Wednesday, August 27, 2008

A Glimpse of a Summer at Holden

School begins Tuesday and since the beginning of school always signifies the end of summer, I am feeling some pressure to bring you a sampling of photographs that are indicative of Holden Village in the summer: the place, the people, and the summer activities. After all, "The First Day of School" is its own major event here at Holden and I have to make sure that I create a space for that event which will include very special hi jinks and hilarity.

For those of you who have never been to Holden, I have tried to collect a broad sampling from the photographs I have taken here this summer in order that you might come to know that I have not exaggerated any of my descriptions when I have told you about the place. Now you can see it for yourselves.

For those of you who have been to Holden many times, I don't want to hear any comments about what I have left out. I already know what some of things are and eventually, you just have to go with what you've got...or else school will start before you finish your work, and the entire project of summer at Holden will be out-of-date.

I do acknowledge that it is a great loss to post all of these photographs of a Lutheran retreat and have not one picture of a worship service. But while I do not think it is necessarily wrong to take pictures of people while they are worshipping (it's done...even here...and often) I simply am not the one to do it. Such a picture should be included, if for no other reason than the fact that we have a worship service every day. It is an integral part of village life.

So. All that being said by way of introduction, "on with the show!"

On your way up Lake Chelan by boat, you know that you are getting close to the Lucerne dock where you will get off the boat when you pass this waterfall, the Domke Falls. And the blue of this water has not been "enhanced" in any way. The waters of Lake Chelan really are that blue and are quite clear. Lake Chelan is the third deepest lake in the US and is quite beautiful, both the lake and the surrounding mountains.


Aboard the Lady of the Lake on Lake Chelan.

The Lady of the Lake pulls into the dock at Lucerne landing. There is no town here, just a Forest Service headquarters and some small vacation cabins owned by the (I use the term advisedly) Chelan Yachting Club. It is here at the Lucerne landing that school buses from Holden meet the guests and then transport them from the dock some 12 miles back (or up and back) into the Railroad Creek valley on a gravel road.

It is a custom for some of our daring young men and equally daring young women to jump off the pilings into the icy waters of Lake Chelan. The feat is performed either as a greeting as the boat approaches or in farewell as the boat departs...and usually only on a very hot day.

Once they have taken the plunge, it is a short and frigid swim back to the dock. They are quickly in and just as quickly out.

This is a portion of the road up from the dock...or back to the dock. There is only one way in by motorized vehicle and one way out and this is it. Those who come up the mountain go back down the mountain. All use this road.

Luggage, on the other hand is piled aboard the luggage truck...along with the groceries, and the mail, and supplies of all sorts. There are no stores at the end of the road. Everything must be brought in by boat or barge and then hauled up the road to the village.

There is always a crowd on hand to meet the incoming bus and the guests who are arriving.

Meet the Mayor of Holden Village, Olaf Coffey. Olaf is almost always on hand to climb aboard each bus filled with guests to say (with gusto) , "velcomtaholdnevullage!" His mayoral duties will be interrupted by school this next year. He will be in kindergarten.

Children visiting Holden in the summer enjoy a variety of activities in their morning program at Narnia. Here a group of the Narnia children take a tour of the small garden that is protected from the deer by a very high fence.

I did not take this picture. Gail Johnson, the bookkeeper at Holden, did so. I had walked outside Agape where we both live and this rather remarkable buck was eating just off to the side of the porch. I called to her to bring her camera, and she took the picture, which she then captioned, "The Buck Stops Here."

Famous for its "Holden Scoops" the snack bar is a popular spot for young and old alike. The ice cream itself is delicious and perhaps made even more delicious by the fact that it is very likely the one thing you would least expect to have access to in the wilderness.

Families (here a grandmother and her two granddaughters) enjoy an ice cream cone on a hot afternoon.

A summer day in a mountain meadow, about a mile from the village itself, that Holdenites call "the ball field" after the fact that in the days the mine was operative, the place was actually used as a ball field. Snow-covered Bonanza Peak towers above the entire scene.

The Ark is a favorite gathering place to sit with friends and enjoy the sun, to read, to take a nap, to enjoy the scenery.

The covered bridge crosses Railroad Creek and provides a way for those who are "on foot" to get to the other side and on up to trails, the museum, to the mine site itself, and to various functioning utilitarian facilities serving the village (the hydroelectric plant, the garbage disposal area where composting and incinerating and landfill take place, the automotive shop, wood cutting, etc.).

Lead cook, Mary Sather, is actually making marshmallows for a staff social in Agape. I honestly did not know that you could make marshmallows yourself. The ingredients are simple but the process is fairly tricky and requires attention to the details...like constantly checking the thermometer. The marshmallows were delicious.

Chipmunks rule. Period.

The portable inkle loom is a highly popular craft option with young and old alike.

All summer we enjoyed fresh fruit. Here a peach ripens in my room. We were also privileged to enjoy apricots, plums, cherries, as well as the more usual apples, oranges, and bananas.

A musical group performs outdoors during the Jubilee celebration.

The kiosk is required reading for those interested in knowing the day's scheduled events.

Mary's jams made from locally grown fruit.

Reading or simply taking a small nap under a shade tree is a favorite summer activity.

That same shade tree can serve the children as a place to hear their morning story.
Three chairs suitable for lounging, napping, reading or sleeping await their next users under the same shade tree.

Virtually every guest coming to Holden is willing to volunteer for a major work project such as this one to construct flower beds and lay a rock walk. They will also readily volunteer for smaller projects such as joining a dish team, cleaning the dining hall after meals, and volunteering in Narnia for a morning. It is just what they do...and willingly.
Outdoor buffets are quite common in the summer. The weather is most often warm and sunny and conducive to having families and friends eat outside, sitting on the lawn or on the lodge porches to do so.
One of the local squirrels. This one was tearing the leaves off the tree one-by-one and letting them fall to earth. I could never figure why it was doing that or what nourishment or behavioral satisfaction it was obtaining from the ritual.

Begun as an Eagle Scout project by one of Holden Village's boarding students, there are now 2 yurts ready for campers as an alternative to tent camping and as an alternative to staying in a lodge withing the village. They are located about a mile out of the village near the "ball field."

Narnia kids visit the carpentry shop and learn how to saw.

Older Narnia kids have an outside pottery lesson.

A group of young teens play cards on a rainy day on the porch outside the book store.

To all of my purist southern friends and family members: this is a hand-cranked churn of homemade ice cream and that is the dasher you see coming out of the churn.

Railroad Creek with a view up the creek toward Bonanza. Railroad Creek runs through the valley in which Holden Village is located.

Strings of flamingo lights adorn the porch of Agape.

And one smaller flamingo has taken up residence in the flower box.

Four real birds (swallows) peering out from their nest under the eaves and over the registration office. The mother swallow worked tirelessly to make sure the young were fed.

Each morning at 10:00 there was a half hour interval called coffee break. Many guests and staff members took their coffee and their morning treat to the Ark to sit in the morning sun and enjoy.

Cafe Holden featured inside dining at the evening meal. Groups of 8 were seated and served together.

Wet bathing suits and towels drying on a lodges railing provide evidence that a family has enjoyed spending time in the jacuzzi.

Luggage for departing guests is brought to the luggage dock where it will put on the luggage truck and taken down to Lucerne to be put on the boat.

It is a tradition at Holden for staff members and guests not leaving on a given day to gather as the buses depart and to wave farewell to those who are departing. It is also a tradition that the waving continue until the buses are out of sight.

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