The Nawakwa Outdoor Association of New York, Inc.

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UPDATE: Alexander Wilkie‘s Camp Nawakwa to be Auctioned for ADKNY

June 15, 2020 3 Comments

Update: Alex has generously offered his painting as a fundraiser for ADKNY. More details in the coming weeks on how you could own this original!


Camp Nawakwa
by Alexander Wilkie, 2020. 8×10.

Alexander Wilkie, 2020

Filed Under: News

Camp is NOW OPEN on a restricted basis- please read!

June 15, 2020 Leave a Comment

Camp Nawakwa is Open under Park-mandated guidelines!

Camp will open on Saturday, June 20, 2020 using temporary guidelines/rules intended to address the Camp Nawakwa opening plan which has been approved by the Park. These guidelines/rules will be in effect until we are otherwise informed by the Group Camps office.

Members are not allowed to visit Nawakwa without prior authorization. Use the Request Form to visit.

There are specific limitations including a maximum of 15 members occupying camp at a time, and everyone MUST be scheduled for access. As restrictions ease and New York State moves forward to Phases 2 & 3, we will adjust the camp use conditions and restrictions.

Please read the 2020 Camp Opening Instructions and submit a Request Form to attend camp. Both documents are under the Nawakwa Keyholders section.


Nawakwa Keyholders must Log In to access the instructions and the Request Form.

 

 

Filed Under: News

100 Years: Nawakwa’s First Camp Seasons

June 9, 2020 Leave a Comment

In this edition we’ll cover events taking place at Camp Nawakwa and the Palisades Interstate Park during 1927 and 1928.

The May 1927 Trail Marker includes: “CAMP NOTES: Since there are a good many members of the club that attend camp who have not learned to like snakes, the Camp Committee has made the following ruling:

No snakes of any kind may be brought on the camp property by any member or guest of a member.  Members will be held responsible for guests bringing snakes into camp.”

From the November 1927 Trail Marker: “WANTED: A VICTROLA    The camp victrola has at last refused to carry on.  On the cold winter evenings to come, a little music would be most acceptable.  Any member donating or obtaining the donation of a victrola would find their act appreciated.”

As for the big change in Harriman State Park camps that year, “some camps introduced archery.”

The July 1928 Trail Marker: “A WORD TO THE WISE – Bathing Suits Should Not Be Worn In Main Room of Camp, Lodge Or On the Porch.  Serious and justified complaint has recently been made by a number of members who object, and rightly, to the wearing of bathing suits around the main lodge and on its porch.  One person recently had the bad taste to appear at the luncheon in a bathing suit.”

Ever wonder when the tradition of introducing Applicants during the Saturday evening meal was first introduced?  The November 1928 Trail Marker: “CAMP HOSTS TO INTRODUCE APPLICANTS EACH WEEKEND – In accordance with a suggestion made at the last meeting of the Council, the Camp Committee will ask all hosts at Camp Nawakwa in the future to introduce to the members present all applicants in camp.  This is to be done during the Saturday evening meal by calling upon the applicants to stand and be recognized.  The aim of this proposal is to make applicants known to members and to officially welcome the applicants to the camp.”

The Schedule of Summer Outings 1928 – “NAWAKWA SEASON BOOMING – A number of improvements have been made and others are planned by the Camp Committee.  The boats have had the club emblem painted on each bow, copper screens have been put on the windows of the main cabin and are to be put on the two winter cabins to make them mosquito proof.  A diving board will be put into place on the dock and the canoe dock is to be rebuilt.”

This same year, “The dam and core wall of Lake Sebago was completed, impounding a lake of 500 acres with seven miles of shore line; 42,000 cubic yards of each and rock place at core wall, 1,000 feet of core wall fill riprapped and planted; steel and concrete bridge, 190 feet long, erected over spillway.  The foreman’s cabin and one ice house with 200-ton capacity was completed. (1)

In 1927 the Trailside Museum was officially established at Bear Mountain State Park. (3)

Further south in the Palisades Interstate Park, John D. Rockefeller Jr. proposed to extend the park to where would later be the George Washington Bridge.  “Between 1928 and 1931 he orchestrated a massive land-buying program.  The Commission could not consider expanding parkland in New Jersey.  It was just too expensive for them.  But, it was not too expensive for JDR Jr., and he spent $21,158,475 dollars accomplishing the task.  He kept his land buying a secret from the Commission and the press.  If buyers found out that a rich philanthropist wanted their land, prices would skyrocket.  The New York Sun reported that a ten-mile strip of land in the Palisades was purchased, and though they suspected conservation as the motive, the purchaser was unknown.  In July 1933, JDR Jr. announced his intention to donate the 652 acres of land to the Commission.” (2)

Footnotes:

  1. Twenty-Seventh Annual Report of the Commissioners of the Palisades Interstate Park, January 31, 1927
  2. Nature’s Parkway: Landscape and Philanthropy at the Palisades Interstate Park, 1900 – 1930
  3. Trailsidezoo.org

Ellen King

Archivist

 

 

 

Filed Under: News

Reminder: Camp Nawakwa is not yet open

May 30, 2020 Leave a Comment

To All New York Chapter Members: Camp Nawakwa Update

NOTICE: Camp Nawakwa (as well as all camps in Harriman Park) is officially closed. Keyholders should be not be accessing or using Camp Nawakwa until official notice of approval for camp use is given by the Park.

Over the Memorial weekend, Gov. Cuomo surprised the State by announcing camping and outdoor recreation is open. David Bourne, of Harriman Group Camps, feels the State may be scrambling to devise a way that can happen, and the Park may get new guidelines sooner rather than later. He requested group camps develop their plans for opening camp safely. The Board of Directors is finalizing such a plan and will be submitting it to the Park for approval. Camp opening is a fluid one and we will keep you updated.

– New York Chapter Board of Directors

Filed Under: News

June-July Trailmarker is here!

May 30, 2020 Leave a Comment

The new issue of The Trailmarker is now available.

 

June-July 2020 Trail Marker

Filed Under: News

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Recent Posts

  • Cancelled: Winter Social February 21, 2026
  • Now available: the 2026 Nawakwa Passport February 20, 2026
  • View of snowy Camp Nawakwa January 27, 2026
  • RESCHEDULED: Winter Social February 22 December 6, 2025
  • Photos from the Post-Thanksgiving weekend at Nawakwa December 1, 2025

Founded in 1923, the Nawakwa Outdoor Association of New York, Inc. is a membership organization dedicated to the enjoyment of the outdoors through hiking, walking, camping, swimming, skiing, sailing, canoeing, and kayaking, and to the conservation and preservation of our wilderness, particularly the mountains, lakes, trails, and camping areas of the metropolitan New York region.

 

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