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Film revisits infamous Kauai camp

July 6th, 2008 · 4 Comments

Taylor Camp, kauai - Photo by John Wehrheim

John Wehrheim struggled for years with what to do with the pictures.

His collection of photos are both deeply personal and emblematic of an era. They document a time and place on Kaua’i that some reviled, some adored and many knew only as a punchline to local jokes or a codeword for a 1970s phenomenon: Taylor Camp.

Wehrheim wanted to publish a book of his photos from Ha’ena’s infamous clothing-optional, alternative lifestyle, hippies-in-treehouses community.

But he didn’t want to do just another book of photography.

As an intermediate step, he ended up creating a 20-minute slide show of the photos set to period music and showing it at the Kilauea Theater as a one-night fundraiser for Kaua’i Community Radio.

“An hour before the screening every seat in the house was taken and there were 1,000 people outside wanting to get in,” Wehrheim said. “The ‘slideshow’ was held over for a week. I knew then we had a film and decided that I would create a feature-length documentary.”

Taylor Camp, Kauai - Photo by John Wehrheim

Wehrheim then set out to get video interviews of the players involved in the Taylor Camp saga, including politicians, community leaders and the camp residents themselves.

Tracking down the former Taylor Camp residents was actually easy, he said. They mostly kept in touch over the years. Many are leading what mainstream society would consider successful lives.

“They spread the word, threw big parties, everyone came and we interviewed them — sometimes for days,” he said. “They wanted their stories told.”

Some wanted to “wax nostalgic” and romanticize their hippie days, he says, and those interviews provide comic relief.

“But most were honest and forthcoming and talked about the drugs, the rip-offs, the welfare and food stamps and the children growing up wild. Yet almost without exception they all described it as ‘the best time of their lives.’ ”

Wehrheim is in a unique position to tell this story. He did not live at Taylor Camp, but stayed at a house nearby when he first moved to Kaua’i in 1971. His dossier is complex: He is a Notre Dame grad with an engineering degree, former Kaua’i Community College photography teacher, owner of Pacific Hydroelectric, developer, world traveler and husband of Kaua’i Councilmember and former mayor JoAnn Yukimura.

He was a recent college grad when he came to Kaua’i, where he got to know Howard Taylor, brother of movie star Elizabeth Taylor, who owned property in Ha’ena.

Howard Taylor got mad at the county when his plans for developing the land languished for years. Perhaps as an act of revenge, he bailed out a group of 13 young men and women who had been arrested for vagrancy and invited them to live on his property.

Those were the original residents of Taylor Camp.

Read more …

(Source:  Lee Cataluna, Honolulu Advertiser)

Taylor Camp (1969-1997)

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Tags: Art · Community · Film

4 responses so far ↓

  • 1 kirby // Apr 28, 2009 at 6:16 pm

    Greetings,
    I was one of the original founders of Taylor Camp back when Howard Taylor (Elizabeth Taylrs brother) had acquired the 7 acres know as Taylor Camp. He bailed 13 of us out of jail, because we had been arrested on vagrancy charges. Howard Taylor bailed us out and let us stay on his land. We all went to court and our sentence was as follows. #1 We could get out of jail if we had a place to stay. #2 or if we got a job with the locals. #3 the court would give us a plane ticket off the island. Noon of which we agreed to. So, to make a long novel short, Howard Taylor was following our news worthing story in the local paper, and he came to our rescue. Morea to follow if anyone is interested!
    Sincerely, Kirby N. At this writing I believe there’s a documentary being made of this once in a life time experience!

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  • 2 Meadow // Jul 26, 2009 at 6:51 am

    Hi Kirby. Yes I am interested in your story because I am trying to find Howard’s daughter. Was she also at Taylor Camp? Thank you, Meadow

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  • 3 Robert Sweetman // Dec 28, 2009 at 11:39 pm

    I lived in the treehouse in the very front after Bill and Lisa Godshall moved out into Hanalei.

    I am the guy who built the communal shower with that 55 gal. drum & pvcgravity fed hose from the creek above the beach. I was there from the fall of 1971 to the fall of 1972. I cried when I flew back to the beaches of So. Cal. I was one of those half surfer half hippies who lived in front of Bobo and her gorgeous little daughter Joyblossom. If you see Roger who built the big A Frame up the road or Bobo tell her Robert says boo.

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  • 4 Lisa Hoffman // Jan 10, 2010 at 1:07 pm

    Meadow,

    I lived at Taylor Camp from 1970- 1972 as a young teenager. My father was Camp Doc, Arnie.

    Howard’s daughter is named Allen…he also had two sons, Christopher and Leighton. Sadly, Leighton died in March of 1979.

    Robert, you lived in the first house?? I lived in that house but don’t remember you. We lived in the first house on the right coming from the parking lot, Franchois Bouchard’s house with my father and Sharon.

    Joy Blossoom, I remember her – she was a toddler when I was there. Oh, Memories – the best time of my life.

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