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Saturday, July 23, 2011

Don't cry because it's over, smile because it happened...

Perhaps that should be the underlying theme of my always faltering blogging experience... but seriously:

I was lying in bed this evening thinking about the past. I'm not a "glory days" kind of person, I rather enjoy the present. But there are times when I find myself really wishing that there were some things that I could go back and do-over. Not that I would do them any differently, just do them over for the sake of being able to have that experience again. I started thinking of this the other day when I was listening to an Amtrak pull into the La Grange Road station and all of a sudden I was a kid waiting at the Joliet train station with my mom waiting for the train to go to my grandparents' house in Bloomington (we didn't always take the train down, but it was something I always enjoyed doing).

But this got me to thinking: why is this? On my anniversary, I don't necessarily think about my wedding day, but I think about my marriage now... so different, so much better than that first day of my husband's and my life together. So why is it that when I hear the locusts sing in the late summer, I wish I was at Bortell's Ranch, the summer camp that I went to every summer from 1984-1992? This camp was the highlight of my YEAR as a kid. We didn't go on too many family vacations, and I don't feel that I missed out on that sort of thing, because I so loved going to camp each summer.

Bortell's doesn't exist anymore, which makes me very sad. I wish that I could give my kids the opportunity to go away to this wonderful place where we would go horseback riding every morning for an hour or so, with the likes of horses named "Triple Tanny" (my horse for several years) or "Pepper" (my horse for only one year, my first, and it's amazing that a 9 year old kid would actually want to get back on a horse after dealing with Pepper's antics, but I digress...). I almost remember the schedule at camp like I went last week, not almost 20 years ago (yikes!): we would get up at 7 (unless you were a horse catcher, then you got up at 6:30), then ate breakfast, went back up to the bunkhouse and cleaned and made your bunk. At 8 you would go down for flag raising and be on your way to horses, crafts, and sports/free time. There would be "bank" in the morning, when you could get a snack, then at noon, lunch was served. There were awards daily for the cleanest bunkhouse, the one would went to sleep first the night before... and the food was AWESOME. I actually have a Bortell's Ranch cookbook (not that I've ever made anything out of it, but...) In the afternoon there would be rest period, then swim time, then "bank", then afternoon "free" time, which, now that I think about it, doesn't really seem all that free, because you had to pick from a select few activities offered that day. After free time there was dinner, then night activities, then showers, then bank, then flag lowering, then songs and bed at 9pm. A full day. An awesome day. What I wouldn't give to be able to go back there and do that again. Or at least have my kids have the chance to do it. But Bortell's closed and is now some camp for underprivileged kids. I'm sure it's a great experience for those kids now, but not nearly the same.

This is very therapeutic, to put this all on paper (ok, so this isn't paper, but you know what I mean)... I'm not sure the last time I talked at length about my camp experience. My camp experience is probably the biggest reason that I chose to go to college in Iowa. And probably why, at some point in my life, I would love to go back and live in Iowa on a horse farm that had Great Danes running around, gravel hills to climb up and down, lakes to swim and fish in, archery and riflery (to do at least once), trails to ride and friends to make, even if I ended up never seeing them again. Even if it would just be for a week in July.

So I'll end with this little ditty that we sung every night at songs at camp (and why I can remember this song after so many years but NOT the thing that I went to the basement to get beats the heck out of me):

Friends, I will remember you, think of you, pray for you
and when another day is through, I'll still be friends with you.
Remember the fun we've had here, remember when you're away.
Remember the friends you've made here, and don't forget to come back some day.
Remember the blazing campfires, the fun and frolic too...
'Cuz you kids belong to Bortells' and Bortells' belongs to you.

18 comments:

  1. I just saw this because I was Googling whatever happened to Bortell's Ranch....I miss those days there and I have those same memories...they were the best. It's still heartbreaking to me how that all ended. I went there from the time I was 7 'til I was 14...1981 to 1988. I remember Pepper & Triple Tanny & many others....Nugget, the palomino everyone wanted to be assigned to...I had Donuts for my very first horse there...then there was going to Outpost, Uncle Bill, Bound-to-Win, and so much more. It built alot of character going there...so ironic, given how it all crashed & burned in the late 1990's...but I will forever cherish those days, and " do them over" in my mind...like you said, not to change them, but relive the magic...that song, too, I can still sing it....thanks for blog!

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  2. Bortells ranch is the biggest and best, and the horses and the counselors are the greatest in the west, ..do you recall that song? Went there too in 92 or 93. I found your blog when I googled Bortell's Ranch. My daughter will be turning 12 this year and I thought I would continue the tradition of attending the camp. So sad to hear it has closed.

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    1. And the campers had a yell
      and they yell it all together
      and it goes like this
      Rockin B forever.
      Boom diddley Ada...
      Some Ranch.

