Monday, January 24, 2011

Questions to Ask When Selecting a Summer Camp


Now is the time to start planning for summer camp.  There are numerous camp fairs in February and March.  Check out http://www.acacamps.org/camp-fairs for a list of fairs throughout the country.   Many camps also host gatherings for current and prospective campers around the country, so check out the web sites of camps you are considering to see what gatherings they have planned.

There are many excellent overnight camps for children that are ACA accredited.  To find the right camp for your child consider both what you and your child are looking for in a summer camp experience as well as camp foundations.  Does your child have a particular interest that he or she wants to pursue—overnight hiking trips, a particular sport, an artistic interest?  How close or far from home are you willing to send your child to camp and for how long?   Are you looking for a girls camp, boys camp or a coed camp?  When evaluating the camp foundations look at the camp values, the staff to camper ratio, the tuition, returning campers and staff.

As you are considering alternative camps for your child be sure to meet the directors of prospective camps and ideally also talk with parents of current campers.  You can learn a lot about a camp from the attitude of current parents.  Following are some questions that may help you get started in a conversation.

For a conversation with camp parents

1.     Why did you send your child to this camp?
2.     Did your child have any transitional issues at camp?
3.     What were the best elements of camp for your child?
4.     What was most difficult for your child at camp?
5.     What did your child learn at camp?
6.     Did your child make any new friends at camp?

For a conversation with camp directors

1.     Are you ACA accredited?
2.     What are the camp values?
3.     How long has the camp been operating and how long have you directed the camp?
4.     What is the staff to camper ratio?
5.     How many campers and staff return year to year?
6.     How long are the camp sessions and how many sessions do most campers attend?
7.     What are your visitation policies for parents?
8.     What activities are offered?
9.     How much choice do the campers have in which activities to pursue?

What else would you want to know about a camp before sending your child?  What do you wish you had known about a camp before you sent your child?

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Tipping Point


A tipping point—like sitting on a really long see-saw and slowly the person on the opposite end starts leaning back, just a tiny bit, just enough to start lifting me into the air—that is how I feel this week—the magical week when I am precisely equidistant from the close of camp last summer and the opening of camp this year.

Now is the time to start planning for summer camp—whether your child is returning for her 10th year, just starting her first or you are still considering whether sleepover camp is the right choice for your daughter. 

For those who are still weighing the pros and cons of sleep away camp, there are often Summer Opportunity Fairs or Camp Fairs where summer program directors converge and set up tables to sell their programs to parents and their children.  These programs tend to pop up during this tipping point period, so now is the time to look for these open houses in a town near you and spend a Sunday afternoon talking with camp directors to find a good program for your child.  

I will begin planning programs for my campers and thinking about new activities they can delve into this summer—perhaps I will muse over a camp treasure hunt or look for some new group games.  Even with the snow swirling outside and sleet on its way, I smile as I begin the happy slide toward another summer at camp.

Tuesday, December 21, 2010

The Winter Solstice, Flinging and Slowing Down

One of my favorite days of the year is the winter solstice—not for its long hours of dark, but for the turning point it marks as the days grow longer.

My mind turns to June and July and sitting on rocks above a lake watching the sunset, or gathering around a campfire while the sun still lingers above the distant mountains or even rising with the bugle and jumping into the lake, the sun well above the horizon. Today marks the turning point towards those long camp days.

I am so enamored of the winter solstice that I eagerly check the sunrise and sunset times to confirm that the days will indeed be lengthening come tomorrow. This isn’t as straightforward as it sounds. Math is actually required, albeit simple arithmetic. Unless I visit one of the websites that list the length of day down to the second, removing the need for any calculation at all.

The sun actually began setting later on December 15 in Boston, but sunrise also continues to occur later right on until January 6. Curiously I wonder if that has anything to do with the 12 days of Christmas, but I digress. So how is it that we experience a longer day (here in the northern hemisphere) even as sunrise continues to occur later?

