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1696 lines
101 KiB
Plaintext
1696 lines
101 KiB
Plaintext
SOURCE: /mnt/d/GoogleDrive/Cercetasi/carti-camp-jocuri/100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas.pdf
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CONVERTED: 2025-01-11
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==================================================
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--- PAGE 2 ---
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THE COLLECTION
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This collection of summer camp program ideas came from the submissions of three of our email
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roundtables; “Best Programs”, “Best Things We Do At Camp“ and “It’s a Hit!” These 100 pro-
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gram ideas were chosen because they are unique, creative and most can be done at either a day
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camp or resident (sleep-away) camp. These activities, programs and events were submitted by
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directors and program directors from all over the world.
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EMAIL ROUNDTABLES
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Want to be part of future roundtables? Each month a new email roundtable is offered. Those on
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the email list get notified and have a few days to submit their ideas on the given topic. In return
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they are sent the complete compilation of everyone’s ideas. The ebooks are edited versions of
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those roundtables. If you would like to participate in future email roundtable go to the home
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page of SummerCampProgramDirector.com and sign-up to recieve email notifications.
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--- PAGE 3 ---
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
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1. DO-IT-YOURSELF WATERPARK .......................................1
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2. KNOW YOUR CAMPER TRUTH CEREMONY ..........................2
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3. THE WHEEL OF MISFORTUNE .......................................3
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4. THE GUINNESS GAMES. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
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5. KEY TO THE TREASURE .............................................4
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6. MARK TWAIN DAYS .................................................4
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7. TALENT/NO TALENT SHOW .........................................5
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8. ROCK THROWING AREA ............................................6
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9. BEAD TRADE-IN ....................................................7
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10. OUR CAMP’S GOT TALENT ..........................................7
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11. WESTERN NIGHT ...................................................8
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12. PAY IT FORWARD ...................................................8
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13. THE SPIRIT OF CAMP - CAMPFIRE ....................................9
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14. HARRY POTTER WEEK .............................................10
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15. MINUTE TO WIN IT STATIONS ......................................10
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16. CHANGE THE WORLD .............................................10
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17. SUPER SECRET GUEST ..............................................11
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18. SUPER COOL VEHICLE DAY .........................................11
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19. YOUTH FITNESS ...................................................12
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20. BUTTON TRADING .................................................13
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21. ICE WATER DAY STATIONS. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14
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22. MYSTERY TRIP .....................................................14
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23. THEMED TRAILS ................................................... 15
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24. TREE IDENTIFICATION .............................................16
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25. MOVIE QUOTE SCAVENGER HUNT .................................17
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26. TRICK AND TREAT NIGHT ..........................................17
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27. CREATING CAMP MAGIC ...........................................18
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28. THROUGH THE AGES ..............................................19
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29. MISSION PROJECTS ................................................20
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30. KINGDOM KATASTROPHE ..........................................20
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31. CAKE WARS .......................................................21
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32. BUZZWORD .......................................................23
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33. FIRST TIME COLOR WAR ............................................23
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34. CHAOS ............................................................25
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35. REVERSE SCAVENGER HUNT .......................................25
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36. HIT LIST ...........................................................27
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37. CARDBOARD BOAT REGATTA ......................................27
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38. CARNIVAL ANSWERING MACHINE .................................29
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39. ALICE IN WONDERLAND / UN-BIRTHDAY PARTY ....................29
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40. PANDEMIC - CAMP WIDE GAME ....................................31
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41. S’MORE BAKE-OFF .................................................32
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42. SKILLS NIGHT .....................................................33
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43. HARRY POTTER BREAKFAST ........................................33
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44. ROTATION CELEBRATION ..........................................34
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--- PAGE 4 ---
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45. COLOR OLYMPIC THEME WEEK ....................................35
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46. AMAZING RACE AT CAMP .........................................35
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47. ADVENTURE CHALLENGE .........................................36
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48. MIDNIGHT MADNESS ..............................................36
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49. HOUSE POINTS ....................................................37
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50. RED CARPET EVENT ...............................................38
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51. SAFARI HUNT .....................................................39
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52. THEMED MEALS ...................................................39
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53. THE AVENGERS EVENING ACTIVITY ................................40
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54. HOLIDAZE CELEBRATIONS .........................................41
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55. MAGGOT ART .....................................................42
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56. WALKING TACOS ..................................................43
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57. BEAD REWARD PROGRAM .........................................43
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58. THE HUNGRY GAMES ..............................................44
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59. WISHBOAT CEREMONY ............................................44
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60. I’M A CELEBRITY...GET ME OUT OF HERE ............................45
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61. OLD TIME OLYMPICS ...............................................45
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62. TEACHABLE MOMENT ............................................46
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63. KINDNESS TICKETS ................................................46
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64. SCOOTER TOWN USA ..............................................47
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65. AROUND THE WORLD DAY .........................................47
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66. PHOTOGRAPHY CAMP .............................................48
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67. DANCING WITH THE ALL-STARS ...................................48
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68. PANIC ........................................... ..................49
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69. BATTLE OF THE SUPER STARS ......................................50
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70. WHERE’S WALDO? .................................................51
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71. FICTIONAL COUNTRIES - OLYMPICS ................................51
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72. SUNNY S’MORES ...................................................52
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73. GETTING TO KNOW YOUR COUNSELOR ............................52
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74. A BETTER CAMPOUT ...............................................52
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75. CHOOSE YOUR OWN ADVENTURE TUESDAY ........................ 54
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76. SILENT MEAL ......................................................54
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77. MISSION IMPOSSIBLE ..............................................55
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78. STAFF PROJECTS ...................................................55
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79. REDNECK DINNER .................................................56
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80. HOMEMADE ICE CREAM IN A BAG .................................56
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81. BLACK LIGHT PARTY ............................................... 57
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82. MAKING FAKE SNOT ...............................................57
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83. THE BIG APPLE DAY ........... .....................................58
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84. COW TONGUE COMPETITIONS .....................................59
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85. CHRISTMAS CARDS ................................................59
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86. INTRODUCING CAMP NAMES ......................................60
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87. GIANT GAME OF LIFE ..............................................60
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88. STAFF RECOGNITION ..............................................61
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89. THE CIVILIZED DINNER ...................... ......................61
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90. CHRISTMAS IN JULY ...............................................62
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91. MODERN ART NIGHT ..............................................63
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--- PAGE 5 ---
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92. BEACH THEME ....................................................63
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93. WE’RE ALL GOING M.A.D. ..........................................64
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94. SURVIVOR THEME .................................................65
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95. EMBERS: WISH-SURPRISE-WONDER .................................67
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96. ZOMBIE RAID - CAMP WIDE GAME .................................69
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97. GAMES FOR A SUPERHEROES THEME ..............................71
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98. IDEAS FOR A WILD WEST THEME ...................................74
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99. KIDS SWAP MEET ..................................................79
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100. THE PROPOSAL .................................................... 80
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--- PAGE 6 ---
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DO-IT-YOURSELF WATER PARK
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It’s all the rage to build a water park at your camp these days. But if you do the research (like
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borrow a kid and go to a municipal water park), you’ll find that kids get bored VERY quickly
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because even those things that are supposed to be “interactive” are very limited in creative
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play. So a lot of running, no making of new friends. And if you’ve priced one, you’ll find that
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they are NOT as much cheaper than a pool as you would think.
