A Girl’s Guide to Camping

<p><strong>Tent</strong><br /> A nylon pup tent should be sufficient for a nine year-old girl and her younger brother to sleep in when their family goes camping at a rustic site by a lake in Massachusetts. The tent should keep out the rain, but it won&rsquo;t, even if the siblings have dug a circular ditch &mdash; a moat, of sorts &mdash; around the base of the tent. The walls of the tent should bead with droplets of condensation. When a girl writes her name in the moisture with her fingertip, cold water should trickle down her arm. She hates camping. She hates everything about it.</p> <p><strong>Sleeping Bag</strong><br /> A girl may forego leaving her tent to pee because of the drizzle and the chill. She may decide to just hold it in. If so, she should burrow down deep into her thick nylon sack and fall asleep to the peaceful patter of raindrops on the tent walls.</p> <p><a href="https://arcturus.chireviewofbooks.com/a-girls-guide-to-camping-250c12624677"><strong>Visit Now</strong></a></p>
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