Click Here for Part One
...by the time the
splashing and screaming subsided that is...
No one was on the raft they started on, at
least two people were trying to clear the Lake out of their lungs, and some kid was
making an effort to stand on top of me.
Finally, poor Valerie was normally bobbing somewhere out of harm’s way,
yelling for someone to come get her, not realizing that she was the only one
who didn’t almost drown.
(Beach balls and small children rescued:
Hear our battle cry -
“Ewwwwwww that was really
gross!”)
I repeatedly had to swim in and pull them out. Swimming at full speed through the weeds with fins on caused enough turbulence that I ended up with lily pads in places I didn’t even know I had places. The rescued child would often thank me by tossing some upturned weeds on my face, causing me to push them back in to the lilies, and start the process anew.
Once
the kids passed through the 3 stages of cold:
(A) Me- “Your lips are blue, wanna get out?”
Them...”No”
(B) Me-“You’re shivering, wanna get out?”
Them- ”Nuh-nuh-nuh-No”
(C) Them- “I’m freezing, I wanna get out”
Note- Stage “C” occurs thirty seconds after Stage “B.”
The
day’s war games ended as we headed in, stopping briefly so I could throw the
Joes in a couple hundred cannonballs.
Honestly,
if a shotput weighed fifty pounds and screamed, I’d have been a starter in the
Olympics.
There
were also the occasional “overhead flip” originally patented by Little Rich and myself and
the “Super Joey” wherein I would military press the kid over my head just long
enough for them to yell, “Look Mom, I’m flying!” before I tossed them into a
dive.
I
never saw the attraction, but they seemed to enjoy it over and over (and over and over) again. No wonder I didn’t have to swim as much back
then to stay in shape.
That
was the final big hurrah for the Lake that year. For a lesser hurrah, Joe and Ashley decided they wanted one last
swim after it got dark. I took them down
to the Lake, because their parents were smarter than me, I guess. After entering the (impossibly) colder water,
they asked if I would swim out to the middle with them. My sister, who came just for the walk since
she was also smarter than me, thought she heard a car coming down. Instead of calling out the simple recommendation
that we, “swim in,” she instead decided to use the much more obvious statement,
“Something just jumped out there!”
It
was oodles of fun trying to navigate back in through the dark and frigid water with
two children standing on my back and doing the equivalent of a high speed panicked
“Macarena”. As we got in I did see
headlights starting to come down. The old
instincts took over and I yelled, “Go go go!” and made a bee line to hide in
the woods. Half way there I realized
that I was not ten years old, and somehow had turned into a recognizable adult.
Therefore we were not going to get “in troooouuuuuuble!”
We
dried off, thawed out, and walked back to the cabins to play some cards, and
pass out from exhaustion for the last time of the season.
Closing
and packing up was made interesting, as always, by the four ways to do any Up
the Lake job:
I) The right way,
II) The wrong way,
III) My Mother’s way,
IV) My Father’s way.
As
none of these have anything to do with the rest of the list, it was always a pleasant and
festive atmosphere to work in, and lessened the impact of the annual tearful
good byes.
I repeatedly had to swim in and pull them out. Swimming at full speed through the weeds with fins on caused enough turbulence that I ended up with lily pads in places I didn’t even know I had places. The rescued child would often thank me by tossing some upturned weeds on my face, causing me to push them back in to the lilies, and start the process anew.
(A) Me- “Your lips are blue, wanna get out?”
Them...”No”
(B) Me-“You’re shivering, wanna get out?”
Them- ”Nuh-nuh-nuh-No”
(C) Them- “I’m freezing, I wanna get out”
Note- Stage “C” occurs thirty seconds after Stage “B.”
I) The right way,
II) The wrong way,
III) My Mother’s way,
IV) My Father’s way.
Disclaimer- After all the crap that happened (and continues to happen) this past year, nothing I could think of would be worthy of an APRIL FOOL. Maybe next year.
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