For our first venture into the Adirondacks, we wanted to be high
class! Even though we don't have any Vanderbilt blood in our veins, we
got to spend the weekend at Sagamore, their former great camp turned
non-profit. Located four and a half miles from Raquette Lake village, we
chauffeured ourselves along the meandering road. Of course - we were
there for their half-price "community weekend;" the black flies were
still out!
Upon
arrival, we went straight for the boat house and signed out canoes to
get onto Sagamore Lake. After we returned my parents (Linda and Steve),
sister/brother-in-law (Amy and Mike) with nephew Ben arrived just in
time for dinner. Since Tom and Jean rode with us, that gave us a nine
person crew with whom to experience the great camp.
After
a camp orientation, we went for another paddle just before sunset. Lisa
and I made a plan to get up and paddle the shoreline of the lake in the
morning. After a night in "Wigwam," a building that we soon learned was
used for drinking, gambling and debauchery by the young Vanderbilt men,
we awoke just after sunrise. Tom joined us in an aluminum canoe with
the bow comically sticking clear out of the water and we made it back in
time for 8:00 breakfast.
After
breakfast, we explored some of the buildings and attended a slideshow
on the history of great camps in the Adirondacks. We then left the camp
and headed to Raquette Lake village for a tour on the W. W. Durant - a
paddle wheeler (named for the designer of Sagamore) that makes daily
tours as well as lunch and dinner cruises on the lake. We saw many of
the other great and not-so-great camps around the lake which were owned
by Carnegies, Colliers, and Durant himself. The captain was a local who
had built the boat and ran the company with his family - he seemed
intimately knowledgeable about each structure on the lake.
The blue line below indicates our path on the cruise:
Returning
to Sagamore, we ate our lunches and went on a tour of the many
buildings that comprise the Great Camp. This included the worker's
complex which employed 40-50 people that would keep Sagamore running
seamlessly. The architecture and attention to detail created a rustic
impression while allowing for modern conveniences that many city
dwellers didn't even enjoy at the time.
One of the worker's buildings: ......sheesh!
A
quick nap and a row on the lake led into meatloaf for dinner. We ate
our fill and meandered around the camp and back to "Wigwam" to wait
until the bugs went away for the evening. Just outside, we had a
campfire at the lean-to with s'mores. We brought out the guitar and
fiddle and there was singing around the campfire accompanied with
dancing from Lisa's new friend Neveah. We stayed in the lean-to as
clouds came and dropped steady rain for a few hours.
The
next morning we begrudgingly packed our things and went for a hike
around the Lake Trail. It was beautiful weather but the head nets were
still necessary due to the black flies. Since it had rained, we took the
"high-road" to the bridge and turned around rather than hiking around
the entire lake.
We left Sagamore and began a
food-filled ride home which included ice-cream at Hoss's in Long Lake
and michigans at Gene's in Port Henry (a birthday tradition for Tom).
Between food stops we sandwiched in a short hike into Challis Pond in
North Hudson in a meager attempt to burn a few calories. It was there
that I found this guy posing for a picture:
It's
home to pack and off to Lake George tomorrow. Although it might take
some adjustment to primitive camping on an island after the high class
living at Sagamore...
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