Shown above: Scouts from Pine Tree Council play gaga ball at the Camp William Hinds ArrowTour stop. Photo credit: Mitchell Heisler
They always say there’s no place quite like home.
My summer travels have taken me to some pretty wild places this year. I vacationed in the Outer Banks of North Carolina. I experienced a rewarding OA Wilderness Voyage Trek through Ontario. I was even able to join the Central Region's ArrowTour Road Crew, where, under the leadership of crew chief Ricky Angeletti, I helped to bring our national centennial experience to Arrowmen from Canton and Cleveland in Ohio, Wheeling, West Virginia, and even at the Summit Bechtel Reserve. But after that, I found myself flying back into the Northeast Region—the place I call home—to join them for a week’s worth of their travels.
It was great to be able to catch up, hang out, and run a great ArrowTour program with five of my closest friends and brothers from my home region in the Order of the Arrow. I joined the NER ArrowTour Road Crew in Binghamton, New York just before their stop at Onteora Scout Reservation. Called the "land in the sky," Onteora provided a beautiful home for my first stop with this road crew. The stop also did not come without its difficulties: I grappled with learning the ropes (literally) as I aided in tethering our banner to the box truck and securing the vinyl panels to the tents. After leaving the brothers of Buckskin lodge in New York, our trip turned northward. We visited Chippanyonk Lodge at Camp Resolute in Massachusetts , celebrated with Grand Manandock Lodge at Camp Wanocksett in New Hampshire, bonded with Ajapeu Lodge at Mount Norris in Vermont, and rounded the trip off with Madockawanda Lodge at Camp William Hinds in Maine.
While I enjoyed every minute, ArrowTour was no vacation. Setting up each day on both the Central and Northeast Road Crews required hard work. Waking up early to shovel tents, equipment and (of course) patches out of the box truck each day took strength and commitment. The words “cheerful service” resonate with me when I consider how each road crew and host lodge member alike came together to work hard, set up the exhibit, and enjoy the tour together. The Scouts and Arrowmen I met on my journey—young and old alike—really made this experience special. These men and women make me proud to call the Order of the Arrow my home. I can’t wait to continue my interactions with some great Arrowmen later this year. But for now, I look forward to traveling back to my actual home near Scranton, PA, for some rest and relaxation before the largest event the Order has ever seen: the 2015 NOAC.
- 2015 National Vice Chief Donnie Stephens









