Church Camp Chaos (19 page)

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Authors: Annie Tipton

BOOK: Church Camp Chaos
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I kind of hope wilderness camp will be something like that TV show called
Survivor
. It’s one of Dad’s favorite shows, and sometimes I watch it with him. The best thing about
Survivor
is the immunity challenges that the contestants play. My least favorite thing about it is the bugs. And the nasty food they have to eat to stay alive. (Dad told me about one time when the contestants cooked a rat and ate it! GROSS!)

Macy told me she’s a little nervous about being out in the woods in the dark. I told her there’s nothing to worry about, and I’ll protect her. Unless there are baby alligators in the woods, in which case I’ll be terrified, too. But if there are fuzzy bunnies, we’ll be fine. (Honestly, Diary, I had no idea I was such a wimp!)

So I’m packing my backpack for overnight in the woods. (Note to self: don’t forget to pack the bug spray!) You’re going with me, Diary. So at least if I don’t survive out there, there will be a record of who I was.

EJ

 

EJ slapped her left elbow, ending the life of one of about a million mosquitoes in the woods.

“Yuck!” she said, wiping away the remnants of the bloodthirsty bug with her T-shirt sleeve.

The girls of dorm E were making the mile-long hike to wilderness camp. Each girl toted a backpack and a sleeping bag and pillow under each arm. Susan led the way, stopping the group every now and then to point out an interesting tree or bird.

“Everybody here?” Susan asked, doing a quick head count. “CoraLee, you still with us, girl?”

“I’m here!” CoraLee sounded breathless due to the fact that her backpack was positively stuffed with enough pink ruffles and accessories for a weeklong stay in the wilderness. Back at the dorm, EJ overheard CoraLee telling Susan that Michael Draper “volunteered” to carry her camp gear out to the campsite, but Susan said no, CoraLee had to carry her own stuff because boys were absolutely forbidden to set foot on the girls’ campsite. EJ thought for sure CoraLee would pack a little lighter after that, but apparently fashion was more important than being practical.

“For some of you, this might be your first time camping out in the woods, so I want to show you something to avoid,” Susan said.

Susan gathered the girls around a tree that had poison ivy growing up the trunk and pointed out the way the plant was divided into three leaflets. “That’s how you can identify poison ivy,” the counselor explained. “Remember the old saying, ‘Leaves of three, let it be.’ ”

They passed a pretty little brook and a sign that pointed in opposite directions, one to the girls’ latrine and one to the boys’ latrine.

“Susan, what’s a latrine?” Anna Baker asked the question that everyone else was wondering.

“The outdoor commode,” Susan said matter-of-factly. Some of the girls still looked confused, so she made it even clearer by saying, “The outdoor toilet.”

“The outdoor WHAT?” CoraLee’s voice reached a shrill pitch at the end of the question.

“It’s not all that bad,” Susan said, trying to hide a chuckle. “Besides, this is
wilderness
camp, ladies. No plumbing, no electricity. Let’s enjoy God’s creation to its fullest!”

EJ grinned at Susan. She thought the camp counselor might just be the best adult she knew. She made another mental note to ask Susan what she needed to do to become a camp counselor someday.

A few minutes later, the trail opened up to a large clearing marked by a carved wooden sign that said G
IRLS
D
ORM
E. Ten small tents were set up in a circle, and in the middle was a fire pit surrounded by several large stumps that looked like the perfect place to sit to enjoy the fire.

“Home sweet home, ladies!” Susan said, smiling. “Pair up and find a tent.”

There was a moment of scurrying as everyone found a partner and sprinted for a tent. EJ and Macy grabbed hands and ran to the opposite side of the tent circle to claim their space.

Inside the tent they found two thin air mattresses lying parallel on the floor. The tent was just big enough for them to crawl inside, unroll their sleeping bags on the mattresses, plop their pillows at the head, and set their backpacks on the floor between their sleeping areas.

EJ and Macy sat cross-legged on their sleeping bags and gulped water from plastic bottles to try to cool down from their hike.

EJ pulls the bottle away from her mouth and gasps
.

“Macy, slow down!” she says frantically. “We never know how long it’ll be until we find fresh drinking water again.”

“You’re right, EJ,” Macy says solemnly, twisting the cap on her water bottle and stowing it in her bag. “What’s for supper tonight? Do we have any rice left, or are we going to have to scout for edible bugs?”

“The rest of the tribe ate all the rice this morning,” EJ says. “Looks like it’s bugs for us tonight. And maybe a mango or two if we can find them.”

