Lincoln Miller
北乔治亚山脉高处的蓝岭营地是孩子们心中的理想营地。 因为新冠肺炎,营地活动曾被禁止。 如今,蓝岭营地重新向孩子们开放,给他们的生活带来更多的色彩。
High in the North Georgia mountains lies Camp Blue Ridge (CBR), a co-educational sleep-away camp. In 2020, after more than 50 summers of campfires and memories, owners Joey and Lori Waldman were forced to shut down the camp due to the coronavirus pandemic.
“Camp is often the place where our campers feel the most included, the most accepted, and understood,” the Waldmans told me in an email interview. Like campers in other parts of the country,members of the Blue Ridge family were disappointed when they heard about the closure.
Fortunately, Blue Ridge and other camps nationwide were able to reopen this past summer. Blue Ridge welcomed more campers than ever this year. Like many other kids, I attended CBR for the first time. As my mother explained, “We saw how you missed your friends, and we wanted to give you the opportunity to be a kid again, to make up for everything that the pandemic took away from you.”
I loved my first camp experience and can't wait to return.According to the Waldmans, other campers benefited from their time away, too. “It's a huge positive for so many families and it proves how important and beneficial camp really is,” the Waldmans wrote.
Noah Callahan, 12, of Georgia was among the first-time campers. “When I first walked into the cabin, I was amazed that I could be around these many kids,” he said. “I was so happy! It was very meaningful for me, after almost a year, to finally have so many activities available to me, from gardening to drums. I loved it.”
Blue Ridge provided an opportunity for kids like me to get back to friendships and activities after months of pandemic-related stress. The Waldmans felt the same way. “This pandemic has affected all of us, no matter the age,” the couple wrote. “Camp offered a safe and healthy haven for us all to reconnect in person and remember what a social and loving species we are.”