Campground Events

Internal Affairs

You'd think there would be enough to do when you go camping on hundreds of acres of field and forest, outfitted with olympic size swimming pools, heated spas, mini-golf courses, private fishing and boating lakes and tennis courts. Plus, with all the area events and attractions, it would seem that there wouldn't be spare time to do anything else. But campgrounds have developed their own internal subculture of special events to spice up campers' weekends.

After all the work involved in assuring their guests of perfect relaxation and worry-free fun, why do campground owners go to the trouble of cooking up these sprightly affairs? Probably because they want to make absolutely sure you have a good time. "I think its more fun and more interesting for campers to be able to get together," says Jean Taylor of Camp Taylor Campground in Columbia (908/496-4333). "They really get to have a camaraderie; the seasonals especially, but also the weekenders. They meet people and enjoy each other's company. Some will meet here and make plans to come back for the same event again. Its a way of getting everybody together and seeing how friendly campers really are. Campers are very friendly people." Or maybe its just because these campground owners like to get to know their visitors a little better.

Campers at the Taylor's can look forward to a surprise nearly every weekend. Treasure hunts, scavenger hunts and murder mysteries are popular. Jean explains, "Lots of people, after they get to their site, never see the whole campground. Treasure hunts get them out looking and picking up clues at different areas." The hunts are often thematic and always creative and original. One murder mystery had people coming back until the leaves started falling off the trees trying to solve it. Camp Taylor, which adjoins the Delaware Water Gap National Recreation Area, is also perfect for nature oriented programs like guided hikes up to the Water Gap overlook, walks along the Appalachian Trail, and tree identification weekends.

The campground also offers guest presentations from Space Farms, the Pocono Animal and Snake Farm, storyteller Mary McBride, magician Beverly Suzanne, and Paul Stillman, who does first person historical characterizations. This year Stillman, who also entertains at schools all over New York State and at Corning Museum of Glass, will come as crusty old Nasty Ned the Frontiersman with tall tales about westward expansion. In the fall the Taylors convert the pavilion into a very spooky haunted house, which has become so popular they've had to stretch it out over a full month of the foliage season.

Since early 1998, visitors to Camp Taylor have enjoyed a built-in, twice-a-day special event: wolf watches at the ten acre Lakota Wolf Preserve (908/496-9244). Packs of tundra, timber and arctic wolves, bobcats, and foxes reside there, a mile back from the campground office in the Kittatinny woodlands. Campers or day visitors can enjoy a scenic walk back to the Preserve or ride at scheduled intervals. Beyond the double chained locked gates, the observation area lies in the center of four compounds where wildlife photographer Dan Bacon or his partner, Jim Stein, will answer questions, talk about the social structure of wolf packs, their eating habits, their interaction with man, and many other interesting facts. Unlike a zoo, visitors must often sit and wait for the wolves to come out of the woods, which they do most readily at feeding time. When they arrive you can watch the wolves play, interact with each other and maybe even hear them howl! Serious photographers can take guided photography or video sessions around each individual wolf compound. The fee for those coming just to see the wolves includes day use of all Camp Taylor facilities including lake swimming, picnicking, mini-golf, miles of nature trails, and evening programs.

A few miles away at Triple Brook Family Camping Resort in Hope (908-459-4079), master eventmaker Brenda James and her family have cooked up a menu of summer happenings laden with the down-home hospitality and humour that endear this place to so many.

One of the favorite annual events at Triplebrook is an evening of story telling called the Teddy Bear Tea. People bring their teddy bears so that can hear the stories too. "People sit down by the lake under the big willow trees. We have everybody there from very elderly people to the littlest tiny kids," says Brenda. "You wouldn't believe how many grown-ups bring their old teddy bears.They come back year after year." Teddy Bears win prizes; one for the most loved bear, usually the one that's the most worn out. The bears and their friends finish out the evening on a hayride.

Then there's the annual Bovine Day at Triplebrook. This down-to-earth celebration of the ordinary cow is nurtured by imaginations no less abundant that the well-fertilized campground farm fields. The day begins with the Cow Plop Open, a round of golf in the pasture. There is a cow costume contest and a mooing competition. And there are a series of segments to the day that revolve around manipulating cow manure, including a Cow Plop Sculpting Contest, a Cow Pie Eating Contest and the Cow Chip Throw. Brenda explains, "Cow plop is an old farmer thing. Each fall we went out into the huge garden patch and had a tomato fight. When we ran out, we started throwing the plop. Teenagers love it."

Finally, Cow Plop Bingo challenges players to pick the square in the pasture which will receive the most manure during the contest, which sometimes takes hours. The depositing cow usually needs a nap during the course of his wandering and almost always scores a direct hit on the border between two squares, causing raucous debate as to which contains the largest, and winning, volume. Agritourism at its finest.

Christmas in July has become a favorite weekend at nearly every campground in the area. The weekend just what it sounds like: glitter and glue, tree decorating, paper cut outs, Christmas crafts, kids parties, gift exchanges, and Mr. and Mrs. Claus to preside over the festivities.

When you plan your camping trip this summer, you really can't go wrong in Northwest New Jersey. But ask about what's on the calendar. There might be something special waiting for you.

Comments

Skylands Visitor
01 Apr 2008, 14:20
Cathy, You won't find a cabin on a stream unless you buy one. But these campgrounds have cabins and local access to good fishing. Also some state parks have cabins. Check Stokes State Forest and others
cathy cornell
31 Mar 2008, 17:42
my husband and boys (16 and 18) are looking for a weekend trout fishing cabin in the month of april, any suggestions? They are regular lake trout fishermen, with an occasional stream trip each season. They are looking for a weeekend getaway before time slips away! Thanks, cathy
Joe Vanderhoof
09 Mar 2008, 12:01
How good are your cow pies?
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