boats and equipment, the best groups of campers we have had the pleasure of working with and the best attitudes from everyone involved dealing with five weeks of rain from June through July! A lot goes into making a summer of camp happen so take a look below at some fun camp stats:

  • 140 campers over 7 weeks (plus 10 campers at our Sunapee Day Camp)

  • Campers stayed an average of 1.125 weeks at camp

  • Average number of campers each week was 20

  • Campers were 27% girls and 73% boys

  • Average camper age was 13.66

  • 54% new campers and 46% returners

  • Campers came from 16 states (CA, CO, CT, DC, FL, GA, IL, MA, ME, MT, NH, NJ, NY, OR, PA,RI and TX) as well as Washington, DC, Mexico and the U.S. Virgin Islands (we were closed to most international campers in 2021)

  • There were 7 coaches, 1 chef and 1 director

  • Average coach age was 19.7

  • 3 coaches had their birthdays during the summer (Sam, Zoe and Elijah)

  • 3,960 ridiculous meals prepared by Chef Cher who used approximately:

    • 1290 eggs

    • 370 pounds of flour

    • 110 pounds of strawberries

    • 60 pounds of chocolate chips (mostly in 860 homemade choc chip muffins)

    • 250 pounds of chicken

    • 150 gallons of lemonade

    • 65 hours a week of cooking (plus countless hours shopping)

    • 75 five-gallon buckets of non-meat scraps fed to local hungry pigs to divert food waste from the landfill

  • 5 pallets of concrete used to pour new cabin footings

  • 11,309 unique visitors to watermonkeycamp.com in the last 12 months

  • 9,278 photos uploaded and shared with camp families

  • 540 hours on our 2 2021 MasterCraft NXT22's (Bob and Marley)

  • 16 boat oil changes (plus 1 water pump)

  • 3048.935 gallons of gas burned producing roughly 34 metric tons of CO2 which we offset with contributions to the Society For The Protection of New Hampshire Forests and CoolEffect.org Our contributions this year will offset about 75 metric tons of CO2 with the extra going towards camper travel to and from camp!

  • We have now offset around 300 metric tons of CO2 since 2012!

Those stats do not really do justice to all of the fun we had this summer but hopefully it was a good read! We are hard at work getting ready for 2022 and I sincerely hope to see all of our campers back again for great times on the boats!

-Evan

We went for a hike!

We have been spending lots of time at camp lately. It is such a good spot to stay isolated and avoid the pandemic craziness. We know we are fortunate to have this escape and we try to take advantage of everything the lakes region has to offer.

He’s probably a bit too big for the backpack but Kai was not about to hike the mountain on his own!

He’s probably a bit too big for the backpack but Kai was not about to hike the mountain on his own!

Mt. Molly is a great little ‘mountain’ right beyond the banks of Merrymeeting Lake, where our camp is located. I have hiked it hundreds of times…with campers, with friends and even a daily run up to the summit while training for a Tough Mudder in 2010. Taking my own kids up, though, is a new and awesome experience.

The trail up. Not much snow this year!

The trail up. Not much snow this year!

With almost no snow and mild temps the going was easy even with 40 pounds on my back (some combination of Kai (3 years old) and snacks for Kai (limitless). We talked about trees, animal tracks and rocks for the whole 25 minute trek up to the peak.

At the top we soaked up the sun and took in the views of the lake and surrounding hills. We spotted a bald eagle, a hawk and a few airplanes as well!

Looking west-ish at sprawling Lake Winnipesaukee!

Of course I had to fly camp’s new drone on this gorgeous bluebird day! The above shot is from about 1,200 feet above the summit of Mt. Molly looking out over Lake Winnipesaukee. Gorgeous.

Merrymeeting Lake

Merrymeeting Lake

From the same altitude I snapped a few shots of Merrymeeting. The sun glare was pretty intense so the back side of the lake was the only picture that was worth keeping. As you can see, mid January and not even close to frozen!

Look up, look down.

Look up, look down.

The above shot is of the peak of Mt. Molly. We are standing directly in the middle (if you zoom in you can see us standing near my black coat which I used as a takeoff/landing pad for the drone.

The hike down was quick and Kai loved every second of the day. Being in the outdoors is the best!

first storm o' the season

The weather in NH is notoriously shifty. Two weeks ago I was hustling through bike trails in near-perfect conditions and then out of nowhere the temperature dropped about 100 degrees in one day and we got walloped with a great early season snow storm.

The storm started out on Saturday with some rain and by mid-day it was sleeting and we thought it would fizzle out entirely. By late afternoon, though, the wind was howling and the snow was flying sideways. My boys, the dog and I had some fun in the first flakes of the season. Visibility at the lake (above left) was just about zero.

By early evening it was clear that this storm was going to linger and make a mess. We lost power around 3:30PM and it would not be restored for three days. No problem, right? My wife cooked up an amazing meal using cell phone flashlights and the propane burners and we built a ‘campsite’ around the fireplace for the guys to stay warm. On Sunday we woke up, packed up and escaped to where power and heat were more plentiful. With the car running I hopped out to grab one gorgeous picture of the sun hitting camp:

We came back on Monday to check on camp and make sure no pipes were freezing (and have a blast outside).

With Tuckerman zooming around we explored, dug out and ate lots of fresh snow.

Here’s to winter!

And…the calm after the storm.