Destination Spots at Camp

Hello again from the road, this time from just south of Denver. We have been on the road now for 66 days and have visited 22 states and 23 camps. In our travels we have seen some incredible camps and one thing that has stuck with us is the way some camps have great destination spots. Places that counselors can take their campers and let the campers have some free time just to play. A lot has been talked about in the last few years about this generation of kids needing more time for free play and how that free time is essential for youth development. We don’t claim to know much about the psychology behind it but it is great to see the way camps have built in free play sites in to camp, kind of like building special camp only playgrounds where campers can just be kids and make their own magic. 

the mound at kern.JPG

Maybe the best example we saw of this was at YMCA Camp Kern outside Dayton Ohio. At Kern that had The Mound, basically a pile of dirt with big tubes running through it for campers to play around, when we saw it we couldn’t help but just run over to it and climb around. Imagine the fun!

Brisban Village at Kern.JPG

They also at their Brisban Village have structured their cabins in such a way that you can almost see the games and fun that campers can make up right in the places they live. They also reenact the battle of Hogwarts here, of course. 

Some other destination spots at Kern were the rainforest, simply a few soak hoses high up in the trees for those super hot days, they were building a one room school house, of course with a secret tunnel, and many more great spots for campers to explore and create their own fun.

Another cool destination spot we have seen at a few camps, YMCA Camp Ernst, Kern, and Piomingo is just a big tube slide that you go down on sleds or half garbage camps, like summer sledding. 

Jack from camping coast to coast at camp Piomingo. What a cool idea for a fast camp slide! http://www.facebook.com/CampingCoastToCoast

Finally, one of the grandest ideas we didn’t get a chance to see was Cory Harrison’s plan to build a stockade fort on site at Camp Benson. Hopefully by next summer at Benson they will have a fort complete with stockades, a massive gate, giant games, maybe a mud pit, some outdoor cooking spots, and more. This will be the ulitmate destination spot for campers at Benson to come and be relatively enclosed and easy to supervise while also being free to create their own magic and have some free play time. 

-Jack and Laura @campcoast2coast

[Note from Travis: Make sure you like the Camping Coast to Coast project on Facebook.]

Collaboration with the Camp Staff Dream Team

Hello from the Head Counsellor - #2

Some of the Cairn Dream Team of 2012

Some of the Cairn Dream Team of 2012

In the off season, when I’m not camp hacking with Travis, I study Music Education at Wilfrid Laurier University. This past year, I took a high school music education class with an amazing professor, Doug Friesen. This guy is awesome, my friends. All you teachers out there (especially music teachers) need to check him out. He has some very insightful opinions on education and the place of creativity and collaboration within it. 

In class, we took a real hard look at collaboration and how by giving kids an opinion on things like educational content and even classroom policies, it results in them being more invested in their education. Our talks really spoke to me and I was excited to start experimenting with collaboration as soon as I could. Since being a teacher is a bit down the road for me, I decided that with the prospect of being the Head Counsellor at camp in the summer, I would try to take a collaborative approach while working with the counsellors. What was the worst that could happen? My thought was, if the counsellors were given an opportunity to work with me and each other in designing how we were going to operate, that we would all be that much more invested in the summer. 

My approach was twofold.

The first collaborative effort, and less complicated of my two ideas, was to collaborate as a group more often. We have a very structured schedule at Cairn so it was tough to come up with a time that worked well for camp but eventually, we settled on having a 15 minute meeting with one counsellor from every counselling pair or trio, every day at the end of rest hour (which for us, is after lunch, and before the 3rd session of the day). These meetings were meant for quick, daily reminders and then the remaining time strictly used for a facilitated discussion about how everyone’s week was going. Topics included cabin morale and dynamics, magic ideas, how to handle specific struggles and many others. My intention for these meetings was to not speak a whole lot. My hope was that the counsellors would draw from their own learning experiences and have them use each other as a resource network more often. While this approach to collaboration wasn’t specifically what we had talked a whole lot about in my education class, it was one that I was definitely glad to have given a try...but more on that next article!

My second collaborative experience for the summer was more along the lines of what had inspired me to explore collaboration in the first place. I was extremely curious to see how a community would work, grow, and perform under expectations that were created and agreed upon by those that would be directly affected. I decided that to have the counselling staff be able to create a comprehensive list of expectations, I would provide them with a general framework and then have the rest of the process be up to all of us from that point on.

For the foundation, I created expectation categories under the following 5 umbrellas:

Dream Big - Supporting camp magic and making camp truly extraordinary

Reach A Little Higher - Going above and beyond the bare minimum of the basics

Equilibrium - Finding balance in all things camp (ex. Finding the line between friend and counsellor, being social with the staff but being camper focused while with the kids, etc.)

Always Campers First - Understanding that campers come first and their well-being should be at the top of our priority list

Manage Yourself - Being a good emotional and physical self-manager

With these categories given to them in Leadership Training, I told the counsellors that being a “team” was something that any group of people doing a job together could call themselves. However, we were going to work together to fill in our thoughts of specific expectations that they thought were essential to being what we called “The Dream Team” of Cairn Counsellors. I had the umbrella statements each written out on chart paper so the counsellors could not only write their opinions, but read each other’s and place a check mark next to someone’s idea they really liked. 

Here is the list of what we came up with.

With these expectations, I looked through them with them and we all agreed that they seemed fair. The last step to this process was for the group to ensure we were staying accountable for the expectations that they had created. To do this, I placed 5 letter place holders on one of the walls of the staff lounge. Each was for the letters D R E A M. As the week ran it’s course, I made sure to update these letters when either I saw, or the counsellors came and told me about the community (as a whole) following through on the criteria of each category. We agreed that we would truly be able to call ourselves the “Dream Team” if we could get all of the letters for at least one of the week of the summer.

So although that this initiative did have some direction from me in the beginning and in some of the evaluation stage, the creation and upholding of the values was on all of us. It was something new, that had never been formally done before at camp so none of us had any idea how it was going to turn out...

So there it was, the framework of a collaborative summer was laid out and ready to get rolling. Going into week one, I can honestly say that I wasn’t sure was to expect and looking back on it now, I had no idea the kinds of fantastic learning we were all about to experience. 

So, I will leave you at that for now. Two weeks from now, I will talk about how this collaborative lab experiment turned out. If you have any thoughts about what I’ve talked about so far, please feel free to comment below or email me. I would love to hear from you.

Until then. Happy days.

~Matt “Iscus” Honsberger
The Head Counsellor
matt@walkingmaverick.com
@iscus