Camp

What is Billy up to?

Our head instructor, Billy Ackerman, does not lead a boring life.  In the ten months of the year that Water Monkey Camp is not going on he is down in Jacksonville Beach, Florida making the most of good weather, sandy beaches, and limitless watersports activities. Recently he has been hooked on kiteboarding.

Kiteboarding is a super versatile sport, mixing a bit of wakeboarding, some surfing, and some serious kite flying skills.

Kiting makes impossibly huge airs and tricks possible due to the power of the massive kite.  Most of learning how to kite is mastering the kite itself; the board skills will follow.

All of Billy's kiting adds to his ridiculous board skills so that he will continue to be a one of a kind instructor to our campers each summer.

We are lucky to have Billy at Water Monkey Camp and he says he is pumped to get back to NH in a few months.  Keep on shreddin' Bill.

An innovative new snow sport or the next "mini-ski"?

I found this new product online and thought it would be a great follow up to our last post about obscure water sports. http://vimeo.com/35672273

This product is essentially two miniature snowboards with normal bindings.  Personally, I think that the novelty would wear off in about two runs and I would be strapping back in to my full size board.  Anyone who hit the slopes in the late 90's/early 00's would remember the mini-ski fad where mostly kids and young teens traded in their skis for tiny planks the size of their boots with a leash and no poles.  This new product is the same theory, just for snowboards.  Just as mini-skis came and went quickly I just do not think that the dual board has a viable path forward.  Miniaturizing the snowboard means less edge (less control) and less surface area (not good in powder), while splitting the board in two means your front and back feet can move independently (less stability, especially at speed).  As their video shows, it may be fun in the park for a bit, that is until you spread-eagle a rail and remember why it was you switched from skis to a board in the first place.

 

 

 

Obscure watersports activities

Companies have promoted some pretty outrageous boating sports over the years.  I have to admit that I am a sucker for cool/new/interesting activities and I will try just about anything given the opportunity.  Whether I would introduce them to my campers, though, is another story. I was inspired to write this entry after seeing the below promotional video online.  The product was so preposterous that I decided to dig into my memory banks for a few others from over the years.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=-VgA32p_6fE

I'll get to the subwing in a couple of paragraphs.

First on my list of disastrous boating activities would have to be the flying tube from around 2006.  On paper it looked awesome; who doesn't like getting launched into the air while tubing?  Achieving sustained flight behind the boat seemed like a no-brainer and countless families, organizations, and boating enthusiasts cleared store shelves of the new item.  About a month into that boating season it was clear that the flying tubes were actually unstable death traps.  The tubes would take flight, as advertised, but once airborne could not be controlled and unpredictably plummeted, inverted, and crashed at high speeds into the water.  After two reported deaths, broken bones, collapsed lungs, and countless face and body lacerations, the manufacturer issued a voluntary recall of the fledgling product.  Various new models have been released since then with added safety features but the stigma has remained and the flying tube has not been able to gain widespread popularity.

The next boat sport that came to mind was one from the early 90's called disk boarding.  I honestly cannot find a picture or any evidence that it ever existed on the web but I distinctly remember it from my early days of learning how to waterski at camp.  It was just a slightly concave disk like you would use to go sledding but it had a plastic hitch to lock the rope handle into for when you were sick of holding on.  Basically all you could do when moving was spin in circles and attempt to go to the left or right over the wake which was made difficult to nearly impossible due to the lack of fins.  Disc boarding was not dangerous but just a massive dud of a sport.  I'm sure someone else has heard of this, anyone?

Not all dumb watersports ideas need be motor-boat reliant to make this list.  I am including the floating iceberg climbing tower/slide because like the flying tube it just was not properly thought out by its designers.  I was at a camp fair in 2009 when I saw a picture of one at another camp's booth.  The director told me that he loved the iceberg at his camp - he chose to purchase a 25 foot high variant - save two major issues.  The first was that he needed about fifty of his staff members to carry it out of storage each season because of its cumbersome size and weight.  The second, more important, issue was that the number of broken arms and ankles at his camp skyrocketed in the first summer that he had the floating iceberg.  Apparently the climbing rungs were designed in such a way that if a climber lost his/her grip and fell it was easy to get caught on the way down and break whatever appendage got hung up.  The manufacturer has since corrected this design flaw and under careful supervision the floating iceberg is a great toy for camp groups.

