It was the first Southeastern, held at a Ga. State park near Helen, about 35 years ago. The most enduring memory was my friend, Wild Bill Holcombe, who got between two Ga. boys passing around a jug of shine one evenin and ended up double toking the jug all night. The next morning I was awakened before dawn by a sound like I imagine a small cow would make trying to give birth to an elephant--a horrible combination of bellowing, gagging, snorting, and heaving, with what sounded like a prayer in the more quiet intervals, comming from a grove of Russian olive trees behind our camp. This kept up while I got a fire going and boiled coffee. Ol'e Bill staggered back into camp, his face a putrid shade of jaundiced yellow/green, and moaned: "good lord, boys, I've been puking up better liquor than I usually drink."
They had another Southeastern there a few years later, and I noticed an area almost 10 feet in diameter in the Russian olive trees where the ground was still black and nothing was growing. . . .