Dog days of summer at the Club
Suzie Harrison
While most are doing their best to get out of the sun and hopefully
gel somewhere, children at the Boys and Girls Club of Laguna Beach
are utilizing the club’s gym to play games like soccer and capture
the flag.
“In the summer we have all kinds of different activities,” said
Joe Derichsweiler, who is club’s director. “We have field trips, we
took them to Knott’s, and we have a day at the beach this Friday --
all the kids are going to meet at Woods Cove.”
They had a carnival in July and their last field trip is to Wild
Rivers on Aug. 20. They’ll also be having their last ever sleepover
in this building before the new one is built and it’s coming up soon.
It was surprising to learn that there are fewer children who come
to the club during the summer than there are during the school year.
“In the summer we usually have 75 to 100 kids a day,” Derichsweiler said. “We usually have 150 and 175 during the school
year. “In the summer, there’s not as much homework and the field
trips make it more exciting for the kids.”
Children can work on art projects or computers, but most of the
time the children play group games and organized activities.
“We have wacky relays, the mingle game for kids to get to know
each other, three-wall soccer, four-goal soccer and dice games with
teams,” Derichsweiler said. “We make up fun and original games for
the kids -- Jurassic Park, Shark Island and mostly tag games.”
On Tuesday, the gym was the place to be where each side was
divided into two sections with two different games going on.
For Jurassic Park, the children put a basket in the middle of the
court and their challenge is to capture the white dinosaur eggs.
“The kids with the red shirts are the kind that spit and if they
catch you you’re out,” Derichsweiler said. “The blue shirts can run
around and free you. The other kids are the poachers, trying to get
all the dinosaur eggs in the basket.”
The teams are dispersed fairly with big and small children on each
side.
On the other side of the gym, the ever-popular game capture the
flag was being played. Each team, one being yellow and the other red,
face off and when it’s called for them to go they try to capture the
opposite colors flag and bring it home into their goal. The way they
are stopped is if someone pulls a flag from the person.
The strategies were diverse with some runs up the middle or to the
far side -- there were even some zigzag plays maneuvered for a point.
“The hardest part is having to get the flag and bring it to your
side,” Tommy Nixon, 10, said.
Nate Everhart, 8, who just made a score was modest about his
skill.
“Trying to get the flag is the most exciting part,” Nate said. “My
favorite part is scoring.”
Ben Cote, 10 said that the biggest challenge was getting to the
other side.
“That’s hard because they have good defense,” Ben said.
Brett Peterson, 11, like most the other kids, said that they liked
having fun.
“I like that you get to pull the flags off, guard, score and have
fun,” Brett said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.