Mrs.
Dryscoll with our 5th grade hiking group.
In
September I started the fifth grade with Mrs. Lewis as my teacher
and I started doing better making B’s in reading, English, spelling,
writing and Social Studies. Oddly I did poorly in Arithmetic and
Science which in later years became my best subjects. In the fall
all the fifth grade classes at Littlewood went on a day long field
trip to
Camp Crystal Lake. [photo] This was a fifth grade ritual
for all schools in Alachua county, spending a school day at the camp
which is owned by the county. I had heard about Camp Crystal from my
older sister Brenda, who had gone the previous year so I knew a
little about it. The week before the trip we given permission slips
to bring home for our parents sign which on the day of the trip we
gave the teacher as we boarded the bus which took us on an hour
drive out to Camp Crystal. This was my first time on a bus as I
always walked or road my bike to school so I was excited about the
bus ride as much as going to the camp. There were two busses as
there was quite a crowd since there were several fifth grade
classes, along with the teachers and quite a few parents as
chaperones, there was over a hundred that day. We arrived at the
camp, got out of the busses, and gathered for a short lecture about
the events that day. There were several options, a nature hike,
crafts, archery and others as well as swimming in the lake although
when we were there it was in the fall and too cool to go swimming.
We were given a few minutes to confer with our friends to see what
they wanted to do and then were divided into groups based on what
events we decided upon and off we went. I had decided on the nature
hike which gathered at one of the buildings where we were given
socks filled with sulfur which we banged against our ankles to keep
ticks away and off we went on a path through the woods. Our guide
was Mrs. Driscoll who was the camp director for over many years who
would along the way would stop and show us things telling us about
them, there was deer moss on the ground which could be eaten, in a
ten foot high cliff with small holes in it which the bumble bees
lived, we stopped and listened at a tapping noise, “That is a
woodpecker.” she said and then asked, “Can anyone spot its red
head?” I developed an appreciation for walking in the woods and
observing what is around me that day from her that has carried with
me throughout my life. At lunch time all the kids gathered in the
large dining hall and where we formed a line going through a door
into the kitchen, getting our food, exiting through another door and
then sitting at one of the many tables in the room to eat our
lunch. Camp Crystal was a wonderful experience and by an
interesting chain of events I would return there fifty some years
later with my dad. Mrs. Driscoll died at the age of 98 in 2021.
Yes, I'm in there somewhere.
Updated: 08-02-2022