Friday, March 14, 2008

BOY SCOUT ROAD CAMP VERITY

Boy Scout Road.
With a name like that, you can only imagine that it would be running rampant with wild-eyed boys full of vim and vigor.
It was! Once upon a time.
Now the land seems sterile, gone is the big hand hewn cabin, trees, creek. Replaced with millions of dollars of homes and green manicured lawns devoid of the sounds of restless youth. The hills we roamed as kids, now are fenced and protected by silent alarm systems daring you to tread backward to those days gone by.
The two story cabin only sat about fifty feet off the road, but to us kids it was in a wilderness, miles from civilization. We unrolled our sleeping bags on the floor upstairs and then set about gathering firewood to burn throughout the night in the great stone fireplace. We traversed the hills behind the cabin as if they were the Sange de Christo mountains and we were beginning an adventure at Philmont. We practiced our woodsmen skills with knives and axes. We built bridges and towers of saplings, lashing them together with rope and honeysuckle vines. We hunted the very elusive snipe at midnight with the new scouts that joined our troop. All in all, we slept very little when we went camping at Camp Verity. There was just so much to do and so little time to do it in.
We tried to squeeze a week of activities into a weekend.
The big cabin is still alive and well. It has a new home near Yatesville Lake in Lawrence County Kentucky, and it has a new name: Camp Cherokee. While it kind of looks the same, it will never be the same. It just doesn’t get the attention it did 30 years ago, when it was occupied by happy throngs of boisterous scouts.
In September 1999, six of us old guys got together and spent the night in the cabin. We didn’t sleep. We sat on the porch in chairs and reminisced the entire night. The propane lantern softly hissed as it lit up the front of the cabin. We all took turns with a memory and everyone added to it. Before we knew it, the sky was beginning to glow a soft yellow and was soon peeking through the pines. Where had the night gone? Once again we squeezed a lot into a little. This time it was twenty five years into about ten hours. We parted ways that morning, only two of us still live in Catlettsburg and the other four headed back to California, Texas, Florida and Ohio, ensuring each other we would try it again soon.
As for Boy Scout Rd…I think it needs a name change.
Camp Arrowhead...I'll save that for later.

9 comments:

Anonymous said...

Good stuff! I drive by there about three times a week and I can still picture the cabin and the big rock that sat behind it. Thanks for the memories!!

Michelle C said...

My grandparents lived on Boy Scout Road (Rt2 before then) and I spent EVERY summer there. It was a huge difference between that and suburbs of Cincinnati and I miss it so much! You're right, it's just not the same. I made friends down there and it was like a different world to me. Running barefoot, the swing over the creek, crawdads crawling out of the ground and sneaking strawberries from the garden (No, Mom, I have no idea where those red stains on my outfit came from *giggle*). Sigh, my daughter has missed so much!

Anonymous said...

I was a Boy Scout in Troop 102 in Ashland Ky from 1969 to 1976. Some of the best memories of my youth took place at Camp Verity. It seemed so far out in the Wilderness back then. Now its just another subdivison. And we call it "Progress".

Nancy Royden said...

I used to come to Camp Verity with the Girl Scouts. I would ride my bike out there all the way from Kentucky Avenue in Ashland. It was so fun. Thanks for the post.

Anonymous said...

I remember playing in the creek, hiking up the hill behind the stream to the cave and then to the lake. ...and going all over the woods behind the cabin for hours playing capture the flag at night. That was an awesome experience as a kid and it's a shame that McMansions have replaced it but that's life.

Unknown said...

Wonderful and so true. I was a scout in troop 154 and Carl curnutte was the caretaker of the camp

Mike Clinch said...

BSA Historian here, I'm developing an index of councils camps and OA lodges. Do you have a date when Camp Verity was closed, and a reason for the closure?

Mike Clinch

rf0203 said...

Mike: I’m not sure of the particulars, but the whole area was redeveloped. Unfortunately Grant who wrote this, passed away a few years back. Lots of fun memories from this place.

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