The year was 1968, I was 10 years old and we were going camping! I knew something had been brewing for several weeks, because my mother seemed preoccupied, and my dad busied himself in the garage more than usual. Now I knew the reason — we would spend the next two weeks fishing and camping all over south-central Idaho!
Camping was different in those days. It involved throwing a couple bales of straw, a canvas, some blankets, a beat-up tin coffee pot and one frying pan into the back of our old Ford truck, affectionately known as The Big Green Monster. We knew we would catch plenty of fish, but Mother always packed a grub box full of pork and beans, corned beef, spuds and bacon, just in case.
In an era of big families with numerous children and lots of aunts, uncles and grandparents, we were a family of just three. It didn’t bother me because my world revolved around my dad — my hero, confidante and buddy. Like so many little girls of my generation, I longed to be the son he didn’t have. Oh, so patiently, he spent hours teaching me to fish, hunt, cook over a campfire and handle myself in the woods. My mother was always there, smiling, waving from the sidelines and cheering us on, but she preferred a good book to a fishing pole.
The next two weeks were filled with one adventure after another. Dad would take some dirt road off some gravel road that was an offshoot of a paved road, and we would find ourselves on the banks of some small creek. Out would come the fishing poles, and Dad and I would head out to see if this location would be worth a night or two of our precious time. If the fishing was good, we stayed. If it was slow, well, we just took off looking for another promising dirt road.