Hartford Courant (Sunday)

The outdoors bonds parents and children

- BY DAVE NICHOLS THE SPOKESMAN-REVIEW

My pop passed away in 2011 due to leukemia and a bit of his own stubbornne­ss. He was a parks and recreation guy and wore many hats in his career, but the last one he wore for nearly 30 years was the famous “Smokey Bear” hat with the National Park Service.

In his career with the NPS he was a park manager for several assignment­s throughout the Washington, D.C., area, including at Antietam National Battlefiel­d in rural

Maryland, where I went to high school in neighborin­g Boonsboro.

His last assignment was as chief of maintenanc­e for the National Capital Region of the NPS,

in charge of the grounds and buildings at the White House, National Mall, the monuments, and the parkways in and out of DC. Pretty good for a guy who dropped out of college and joined the Marines to get out of some gambling debts.

Anyway, I got my love of the outdoors and hunting from him. It was one of the few things we really shared. He golfed a little bit but wasn’t into team sports or rock music — the two things that fueled my teens and 20s.

But when we would go on camping trips with the Boy Scouts, or later when we were at hunting camp, we were best friends. Equals, or at least it felt like it. The highlight of my childhood and adolescenc­e was those couple of days every year that he’d take me up to deer camp with him.

It was the one place we saw eye to eye.

His responsibi­lities grew and his time became less his own as he rose through the park service, just as I was growing into adulthood and more independen­t with my time.

Those few days every year our paths crossed at deer camp became even more vital to our relationsh­ip. Man, I miss that.

A quick story about one of those scout trips. Our troop was participat­ing in a big summer jamboree in

Maryland which included a 25-mile hike, held in the evening and night due to extreme summer temperatur­es.

My pop, the assistant scoutmaste­r, did a great job making sure the dozen or so inexperien­ced and inattentiv­e young teenagers were prepared with extra dry socks, baby powder and other preventive measures.

Being a mediocre scout, I tapped out after 12 miles and hitched a ride back to camp on the dropout bus. But my pop trudged along with the

‘‘ When we would go on camping trips with the Boy Scouts, or later when we were at hunting camp, we were

best friends. Equals, or at least

it felt like it.

rest of the diehards.

I reconvened with my pop at his tent in the morning, and it turned out he was so concerned with the scouts being prepared he wasn’t prepared himself, and the bottoms of both feet were nothing but one big blister.

Selfless to a fault.

My mom — whose idea of camping was a Marriott at the beach — had to drive two hours each way to get us, with a friend to drive my pop’s car back. He couldn’t put shoes on for a week, and he never lived it down.

Love of the outdoors is a strong motivating factor between parents and children. Communing with nature— be it hunting and fishing, or hiking and biking, or just a barbeque in the backyard — is a great way to reinforce the bonds that sometimes get obscured by the day-to-day challenges of everyday life.

I’m not a parent myself, so I can’t speak about the relationsh­ip from that end. But I know what mine meant to me, even if I didn’t always want to acknowledg­e it to him — or myself, for that matter. I wish I’d been better at communicat­ing that to my pop before he got sick.

Being a parent is not always the easiest or most glamorous job you’ll ever have, but it is the most important one.

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