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  3. the owner of the ranch molested me and now he's a registered sex offender.

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  4. That camp was a wonderful experience for me and my friends...as I am now registering my 6th grader for a week long over night camp I wanted to see if this was an option. I was loving reading your post, Twiggs and Cammis....and then got to Bill's. :( I am so sorry if this is true, and now am more than ever reserved to send my daughter away. Although friends of hers have been going away for years, I have waited until this last year before she enters Middle School. I think this experience is so important, stuff like that scares the HELL out of me...... Please re-assure me that kids go to camp every week of the summer. The experience Bill had was horrible, yet rare.

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  5. I had a awesome time at this place as a child, well If what Bill is saying is true that is really horrible.

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  6. Some of my favorite memories of summer included the two weeks a year i spent at Bortell's from '92-'95. I looked forward to seeing my favorite counselors every year, the Bridge of Courage, and the hayrack ride twice a week. I remember when John was arrested when i was a kid, and it still breaks my heart to think about the children he hurt, as well as how he hurt his family, and robbed other kids of experiencing the same things that i was allowed to do. But i still look back on the Bar Rocking B fondley and hope to find a place like that to send my kids when they are a bit older.

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    1. Well said, Shelbs. I feel horrible about what he did, but I feel the same way about my camp memories.

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  7. I randomly googled Bortell's Ranch and came across your blog. And while it looks like you don't really blog much anymore, I wanted to thank you for this trip down memory lane. There are a lot of things about camp that I had completely forgotten about: Horse catchers, the bank where I used to get Fresca and granola bars and the cookbook. Do you remember Vicki's "I hate meatloaf, meatloaf?" It's unfortunate that the camp had to close - especially given the circumstances but I'm glad that underprivileged kids are getting to experience camp because they were some of the best childhood memories I have. Thanks again for the post! :)

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  8. I spent 2 weeks at Bortells camp in 1974, I was 12 and had a homemade pipe in my suit case, not that I ever used it, it was just something I thought made me more grown up I suppose; at some point John had gone through my luggage and found the pipe and he asked me if I smoked pot and told me it's OK he did.

    A couple of nights went by and he came down stairs and woke up 4 of us and had us go upstairs to his room in our underwear, I remember it was freezing cold in his room from the window AC. nothing happened to me or anyone that I knew at camp, but if I would have said something then, maybe Bill would not have had the experience he had, I think back on that now and what a creepy character John Bortell was.. I am Sorry Bill.

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  9. Omg I went to bortells the same time you did!! I was there every year from 88-93? I have the cookbook and the song book too!!

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  10. Omg I went to bortells the same time you did!! I was there every year from 88-93? I have the cookbook and the song book too!!

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  11. I went to Bortell's Bar Rockin B Ranch as a kid. I remember it so fondly that when my kids got to be of camp age I looked it up. Sadly it was closed. But I saw you mentioned you had their cook book. The food at camp was great from my addle brained memories. I think it was Wednesdays when they had these heavenly sticky buns. I still remember them. I was wondering if you had that recipe and if I could get it from you.

    Bfidlow@farmersagent.com

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  12. I went to Bortell's Bar Rockin B Ranch as a kid. I remember it so fondly that when my kids got to be of camp age I looked it up. Sadly it was closed. But I saw you mentioned you had their cook book. The food at camp was great from my addle brained memories. I think it was Wednesdays when they had these heavenly sticky buns. I still remember them. I was wondering if you had that recipe and if I could get it from you.

    Bfidlow@farmersagent.com

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  13. Bill, really sorry you had that experience there. I hope you are healing and doing well. My own experiences were mostly happy, typical growing up kid stuff. My main memory of the place was how one summer (I think I was there around 72-74, at least 2 summers, but it's foggy now), they kept a TV playing near the front of one of the buildings, main house maybe? It was playing the Watergate hearings live and although I didn't bother standing around watching it much, it just seemed odd that there was a TV playing at a camp. I think I had my first dance and kiss with a girl there too, which is a very happy memory. Thanks everyone for sharing your memories. Too bad ... John's activities probably sank the Bar Rockin' B Ranch.

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  14. I was just thinking about Bortell's on this awesome summer day & wanting to horseback ride. I went there every year from '93-'98 & was a counselor in training the last summer. Unfortunately, what Bill said is true. He confessed in '97 to 3 counts. His son tried to save the camp but unfortunately the name was too tainted because of John. I loved going there but remember a very specific event wherein John said I wasn't allowed to go fishing because it was going to be boys only & I had to go to the science thing with the girls & other boys who didn't want to fish. Really made me mad & confused but once that came out, it all made sense. Had so many great memories from there & my family had been going in the generations before me so it was super sad to hear.

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