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A Decline in Nudism? Thirty five years ago they thought so.

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  • A Decline in Nudism? Thirty five years ago they thought so.

    The Decline of Nudism

    Posted Monday, Jul. 19, 1971


    Balmy Southern California has long been a natural habitat for nudists. But now the new permissiveness has caught up with this once-daring tribe. After visiting a former citadel of the cult near Los Angeles, TIME Correspondent Timothy Tyler reports:

    Mel Hocker, one of the alltime great American nudists, is still out there in the nude. But he is not smiling and carefree, the way you would imagine a nudist to be. At 60, Mel sits alone in his little office, a mass of naked wrinkles, glum, dispirited, forlorn. Forlorn because just outside Mel's screen door, his own twelve-acre nudist club—the Oakdale Guest Ranch—is going silently to seed in the dry heat of the San Bernardino Mountains. In fact, the club's membership in two years has plummeted from 300 to 60 couples, and it continues to plummet as the elderly members die off. Another nudist camp near by recently closed up for good.

    "It's the sexual revolution that's killing us," moans Mel, who has been nude nonstop now for 18 years. "The pornographic movies, the topless-bottomless bars, the dirty magazines—they're making nudism in America passé." To show what he means, Mel slips into shower clogs and takes us on a tour of his camp, mercifully letting us keep our pants on. The layout of the place hints of its past grandeur: 16 rustic cabins idling on a hillside, and down on the flat, dozens of vacant trailer slips where you can almost envision happy, laughing naked people swarming around gaily decorated mobile homes. But now, Mel says, the remaining members are mostly middle-aged and elderly couples who come out only on the warm weekends. The grandiose pool is empty, tennis and volleyball courts are unused, nets hanging limp in the sun.

    The only sounds of life come from a screened hut with a sign on it that says CORNER NUDE STAND. Inside, a pretty young woman is dancing nude to a jukebox; the other patrons, mostly older males, sit drinking beer, droning apathetically and ignoring the woman. A sign on the wall says NUDI BURGERS. MORE MEAT LESS DRESSING. Hocker sits down, sips a Coke and brightens somewhat. "I pioneered in nudism, you know" he shouts over the music. "We were the first nudist place to serve beer, and we were first with nude dancing. This place has attracted your professional people, right down to the honorable janitor who pushes the broom."


    Hard to Upstage. Hocker's mind slips gradually back into nudism's past, and he glowingly recalls how he became a nudist in the sedate year of 1953. That was back when he was living in Long Beach and nudism was still considered risqué. In their search for an outdoor health spa, Hocker and his wife Ann stumbled on nudism. "We were the talk of Long Beach for a long time," recalls Ann (equally nude), her eyes gleaming with a certain mischievous pride. After four years Hocker quit his job as a cost analyst with the Ford Motor Co., bought Oakdale, an established nudist club just outside San Bernardino, and made nudism a full-time way of life. "You can't beat it," says Hocker. "It's so — natural. It just seems right not to wear clothes. You can't upstage anybody around here with a mink coat or a good suit. Haha. And then there's the sun. Believe me, after a weekend out here in the nude, you can really kill 'em on your job."

    But in the last few years, as the sexual revolution progressed, the once tantalizing concept of prancing nude through the woods came to seem tame indeed to Southern Californians. Even last year's special event—nude skydiving with music by 15 bare members of the Long Beach Municipal Band—was sparsely attended. Just as well, perhaps, since one hapless skydiver was badly scratched when he landed in a buckthorn patch.

    Looking for Longhairs. Now, it appears, Oakdale has only one slim chance left for survival: a transfusion of good old American public relations techniques. Earlier this year Hocker decided to hire Sparky Blaine, a promoter and manager of topless dancing girls, to push Oakdale back into the big time. For Sparky, 43, Oakdale was a revelation. He abandoned his Beverly Hills office, together with his clothes, philosophizing that "I do most of my work by phone anyway," and moved right into one of the Oakdale cabins. "Out here," he mused, "I can float nude in the pool while my nude secretary sits on the edge and takes a letter—working conditions are marvelous."

    Sparky's big job is to promote the Miss Nude Cosmos Pageant, a nude beauty contest held at Oakdale each summer. His first change has been to bill the pageant "The Woodstock of the Nudist Movement." He explains: "We've got to get the longhairs in here. Only way to save the place. And why not? They took their clothes off at Woodstock. Why can't they do it here?

    "The old nudes have got to step aside or this place is going to die. What we should do, we should let all the good-looking girls join free, then we'd have something. It's youth, baby, that's where it's at. The old blood's dying with the trees." Sparky continues ecstatically: "Just give me ten showgirls out here, and varoom, the young guys'll come out of Los Angeles in first gear. I'm putting up a big stand; I'm gonna have two go-go girls dancing on top of it at night, with spotlights on 'em, so people can see 'em from the highway."