OK, on to the subwing.  Honestly my first reaction was "that thing looks awesome, I can't wait to try it, where can I buy it?"  Then I thought a bit more.  Here are my three big concerns:

  1. At any kind of speed, even under 10 mph behind the boat, you would need some impeccably clear water in order to see approaching obstacles.  I foresee large numbers of tangled lines, smashed faces, and, probably, some drowning/crash related fatalities.
  2. Up in New Hampshire our lakes make it up to about 80 degrees by the middle of the summer - on the surface.  Anyone who has dived down five or ten feet knows that the temperature plummets quickly.  Once you are in water that is steadily in the low 60's or 50's you lose body heat at a rapid pace.  I do not see subwing participants spending an extended amount of time at great depths before there are chattering teeth and blue lips.
  3. The subwing effectively makes the boat spotter irrelevant.  Spotters make sure that skiers or wakeboarders have not fallen or let go or gotten hurt.  With the subwing the spotter may not see a rider let go (or smash into an underwater rock) and by the time he/she is noticed the boat may be quite a distance away.

Almost certain death is enough reason to lead me not to offer the subwing to my campers but if I can get my hands on one this summer I will certainly give it a go (and get some video).  The subwing could be the future of boating fun; I guess if no one ever tossed their surf board behind a boat and rode the wake two feet from the prop we would never have had wake surfing, right?

 

Extreme Crutching

After breaking my leg two weeks ago I was told I could not walk on it for at least eight weeks.  That is an eternity for an adventure-seeker such as myself, especially when the weather is as unseasonably warm as it has been this spring.  I am mostly couch-bound while my friends are out biking, kite surfing, rock climbing, and enjoying the outdoors and just generally rubbing it in my face. Well I may not be able to walk but I certainly cannot let everyone else have all the fun.

Extreme crutching - noun - the adventure activity defined by making simple movement on crutches exponentially more difficult by adding spins, maneuvers, and obstacles whenever possible.

Extreme crutching is not for everyone.  In fact, it really should not be for anyone, but that has not deterred me thus far.  My major obstacle is my 13 year old yellow lab who manages to get in my way whenever I try to move around the house.  His erratic and senile movements make my extreme crutching that much more exciting as I never know how or if he will move as I hobble towards him (most of the time he continues in his normal state of sleeping and snoring).  Stairs and inclines are also fun, as is hopping in and out of the shower without pulling down towel racks or slipping and breaking other bones.

So maybe it is not as adrenaline pumping an activity as many others but sometimes you've just got to improvise!

Why I love watersports (camps)

I learned to waterski when I was eight years old - summer of 1993 - at a day camp in southern NH.  They had a rickety old outboard boat that was broken down more days than it worked but I would race to the dock every morning and jostle in line with the older kids in order to get one of the limited slots to ski.  By the end of that summer I was absolutely hooked.  Nothing beat the feeling of cruising over the water, cutting across the wake, and showboating to the other campers on shore. When I started searching for overnight camps two years later my only requirement was that they offered waterskiing.  During that first summer at overnight camp I got bored with skiing on two skis and focused on dropping a ski and ultimately getting up on one ski.  Perseverance turned out to be the key as day in and day out I dragged through the water, drinking half the lake in the process.  My instructor, Chris, would not let me quit until I had gotten up on just one ski and after a month at camp I was slalom skiing.

The camp bought a new boat the next year with a pylon that raised the rope seven feet or so into the air.  A second-hand wakeboard came from somewhere and it was the new rage.  We could not get enough of jumping the little wake that the ski boat created, trying to get higher into the air than the other kids, landing face first in the water and begging for another pull.  I attended that overnight camp for five summers, until I was 15 in the year 2000.  By that last summer I had coerced the camp director to just block off my class rotation with "ski".  I would head out on the boat at 9am and get back to camp at 4:15pm having skied, tubed, or wakeboarded at least once or twice an hour, all day long.

In probably the most memorable experience I had at camp, three of us coerced one of the boat drivers to take us out at 5am when the lake was glassy and calm.  En route to the lake we encountered a massive male moose who just looked at us like "what are these crazy people doing before sunrise at MY lake?"  We took turns behind the boat getting pulled through perfectly smooth water and as the sun crept up we all congratulated each other on an epic early morning shred session.  Arriving back at camp for breakfast we silently snuck into the cafe, all four of us collaborators returning from a victorious secret mission.

Predictably when I started working as a camp counselor in 2004 it was as a boat driver and ski/wakeboard instructor.  While the boats have gotten incrementally more advanced and powerful and the skis/boards are lighter and packed with cutting edge design, it is still just about being on a boat with awesome people and enjoying some great sports.  Today, 19 years since I first squeezed my feet into a pair of old wooden skis at day camp, I am still out there every summer teaching, learning, ripping behind a boat, and hopefully creating these kinds of lasting memories for my campers at Water Monkey Camp.