On Sat, 29 Jun 2019 15:33:42 -0700 (PDT), Karen MX <
itsk...@hotmail.com>
wrote:
>On Friday, June 28, 2019 at 11:38:57 AM UTC-7, Questor wrote:
>> Oh, and doesn't anyone one go to summer camp on a lake any more?
>
>Goodness, no! It's all about computers or music or tennis or a sport with
>college scholarships and professional prospects (I know, but 'crew' is elitist,
>apparently). Rowing a boat? No, and too much liability insurance involved.
Isn't there any everyday "recreation" in between computer/music/tennis sessions?
Jack's a dull boy these days...
>> Anyone going on the Amazing Race should know how to:
>>
>> - drive a manual transmission
>> - ride a bicycle
>> - paddle a canoe (including the J-stroke)
>> - row a boat
>
>--Read a paper map
I would have thought this to be an obvious no-brainer, but I'm so old-school
it's easy to forget most people aren't as conversant with paper maps these days.
Most of the computer-based maps I've seen (please excuse technical term) suck.
A good paper map lets one see the big picture and the immediate details in the
same glance, without having to zoom between one and the other. And paper
(road) maps usually have a *lot* more useful details that can help the savvy
map-reader in determining exactly what to expect on the ground. When you see an
isolated, light gray road passing through an expanse of green national forest
land with 10,000+ foot mountain peaks indicated on either side, that may not be
a good shortcut to take in the middle of winter...
>--Swim, if only confident dog-paddling.
Really? Certainly for Survivor, but I can't recall racers on TAR ever having to
swim as part of a task. Oh wait, there are some boating tasks where they
sometimes fall overboard, so I guess being confident in the water is a good
thing there.
>Summer camp and family vacations just aren't what they used to be.
Apparently not. I learned how to row a boat on a family vacation when I was
ten, and I attended a canoe camp while in middle school. Many of my peers had
similar experiences at Boy/Girl Scout camps.