Because the earth’s orbit around the sun is an ellipse and the earth is closest to the sun near the winter solstice, the earth is actually traveling faster in its orbit now than in June. So if you feel like you’re flying faster this time of year, well you are, astronomically speaking. During a single day’s revolution, the earth travels a greater distance along its orbit this time of year than it does during our summer.

Consider that you are standing on the earth, facing directly toward the sun at point A. The earth rotates through one day and simultaneously moves along its elliptical orbit. Consequently point A after one day isn’t quite facing directly toward the sun. The earth needs to rotate a tiny bit more for A to be facing the sun again. This corresponds to the sun rising just a bit later. And at the other end of the day, the sun is still in view and the earth needs to rotate a tiny bit more before sunset is experienced. This corresponds to the sun setting just a bit later.

Tomorrow sunrise will be a bit later than today, but sunset will be later by a smidgeon more and voila, tomorrow we will have daylight for nearly a second more than today.

Tomorrow I will relish that second. As I feel myself being flung faster past the sun at greater speeds this time of year, I can look forward to slowing down during the long days of summer camp.

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Gift Ideas for Summer Campers

Looking for a few gift ideas for the summer campers in your life?
Well, look no further. Whether you are finding gifts for your own children, grandchildren, nieces or nephews, you can create a gift and presentation sure to please.

First, consider the activities your child loves most at camp. Is he a sailor? A hiker? A woodworker? A nature enthusiast? Tailor your gift selection to the particular interests of your camper. Here are a few examples.

Hiker:
  • New backpack
  • Head lamp
  • Day pack
  • Hiking Guide to the White Mountains, Green Mountains, Appalachian Trail or wherever your camper hikes
  • Compass
  • Water bottle with camp logo
  • Wool socks—not exciting, but necessary
Sailor:
  • Sailing gloves—look for fingerless kayaking gloves for a less expensive and equally effective option.
  • PFD
  • Water-resistant watch with a timer
  • Sailing rules book such as Dave Perry’s Understanding the Racing Rules of Sailing
Wood shop enthusiast:
  • Swiss Army Knife
  • Reference books for carving
Nature Enthusiast:
  • Compass
  • Pocket Naturalist Guides (animal tracks, night sky, wilderness survival and many more)
  • National Geographic Backyard Guide to the Night Sky
  • Nature Journal
  • Sketch pad and pencils
  • Day pack
Kayaker:
  • Kayaking gloves
  • Spray skirt
  • PFD
  • Dry bag
Second, encapsulate a camp memory as a gift. For instance, frame a summer photo from camp. Many camps have photos available for download or sale on their websites. Or ask your camper’s friend for a high resolution copy of a fun friends photo from the summer. Make a high quality print and frame it in a friends themed frame from Target, Amazon or your local photo shop.

You can also capture memories in a playlist tailored to camp. If your child’s camp has recorded songs you can start with those, add in traditional camp songs like ‘Titanic’ or ‘Little Green Frog’. Or take a theme like friendship and create a playlist around songs about friends.

Capture a year’s worth of memories in a calendar full of camp photos. Include special dates like opening and closing days for camp, and birthdays of camp friends.

Third, remember to visit your child’s camp website. Many camps sell items with camp logos such as caps, water bottles, journals, and stickers.

Lastly, don’t overlook the gift of a summer at camp. If you send a child to camp you can make a presentation of the ultimate camp gift—you are giving a child the time to be immersed in a new environment, bond with friends, build self-confidence, learn new skills and live life lessons. Create a personalized card to give your child as a reminder of the gift of summer camp, wrap it up and present it with intention.

In the middle of the winter, a reminder of long summer days at camp is an ideal gift for your summer camper. What are your best ideas for gift giving to campers? What would you like to receive as a camper?

