Monday, August 3, 2009
Weekly Contra Dances for the Families at Ohana Camp
Wednesday, July 29, 2009
It's Mid Summer at Ohana Family Camp
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
Ohana Open House to Honor Sabra Field Prints
Sunday, June 28, 2009
VYCC Crew Completes Ohana Trail
It's completed!!! The staff of Ohana Family Camp were treated to our first walk on the newly completed trail to the waterfront on Friday. It is a terrific trail, as it meanders through the beautiful woods, by old stone walls and by amazing rock formations. The Vermont Youth Conservation Corps worked very hard, in blistering heat and humidity, to complete their project by Friday. On behalf of the Ohana Staff, the Aloha Foundation, and all the future "walkers" on the path, we say a huge thank you to this wonderful crew and their leaders. Come walk with us on our new trail!
Friday, June 26, 2009
New Aloha Camp Parents Welcome Lunch at Ohana
About 60 parents, who were bringing their children to the Aloha Camps for the first time, were invited to a luncheon at Ohana Family Camp on Wednesday. Opening day at the camps, is always a time of mixed emotions for first time parents. Elation that their children will have such a wonderful summer, probably a few little concerns, and often a feeling of emptiness as they leave their children at camp for the first time. The luncheon organized by Ann Downey, Trustee, and the Aloha Foundation's Development Department was a real hit with parents. They enjoyed discussions, a nice luncheon and a chance to meet each other and share a common bond. It's success will surely guarantee a repeat gathering next summer.
Thursday, June 25, 2009
VYCC Trail Construction Continues at Ohana Family Camp
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Wednesday, June 24, 2009
Ohana Pre Camp Training is in Full Swing
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Vermont Youth Conservation Corps arrives at Ohana Family Camp
Friday, June 19, 2009
GE Service Week - Final Day at Ohana Family Camp
It has been a grand week at Ohama, and all the GE Elfuns are unanimous in expressing heartfelt appreciation to the terrific team which makes this Camp so very special.
We’d like to salute:
Clark for always being one step ahead of the game. His eagerness to be helpful and to make us feel at home couldn’t have been more genuine.
Austin was everywhere doing everything, and anything, that needed attention. Austin, you made a lot of new friends this week.
Lynn, you may be the glue that keeps the day-to-day camp administration together, but this week you also were the thread that kept the sewing circle humming.
Jake you were better than the best in the kitchen, We enjoyed the quality, quantity and variety of your meals. Thanks especially for the cheerful handling of special requests.
Libby your smile is as big as your heart. Your help with the Area 51 crew was awesome. Thanks for being so upbeat and so smart!
Then there’s Deb and Andy. In a word, fantastic. We thank you for caring about us, for making us feel at home, and for helping in every way possible -- even when you were swamped with priority projects of your own.
The DVD will say it all when we get back home. But until then, and forever, thanks to all of you from all of us for a gratifying week together.
Charlotte and Joel Albert
Barbara and Wally Baker
Kathleen and John Betchkal
Jean and Gene Bratton
Pat and Don Dickerman
Ronda and Ron Duvelius
Helen Gaul
Richard Hoffard
Michael Holmes
Marie and Buzz Hope
Jean and Al Jankowski
Ellie Lockwood
Lois Lovinger
Madeline and John Stephenson
Thursday, June 18, 2009
Day 5 - Elfun Service Week at Ohana Camp
Thursday was fantastic! It started with the usual perusing of Deb’s “to do” list, but there was an awareness that today was the Elfuns’ last full work day, so the approach was: Let’s make this Victory Day. And victory was achieved!
The Sugar House got its coat of attractive light yellow paint just before the drizzling rain began. All the other major projects were under cover, including completion of window frame painting for the barn and running wire for the fabled Area 51 building. It got a bit crowded in Area 51 when reinforcements arrived, but the progress was awesome.
Highlight of the mid-morning break was an impromptu piano session with Al Jankowski at the keyboard. He was so good that he inspired Gene Bratton to begin singing. Mighty nice duo! As chance (spelled: good planning) would have it, Andy Williams just happened to place a couple of new tables which needed polyurethaning under cover on the porch. So John Betchkal and Gene grabbed two brushes, applied the polyurethane, and finished just in time for the group photo before lunch.
