I was initially skeptical after my experience leaders (ELs) announced that we'd be living in a Girl Scout cabin. Immediately, questions popped into my mind. Will there be cob webs covering the furniture? Will there *be* furniture? Running water? I was worried.
When we parked in front of the cabin after a long eight hour trip, I thought I arrived at a sleep away camp. The main cabin was much larger than I expected, comfortably fitting 50 overnight. It's tucked away in the woods with smaller cabins off to the side.
We decided to explore the interior before venturing outside to the rest of the camp grounds. The main room is a large open space with a fireplace, cubbies for overnight bags and folded chairs and tables for a nice dining area. The hallway from the main room leads to two bathrooms, with two stalls each, and one separate shower. The hallway divides two rooms--a room with mattress bunk beds and a fully-equipped kitchen with an oven, microwave, refrigerator, freezer, all necessary utensils, pots and pans.
After exploring the indoor cabins, we went outside on a hike. We found cool obstacle courses, an archery ring, and a bonfire pit (none of which we were allowed to use but still fun to look at) and a lake! All in all, I've gotten really good sleep, eaten really well here (thanks awesome ELs for the recipes!), and stayed clean. The cabin at Camp Maude Eaton has served me as well as I hope I've served the community partners!
- Jody Mozersky
- Jody Mozersky
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All the crew together! |
The beautiful lake! |
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