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Giving Thanks for Camp Friendships

Wind-filled sails. Cool morning dips. Friendships for a lifetime. Humorous pranks. Bugle calls echoing. Cooking over a campfire. Self-confidence. Brilliant sunsets. Images flash through my mind as I recall my youthful days immersed in an 8 week sleepover camp each summer. In every image I see a smile—a friend laughing next to me as we sit wrapped in towels on the dock, a giggle after taps as we try to hoist the counselor’s bed into the rafters, a silly grin as we both reach for the last doughnut. Of all of the gifts I received from camp the greatest continues to be the friendships.

I am thankful for the crystal clear moments of bliss with buddies I savor in my memories from those sun-dipped camping days. I am thankful for the longevity of the camp friendships offered to me through adolescence and into adulthood. I am thankful for how easily I can reconnect with campers I haven’t seen in several decades, as if we just furled our sails yesterday and headed our separate ways. I am thankful for how my camp friends have embraced my husband. I give thanks that I have been able to offer my daughters their own summer camp experience and hope their camp friendships will be as enduring as the friendships shared with me.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Camp Themed Halloween Costumes

Sure you see it as just the camp uniform—but to your child’s classmates and neighbors it’s an exceptional Halloween costume and exceptionally easy for you.

Simply add a few elements to your child’s camp uniform for a quick, inexpensive and easy to move around in Halloween costume. Shorts may be chilly for trick or treat in northern climes, so start with jeans, camp shirt, ideally with a logo, and a camp jacket or sweatshirt. Add hiking boots and hiking socks for footwear, put on a headlamp (handy when trick or treating in any case) or wear a camp logo cap and carry something that represents your camper’s favorite activity. Your camper can carry a tennis racquet, wear a hiking back pack, hold a length of rope in a coil if she sails, take along a wood craft if he’s a shop fanatic, put on a life jacket, or make other personalizations.

Perhaps your camper’s costume will interest neighbors in considering summer camp for their children. Regardless, the price is right, just open up the trunk and get out what is needed, dress up and head out.

How do you take advantage of the investment you have made in camp uniforms in the off-season?

Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Preserving Camp Memories

As the days shorten, think about encouraging your camper to collect photos and mementos from camp to put together in a scrapbook. The first step is uploading the photos from the camera to the computer! The longer the photos stay on the camera, the greater the risk they will be lost.

Once the photos are available there are a myriad of options to choose from both on-line and in multi-format scrapbooks.

  1. Online service providers including MobileMe (for Mac users), Picasa Web Albums, Shutterfly.com and many others that provide free formats for online photo albums that can be shared.
  2. Online retailers including MobileMe, Shutterfly.com, myphotoalbum.com that produce soft and hard bound books in addition to online photo albums.
  3. A scrapbook into which photos and other mementos can be affixed
  4. Photos sleeves put into a 3 ring binder and filled with photos

The quickest to produce and share with friends are free, on-line web albums. The privacy of the online album can be set so you can select who can view it and even supply a password for viewing.

If you want an album in your bookshelf or sitting out to page through, then most of the online albums can easily be transformed into a hardbound album. The cost for these albums range depending on the number of pages and whether the book is soft or hard bound. A typical hard bound book generally starts at $30, but there are often promotions be run be different sites so it is worth waiting for a discount before ordering.

Hard bound photo albums take more time to create which can be a fun project for a cold, rainy weekend. Make sure you purchase acid free supplies (album, paper, glue, stickers) to ensure the photos won’t deteriorate excessively. Hard bound albums also can more easily accommodate non-digital mementos such as a ribbon won or a cabin list.

And for the traditionalist, there are always photo sleeves. Photo sleeves are 3 hole punched format plastic sleeves that can hold 4 or 6 4x6 photos. These can be purchased at stores like Walmart, Target and Staples. Slip them into a 3 ring binder and you have a very quick and easy hardbound photo book.

Regardless of the format chosen, have your camper write down names of cabinmates, counselors, places, and other names to accompany the photos. If he or she is really inspired, your camper may want to write a few short memories of specific camp events— the final baseball game, the 4 day camping trip, cooking s’mores for the first time.

What suggestions do you have for preserving camp memories?