The best friends are braving the wilderness together with the hopes of being the last two standing—to win
Survivor
and the cash prize that goes along with it. It’s a battle of wits and survival skills, and one they are both committed to
.

“Girls, come out of your tents as soon as you have your beds made,” Susan called. “We’re going to have a little competition against the other dorms.”

EJ and Macy gathered with the other girls near Susan’s tent. Susan crawled out of her tent a few moments later, a red bandanna folded and tied around her head like a headband and a bundle of red fabric under her arm.

“Here are our team bandannas,” Susan said, passing out red handkerchiefs. “You can wear them however you’d like; they just have to be visible.”

Girls got creative with their bandannas, some loosely tying theirs around their necks like a cowboy, others wearing them as armbands or bracelets. One girl tied it in a knot around her leg, just above her knee.

“Are we ready to win?” Susan, the leader of the all-female tribe, asks
.

“Yeah!” the girls shout back
.

“Then follow me,” she says, leading them deeper into the woods
.

EJ tightens the red bandanna around her head, keeping her hair away from her face. She’s feeling lucky to be on the red tribe since red’s her favorite color and is, in her opinion, the most powerful-looking color
.

Susan leads the red tribe to a clearing, and they come face-to-face with the four other tribes—yellow, purple, blue, and green. As the crowd parts, the red tribe gets its first glance at an epic-looking obstacle course that crosses over a creek flowing through the clearing
.

“Whoa.”

As EJ took in the sights of the obstacle course, she realized she didn’t really need to imagine anything—what was going on in front of her was just as good (if not better) than she could’ve made up in her head.

Susan explained each part: a climbing cargo net led to a platform about ten feet off the ground. Once the entire tribe got on the platform, they had to complete a wooden puzzle that unlocked a hatch to a slide off of the platform, back to the ground. Next was a maze made out of hay bales stacked five feet high—with only one correct way through, Susan said—and lots of dead ends.

For the final part of the obstacle course, Susan pointed to a rope bridge about forty feet long that spanned the fast-moving creek. EJ didn’t think “rope bridge” was a very good description of what she saw. It was more like three thick ropes suspended across the creek: one to walk on and two that were waist high to hold on to and keep your balance.

“The first team to get everyone across the creek wins,” Susan said. “And the winning team will take back to their campsite the fixin’s for a hot dog and s’mores roast.”

“What do the losers eat for dinner?” someone shouted from the orange team.

“Something we like to call a ‘wilderness buffet,’ ” Susan said, smiling. “Beef jerky and trail mix.”

The crowd of girls let out a groan. After finding out there were hot dogs and s’mores on the line, the wilderness buffet sounded downright disappointing.

“Okay, girls, here we go!” Susan cupped her hands around her mouth—nearly as effective as Gene’s megaphone, but much less annoying. “On your marks. Get set. GO!”

EJ’s quick reflexes helped her sprint out ahead of the other girls, and she was the first from the red team to jump onto the cargo net, climbing as fast as she could. She glanced back to see the hungry eyes of her teammates. Hungry for the win—and hungry for the hot dogs and s’mores.

EJ lost her foothold on the cargo net, and she dangled for a second, dangerously close to losing her hand grips and falling on top of her teammates at her heels.

“Keep going, EJ!” Susan cheered from below the cargo net. “You’ve got this, red team!”

EJ regained her footing and looked up to see she was only a couple of feet from the top of the platform. Suddenly Macy leaned over the edge and smiled down at EJ, offering a hand to help her up the last little bit.

“That’s my best friend—the gymnast!” EJ called to no one. “Thanks, Mace!”

EJ and Macy sat on the edge of red team’s platform and helped their teammates up. CoraLee was having an especially difficult time with the cargo net because she was wearing high-heeled sandals instead of athletic shoes like everyone else.

“CoraLee, just kick off your shoes!” Susan yelled. “It’ll make it easier for you to get up the net—I promise!”

“I’m
not
kicking these off just to get lost in the underbrush!” CoraLee clung desperately to the cargo net, unable to go up or down. “They’re
designer
!”

“And they’re super cute, but they aren’t going to help the team win,” Susan said. “Toss them down to me, and I’ll keep them safe.”

CoraLee poked her arms through the cargo net, reached down to her feet, and retrieved the impractical shoes before dropping them into Susan’s outstretched hands below.

“Got ’em—now go!” Susan motioned to CoraLee to hurry.

EJ had never really thought CoraLee was very athletic, so she was surprised at how quickly the barefooted CoraLee scrambled up the cargo net and was catching her breath on the edge of the platform next to Macy.

“Who is good at puzzles?” Sara Powers asked.

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