Once again the Vermont weather was cooperative as the rain stopped just long enough to gather for a picture with Lake Fairlee as a backdrop. Everybody showed up, everybody smiled, and after the picture was taken the light rain began once again.
At lunch time the mood was somewhat serious. The Elfuns knew they had only another four hours to work so the camp area became a blur of moving, hardworking volunteers doing wrap-up tasks. And just for fun at lunch, Deb Williams said she’d really be pleased if some renovation work could be started in the office. She got her wish, and the new look is classy along the wall between the reception area and office.
Every fine effort deserves some kind of celebration. So in anticipation of a Friday morning tree planting Joel Albert dug holes for three lilac bushes to join the lush Ohama Camp grounds right at the entrance to the main gate. Tomorrow the Elfuns will toss ceremonial shovels of Vermont topsoil and then head down the highway with good thoughts about their achievements and happy moments together at Ohana.
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
Day 4 - GE Elfuns Work Week at Ohana Camp
The library is a busy spot where Jean Bratton of Greenville, South Carolina, has catalogued more than 200 books, and today she’s getting a nice assist from Barbara Baker of Hampstead, North Carolina. Nearby Charlotte Albert of Potomac, Maryland, and Madeline Stephenson of Utica, New York, are sewing curtains for cabins. Classy!
Speaking of cabins, Don Dickerman of Leland, North Carolina, and Helen Gaul of Silver Spring, Maryland, volunteered for a very important and “tougher than it sounds” assignment. They’re attaching knobs to the cabin windows, and the challenge is that there are around 144 windows needing attention – each one presenting a unique challenge.
And in Tom Sawyer style, there’s a burgeoning group of folks hovering around the Sugar House, waiting for Andy to pronounce that the sun has dried the building enough for the outside painting to commence. That group may expand because the Fabulous Foresters (Gene Bratton of Greenville, South Carolina, Buzz Hope of Atlanta, Georgia, and Al Jankowski of Granville, Ohio,) have finished taking down selected timber to enhance the view of the lake from the porch.
All this energy comes to a halt after lunch because today’s the day for the Elfuns to spend the afternoon exploring the region, with many of them setting their GPS systems for Ben & Jerry’s. What’s a double scoop of chocolate when you’ve been working all morning!
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Ohana Camp Elfun Service Volunteers Tackle Day 3
It could have been a scene from Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.
But rather it was Deb Williams and the 23 GE Elfun volunteers figuratively singing “Hi-Ho, Hi-Ho, it’s off to work we go” on a beautiful Vermont morning, specifically Tuesday June 16. The group started its day with a salute to Marie and Buzz Hope of Atlanta, Georgia, who are today celebrating their 53rd wedding anniversary. They may not have had toast for breakfast, but they’ll have several “toasts” tonight at dinner.
Progress and pride are the key words for today. The Elfun team building the new shed at the waterfront (Joel Albert of Potomac , Maryland, Ronda and Ron Duvelius of Loveland, Ohio, and John Stephenson of Utica , New York), are making huge progress and could finish the job on Wednesday if the weather stays as nice as it is today.
Jean Jankowski of Granville, Ohio, and Kathleen Betchkal of Shaker Heights, Ohio were all smiles as volunteers stopping at the fabled Area 51 tool shed complimented them on their organizational skills. As the morning progressed they got an assist from Richard Hoffard, of Detroit, Michigan, who arrived there and announced that he was going to be installing new wiring for the building. So, with thanks to Richard, Jean and Kathleen will be able to shine not a little, but a lot, of light on their success.
Across the road the barn restoration volunteers weren’t glazey-eyed doing their day’s project, but Marie Hope, Michael Holmes of Hales Corners, Wisconsin, Pat Dickerman of Leland, North Carolina, and Ellie Lockwood of Arlington, Virginia, gleefully completed glazing the old barn windows, many of which needed new glass.