    At 60, Mel Hocker sits alone in his little office, a mass of naked wrinkles, glum, dispirited, forlorn, brooding about the passing of the golden age of nudism and wearily watching Sparky Blaine trying to create a last varoom.
    .

  • #2
    quote:
    Earlier this year Hocker decided to hire Sparky Blaine, a promoter and manager of topless dancing girls, to push Oakdale back into the big time....I'm putting up a big stand; I'm gonna have two go-go girls dancing on top of it at night, with spotlights on 'em, so people can see 'em from the highway.


    And then he'll try to persuade people that there is nothing sexual about nudism? Does anyone else here see the contradiction?

    From what I have picked up here, nudism isn't dying but rather it is expanding globally. This is a very interesting article and gives much food for thought. It illustrates that nudism can't stand still: it is bound to change in character. Do young people want to go and spend their time among a bunch of naked older folk?

    If you put on topless dancers, you may well attract new blood, but they're not necessarily the sort of people you want.

    Stu

    Comment


    • #3
      By "Stu"
      quote:
      If you put on topless dancers, you may well attract new blood, but they're not necessarily the sort of people you want.


      Stu,

      Who is You? The exitsting middle aged and old people who don't want change or younger people around?.

      Comment


      • #4
        quote:
        Do young people want to go and spend their time among a bunch of naked older folk?


        Absolutely. From toddlers to 60+, all playing volleyball, dancing, etc. Normal family stuff. Just no smelly feet of sweaty clothes to wash.
        And at home, doing the same stuff you do. No differences there.

        Comment


        • #5
          Interesting Article, considering it's 35 years old.

          So how did Oakdale turn out? Did "Sparky" ever do anything to promote it or did it revive at all?

          People reading this need to keep in mind that "Sparky" was a promoter, not a nudist. His concept of nudism and how to attract people to the Oakdale club wasn't a representation of the Nudist Philosophy.

          Don't judge Nudism or Nudist by what one guy thought was a good Idea , over 35 years ago.

          Steve

          Comment


          • #6
            Stu:"And then he'll try to persuade people that there is nothing sexual about nudism? Does anyone else here see the contradiction?"

            I do assume, Stu, you caught sight of the date of the article? You understand the times back then? "It's the sexual revolution that's killing us," moans Mel, who has been nude nonstop now for 18 years. "The pornographic movies, the topless-bottomless bars, the dirty magazines—they're making nudism in America passé."

            He was having to compete with the sexual openness of the times. The age of free love, of group nudity, of a more open society. He was losing his customers to this revolution. The best way to get them back was to change with the times and find ways to connect with the youth. He needed to show them that the parks were not just places for the gray haired, the retirement nudists, but rather a place for the youth as well.

            This is looking back in history through our modern day eyes. We have all changed. Nudist camps are no longer fighting against more permissiveness but rather against those who see us as amoral.

            Bob S.

            Comment


            • #7
              Living in Florida is a distinct advantage for the nudist. With several beaches and multiple resorts all over the state, the opportunity to enjoy a nudist lifestyle or simply enjoy an occasional great nude day is easy for most who embrace this culture. There seems to be no visible evidence that nudism is losing ground here at all. From what I understand, most venues are active and busy all year long. Just this weekend I visited the art show at Cypress Cove and could hardly find two chairs together by the pool! I don't see the resorts suffering from the "sexual" revolution or other social stigmas or ideals. Those who do participate do so willing, those who do not, stay away, but there does not seem any confusion or indecision regarding the matter.

              Comment


              • #8
                Does anyone know if Mel Hocker is still alive? I am his god daughter and haven't heard from him since forever. I know his wife, Anne, died in the late '70's. Any info is appreciated. I guess he would be 90-something?

                quote:
                Originally posted by NakedGary:
                The Decline of Nudism

                Posted Monday, Jul. 19, 1971


                Balmy Southern California has long been a natural habitat for nudists. But now the new permissiveness has caught up with this once-daring tribe. After visiting a former citadel of the cult near Los Angeles, TIME Correspondent Timothy Tyler reports:

                Mel Hocker, one of the alltime great American nudists, is still out there in the nude. But he is not smiling and carefree, the way you would imagine a nudist to be. At 60, Mel sits alone in his little office, a mass of naked wrinkles, glum, dispirited, forlorn. Forlorn because just outside Mel's screen door, his own twelve-acre nudist club—the Oakdale Guest Ranch—is going silently to seed in the dry heat of the San Bernardino Mountains. In fact, the club's membership in two years has plummeted from 300 to 60 couples, and it continues to plummet as the elderly members die off. Another nudist camp near by recently closed up for good.

                Last edited by Guest; 09-27-2007, 01:28 PM.

                Comment


                • #9
                  quote:
                  Originally posted by Stu2630:
                  If you put on topless dancers, you may well attract new blood, but they're not necessarily the sort of people you want.


