Feeding the boa always drew a small crowd. My dad was the nature counselor. He educated the campers on the local plants and animals, took them on hikes, and cared for the rodents and reptiles kept in cages and tanks.The boa he fed with live frogs and mice. Nature was tamed between these walls, but the garbage collector, who lost two fingers of his right hand to a raccoon, was a warning of the wild just beyond.
In June, a day or two after school ended, my family would pack up “Big Red” our much loved convertible Impala and drive to a camp in Honesdale, Pennsylvania. We left the city behind.
My first six summers were spent there. I was the youngest child at the camp and enjoyed considerable doting. Once I was given a huge, swirled, multi-color lollipop, so beautiful, the size of my face, I dared not taste it.
But my treasures were the raspberries, blueberries and blackberries ripe for picking, the Golden Rod, Queen Anne’s Lace and purple thistles perfect for bouquets, the grass and yellow buttercups that tickled my bare ankles, and the jewelweed that popped when squeezed just so.
That last July Fourth was an endless day yielding to a star filled night. All of us gathered around the lake and watched a display of fireworks my father helped ignite. We sat on blankets craning our necks to take in the entire spectacle while the still bright embers extinguished into the near, dark waters below.