Andy Williams, with boundless enthusiasm, was power washing the Sugar House, which could only mean that he’d like to have it painted before the Elfuns leave Lake Fairlee. And when he finished the power washing the next project was just next door at the Gardenside building, the interior of which is at this very writing is now being gutted as a first big step toward its eventual renovation.
This has been a productive day, but all work and no play is not the Ohama Camp way, so at mid afternoon the kayaks and canoes will be occupied by GE Elfuns further building their appetites for tonight’s pork roast with all the trimmings!
G.E. Volunteer Work Week at Ohana Camp
Ohana Camp welcomed 23 GE Elfuns from 10 states on Sunday evening, June 14, for a week of service interspersed with fun. Jake Williams prepared a five star dinner that evening, followed by a briefing and walking tour of the camp led by Deb Williams.
Many of the Elfun volunteers had been to Ohana two years ago and were consequently amazed and thrilled with the progress achieved since their last visit. Notwithstanding past progress, Deb was up to the task of generating almost three pages of wide-ranging new tasks to present on her ubiquitous flip chart to the eager Elfuns
So after devouring strawberry shortcake and selecting Monday’s projects, the GE Elfuns called it a day and headed for a night’s rest in the crisp spring Vermont air. Before they knew it, the smell of coffee brought them out of their cabins to a Monday morning feast of pancakes and sausage –plus a whole lot more-- and then everyone was enthusiastically on the way to work.
Libby Webster was in charge of the fabled Area 51 tool shed, and from there within minutes one crew was going down the road to build a storage shed at the waterfront, another was on its way to glaze windows in the historic barn. And individuals were tackling tasks ranging from tree cutting to electrical wiring, carpentry and even quilting.
“This camp is a very special spot,” said Richard Hoffard of suburban Detroit, Michigan. Hoffard, who was a regional service manager for GE’s Medical Systems Business before retiring , is making his second service trip to Ohana. “It’s picturesque, and it’s peaceful. Working on these meaningful improvements is tremendously satisfying. Equally important, just being here gives us all a renewed sense of purpose and truly separates us from the turmoil of the everyday world. It is a nice refresher course on the meaning of the word Friendship. Spending a week here Is a big time battery charger. I love it!”
It won’t be all work and no play on the Elfuns’ first day because after tonight’s dinner the Elfuns will celebrate Lois Lovinger’s birthday. Lois came to Ohana from Fort Wayne, Indiana. A quilter and also photographer par excellence, she’s planning to snap a few photos of the group after dinner when Vermont Public Radio’s Will Lange entertains with his perspectives on life in New England -- with special emphasis on this neck of the woods.
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Ohana Camp Welcomes Spring
The old earth is turning again and spring is in the air. Soon we will welcome Ohana Family Campers back to the shores of Vermont’s Lake Fairlee. Even if we did not have the gift of sight, we could simply hear the arrival of spring. Every day there is a new voice to be added to the spring chorus. The Red Wing Blackbirds arrived in mid March with snow still on the ground and ice on the lake! They cling to the cat-tails on the lakes edge as they stake out their territories. The wood frogs are also looking for mates as they began their “duck like” chorus last week in the ephemeral (temporary) pools that dot the property. They are courting at a frenzied pace, triggered by the increasing light, warmer days and the open shallow pools. Their eggs will be laid shortly, the hatching tadpoles will mature and head back to the forest. We expect their cousins, the Spring Peepers, to start singing any day now. And soon we will have the sound of Family Campers laughing and playing all around the beautiful grounds of Ohana Camp. Campers will be happy to see all the work that has been accomplished this winter thanks to our dedicated Buildings and Grounds crew. Most of the 23 cabins now have new roofs, including Cabin 11, or affectionately known as “Area 51.” Work on our historic barn has started with the installation of electricity and lights. This summer it will be used for arts and crafts activities. An Alden rowing shell was the first of our new boats to arrive, along with kayaks. And a much needed new storage shed for the waterfront will arrive in a few weeks. The natural world, and the human world are coming alive with excitement as we anticipate summer, and our families gathering once more to enjoy the warm weather on beautiful Lake Fairlee.