                  Good point Stu....

                  Oakdale Guest Ranch was a pioneering nudist resort located in Devore, CA....just outside of San Bernardino. Along with changing their marketing strategy, Oakdale also went on to change their name to "Treehouse".

                  For whose who know the name Treehouse, it is a resort in the 70's that became somewhat of the black sheep of nudism, and at the time was the largest swinger club in Southern California. Sure enough, the "new blood" came, in the form of movie stars, music stars, playboy playmates, porn stars, etc. It became a party place that catered to swingers and the sexually motivated. It the mid-1970's Treehouse came under federal scrutiny for it's involvement in a child pornography ring. "Nudist Moppets" was a magazine that featured young children often posed in provocative Playboy type poses and was distrubuted gobally at it's peak as a "nudist publication". Needless to say....that empire collapsed.

                  Since then, the resort has traded hands and management. For the most part it has rid itself of the bad reputation from the 70's. Today business is still slow (San Bernardino is not exactly a gem). The resort is currently called Deer Park and remains on the same property, located in Devore, California.

                  I can only hope that Mel Hocker died before he saw what his lust for "new blood" created. And may the mistakes of our past always remind us to never compromise the ideals of nudism for sake of more revenue....if only I could say I didn't see that happening today.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    This all raises (with me) the interesting question: what can clubs do when they face declining membership or participation numbers, increasing gender 'imbalance', when they seem to be loosing out against other clubs in the area, etc etc.

                    Put even more 'girls on the cover'? (or in general portray an image that doesn't exactly represent the general atmosphere in the club), hire (expensice) PR people (just look at what happened in CCBN!), just give up and get old?, jump on the commercial bandwagon? Etc?

                    Reviving an organisation that's going through or may be facing tough times is not something you cook up in minutes. But if someone has a recipe than sharing some ingredients would be welcome.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I don't think the problem is in the declining numbers of people participating in nudist activities. I think that the problem is that there are many individuals who see no need to join any of the organizations whose primary function is to protect our ability to participate in nude recreation in the first place. As "free" venues become available, beaches, parks, lakes, etc., and many clubs, landed and travel do not require AANR or TNS membership, it becomes harder to count the numbers of families and individuals. I know that at White Tail Resort, the membership base is growing, and I know that that is true of some (not all) other clubs. But there is no statistical evidence one way or the other. Membership in the national organizations is certainly declining for a variety of reasons (a debate appropriate for another thread please), but I believe that the overall picture is of an expanding awareness and acceptance of nude recreation as a viable alternative to a textiled lifestyle.

                      Walt Iliff

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I agree with Walt,

                        Isn't this the progress we have long sought? In the fifties or even early sixties, I'm sure I would have felt compelled to join a naturist club or resort in order to enjoy a nude lifestyle. But at present, I am nude around home most of the time, enjoy swimming and gardening without clothing, visit our nude beach frequently during the Spring and Summer, and enjoy both nude boating and hiking. There are plenty of opportunities to enjoy the lifestyle these days without necessarily joining a club or resort. And I think it has a lot to do with greater acceptance by the general public. I have inadvertently encountered other clothed persons a few times while hiking nude, and found generally positive or friendly reactions. And while out on the boat... well I can only say I'm certainly not the only one out there enjoying full or at least partial nudity.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          There is a fairly well documented trend in our society to forego joining clubs of any kind, whether it be church, school, or nudist. I'm guilty of it myself.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            A Decline in the Midwest

                            Things may be thriving down ib Florida, but I see a definite decline in people participating in nude activities here in the Chicago area. Attendance at local landed clubs is down - and they are only open 3-4 months May- September. Winter activities sponsored by the AANR non-landed club are almost down to nothing. Complaints by local community do-gooders, who are "appalled" at co-ed nude ativities, have intimidated venue holders to stop hosting. First in was the nude health club with swimming, then it was the nude health club wo a pool, and finally it was the nude bowling. There are currently NO indoor nudist activities scheduled in a metro area of 5 or 6 million people. If that is not a downturn I don't know what is. And completely nude dancer "gentleman's" clubs are springing up all over without a protest. Go figure!

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              A Decline in the Midwest

                              Things may be thriving down in Florida, but I see a definite decline in people participating in nude activities here in the Chicago area. Attendance at local landed clubs is down - and they are only open 3-4 months May- September. Winter activities sponsored by the AANR non-landed club are almost down to nothing. Complaints by local community do-gooders, who are "appalled" at co-ed nude ativities, have intimidated venue holders to stop hosting. First in was the nude health club with swimming, then it was the nude health club wo a pool, and finally it was the nude bowling. There are currently NO indoor nudist activities scheduled in a metro area of 5 or 6 million people. If that is not a downturn I don't know what is. And completely nude dancer "gentleman's" clubs are springing up all over without a protest. Go figure!

                              Comment

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