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A day at camp

A Typical Day at Camp


Everyone wakes up, cleans their cabins, showers (either morning or night), and moseys up to breakfast, prepared by a professional food service staff of five people. All meals are hand prepared, and not just thawed or warmed up. Campers choose four
activities the prior evening, and after breakfast they go off to their first two choices.  After those lessons and experiences, kids join up with their cabin to do an activity that the group decided on their first day at camp.  Kids have about 20 choices, and they have a chance to do 5 of them in a given week.

Following cabin activity time is lunch, a rest period, and then the whole camp gathers for the “
Camp Augusta Playstation.” Here, in addition to trying out other activities or swimming in the lake, there is the opportunity to do things kids could only do at camp, such as play shoe golf, find out why Sally is Silly, play kick the can or Indian Kabaddi, or a host of other games and events. Counselors and staff sell their options and kids choose which one they want to do.

A snack, usually fruit and granola bars, comes next, followed by the campers’ other two
activity choices of the day. A dinner feast follows, and then our evening activity, which the whole camp does together.  Evening activities change every day and week, but they always include a couple of campfires, and the necessary kid-prepared S’mores.  After a very full day, everyone retires to their cabin to get ready for bed. Before the flashlights go off, the counselor arranges for a special evening ember, which may be a story, discussion, or quiet activity to close out the day.
 

Five Reasons To Attend for Two Weeks

More clinic choices

    Instead of 20 clinic choices, campers have 40. With greater clinic time, campers can experiment with more clinics; we offer more than 40 different clinics in a two-week session.

Greater skill levels

    Campers have the option to specialize in more clinics, and/or go deeper with one or two. In two weeks, campers can advance to the higher levels in clinics such as archery, equestrian, climbing, or mountain boarding, which is rarely possible in just a week. There is also the opportunity to develop more skill in clinics such as arts and crafts, since offerings often change with the weeks.

Enhanced personal development

    Research evidence from camps around the country shows that a longer camp experience offers greater social, emotional, cognitive, and character benefits.  You can think of it like the sun and rain with flowers . . . a little definitely helps, but more in the right proportions is better.  Camp Augusta aims to be that nurturing environment where children can flourish and bloom. 

Deeper friendships

    One benefit of living up at camp is being here when Camp Augusta alumni drop by to see the place and share stories. Without fail, they come up in pairs or small groups, with their camp friends. During summer camp, the staff and kids alike comment on how much better people get to know one another in the longer sessions. Two-week sessions offer a slower pace, deeper connections, and deeper memories.

Different programming

    The weekend offers special programming that doesn’t happen in one-week sessions.  There is a special, large game/adventure, which was “Lord of the Rings” this past summer.  Campers got to experience adventure with rich plots, deep and close characters, wonderful props, and be right in the middle of the action.  Special Playstations (not Sony), teambuilding, later wakeups, Giants-Wizards-Elves, and special cabin time for games and bonding also characterize two-week sessions.  Finally, clinics not offered during a one-week session are available for campers to sample or specialize in.   

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