June 21, 2012
Old school camp a scouting tradition
Kenny Kemp
A group of Scouts head back to their campsite at the Buckskin Scout Reservation following a 10-mile hike.
Young scouts learn the proper way to fold the American flag -- a requirement for achieving scouting's "Tenderfoot" status.
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DUNMORE, W.Va. -- As the massive Summit Bechtel Family National Scout Reserve takes shape in Fayette County, more than 1,000 Boy Scouts from Michigan to Florida and all across West Virginia are spending part of the summer at the Buckskin Scout Reservation in Pocahontas County.

Known informally as Dilleys Mill after the gristmill that once operated on Thorny Creek near the entrance to the scout camp, the 2,000-acre expanse of woodland abutting Seneca State Forest and the Monongahela National Forest is now in its 52nd year of operation. The placid, backcountry setting of the camp, with its picturesque, cloud-reflecting centerpiece, 15-acre Lake Sam Hill, is fondly etched in the memory banks of three generations of scouts.

"When I walk out of the parking lot and see the lake, it always feels like I'm coming home," said Marty Fertig, assistant scoutmaster of Troop 164 in Eleanor, who spent a part of his 15th summer at the camp this week.

Fertig, like many troop leaders and members of the camp's staff, are former Dilleys Mill campers who, as adults, enjoy maintaining their connection to the camp and its traditions. In addition to introducing Boy Scouts in their troop to the rustic camp, Fertig and other scout leaders and alumni volunteer to perform needed maintenance tasks.

"I love it here," said Troop 164 scoutmaster John Snedegar, also a former camper. In 2007, Snedegar, now a full-time member of the West Virginia Army National Guard, spent the week before his deployment to Iraq at the Pocahontas County camp.

"Two days after I got back from Iraq, I was back here again, with my wife working in the kitchen," Snedegar said. "I didn't want to miss summer camp. To me, this camp has a great therapeutic effect. I think it helped me make the adjustment to coming back easier than any session with a psychologist could have."

Campers sleep in clusters of tents perched atop wood platforms, and either eat in a cafeteria-style dining hall or prepare their own meals at their campsite. Trails link troop campsites to the dining hall, showers and assembly area, as well as to the various activity sites and merit badge classes.

A wide range of outdoor activities and dozens of merit badge classes are available to the campers at Dilleys Mill. Lake-based topics include small boat sailing, kayaking, canoeing, rowing, motorboat operation and swimming. On shore, scouts can choose from dozens of skills and crafts ranging from astronomy and archery to woodworking and wilderness survival. Shooting ranges accommodate shotgun and rifle instruction on rifle, while in tents and wood shelters, scouts learn about birds, reptiles, geocaching, photography, Indian lore and leatherworking.

New this year at the camp is a climbing wall and a huge inflatable "Iceberg," a giant cube studded with handholds and footholds scouts use to clamber to the top, and then slide a ramp into the lake.

Also debuting this year at the Buckskin Reservation is an "Adventure West Virginia" program for older scouts. It includes mountain bike rides, extended hikes, caving at nearby Stillhouse and Sinks of Gandy caves, climbing the sheer Via Ferrata course at Nelson Rocks, and a New River raft trip.

Scout troops travel hundreds of miles to take in a week at Dilleys Mill.

For scouts from the more hot and humid climes, such as Florida and South Carolina, "the summer weather here is fantastic," said David Leckie, camp staff director of the BSA's 19-county Buckskin Council, and district director of Buckskin Council's Elk River District. "Our temperatures often drop into the 40s at night, and when it's 90 in Charleston, it can be in the 70s here."

"You wear a jacket to breakfast and shorts to lunch," said Shane Miller, a St. Albans native and former camper who now lives in Pittsburgh, and serves as the camp's chaplain. 

Some things haven't changed all that much since camp director Mike Snyder of Elkview took in his first week of camping at Dilleys Mill in 1963.

"We still swim in the lake like we always did, and we still have 2,000 acres of woods to hike through," he said. With tens of thousands of scouts young and old having met friends, learned new skills and shared good times here, "There's a legacy to keep alive. People want to preserve and protect it."

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Copyright 2012 The Charleston Gazette. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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