Yes it does. Besides the main part of the camp (I worked there part of two summers in the kitchen--a very mixed experience) I spent a bit of time in Sidney (sp?) Winter, the larger log cabin in the family camping area (where scout master and staffers' families stayed). During the summer when I was perhaps five we stayed there when my father was a Scoutmaster (my big recollection then was learning to make fires on the beach). My Scout troop stayed there once or twice during the winter (then I remember it being dark and smokey, filled with bunk beds, smelling of bacon?). I don't recall how the cabin was chinked. I recall seeing a cabin chinked with triangular slats of wood nailed into the joints, perhaps holding a fiber material in place and/or reducing the amount of cementitious material used, but that could've been another cabin (the cabin used by the Scouts up in the hills of Caroline?). -----Original Message----- From: Ken Follett [mailto:[log in to unmask]] Sent: Tuesday, July 17, 2001 9:08 AM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Camp Barton In a message dated 7/16/01 2:27:15 AM Central Daylight Time, [log in to unmask] writes: Camp Barton This brings up a whole host of memories. ][<en