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When YOU were a kid and it got really hot outside, you went to the garage and grabbed every
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piece of hose and every kind of sprinkler you could find and set them up in the yard. What a
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blast!
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That’s the best thing you can do for CAMP, too.
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Give a couple creative and “cheap” counselors $200 to go to Walmart and buy a bunch of
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inexpensive hoses, manifolds (those things that let 4 hoses hook to one faucet), and a bunch of
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different sprinklers: wave, rotary, perforated hose, ffft-ffft-ffft-rotating, ring. Whatever. A few
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plastic “grips” so they can be clamped to an old stepladder, a chair, etc. And then pick a spot
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that needs watering.
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What you spend on water will be less than what you’d spend on electricity and chlorine. You
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move the location so different grass gets watered every day.
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With the first group of campers you say, “Rats! Look at all this stuff! (pointing at box of hoses
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and sprinklers). This was all suppose to be put together so that you could cool off. Oh well, I
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guess we’ll just have to come back tomorrow.”
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Of course at least one kid will say, “WE could do it!”
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Rubbing your chin, you say, “I don’t know, do you think you’re smart enough to figure out how
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to use every one of these things at the SAME TIME?”
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And away you go! Let them know you’ll turn the water “on” and “off” every 10 minutes so
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that they WANT to re-arrange it when it’s “off” to create something new. AMAZING fun and
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creativity and teamwork! They put it away at the end of the day and start fresh tomorrow!
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WANT EVEN MORE FUN?!
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Get some ½” PVC pipe (the white stuff
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that glues/screws together) and have them
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create their own water-park spray features.
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With a cordless drill and a 3/32” bit they
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can drill patterns of holes in a 10’ section of
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pipe to create a wave, a dragon, an obstacle
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course… you can even set it along the
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gutter in your pool to create more fun in the
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shallow end! (In the “irrigation” section of
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1 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
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--- PAGE 7 ---
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your Home Depot / Lowes / Menards you’ll find the connector for a “3/4 hose fitting to the ¾”
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pipe thread” for the ½” PVC (interior dimension) pipe.
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Some of the camps I’ve worked with have let the kids use short hack-saws and vices to cut their
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own pipe and use gloves to glue them. Others cut a variety of lengths ahead of time and glued
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pipe-thread fittings on each end so they can be assembled and disassembled by the kids (a little
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more expensive, but YEARS of fun for not much money). (If you’re even smarter, ask for some
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dads to volunteer to make the parts. Every guy is looking for a reason to go to Home Depot and
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spend $20 on something their kid will love!)
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“We don’t have grass.” Then get a piece of indoor-outdoor carpet (el-cheapo grass color is fine)
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and do it on asphalt.
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Be sure to take some photos of kids working together connecting everything! Next year you
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won’t want a spray park any more, you’ll want EVEN MORE hose!
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KNOW YOUR CAMPER TRUTH CEREMONY
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One thing that I have done with my day camp is having a “know your camper truth ceremony.”
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1. Spend the first half-hour making one or two friendship brace-
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lets.
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2. Next we’d gather around our group space (classroom, flag
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pole, etc) and introduce the activity.
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3. We’d then go around and play the game Two Truths & a Lie.
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The game is exactly how it sounds. Each person would say to
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truths and one lie and they’d have to guess the lie.
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4. After that we would have hobos or other snacks to keep our
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spirits up.
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5. Then we would do a variety of small group team building
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activities.
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6. Next we would do a trivia sort of game where each camper
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would come up with facts about the others and we would
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guess who they’re talking about. The counselors are also involved in the game!
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7. Finally we would hand out our friendship bracelets to one or two different people. The
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only catch was that everyone had to end up with at least one bracelet.
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The goal of the activity is two-fold: first to get to know the campers and staff and to make
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everyone “feel good” because they’ll end up with at least one new friend.
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We tried it one time last year and it seemed to work fairly well. We did it during the last week of
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camp. Perhaps this summer we’ll do it two or three times throughout the summer.
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100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 2
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--- PAGE 8 ---
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THE WHEEL OF MISFORTUNE
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For every three letters a camper gets, they have to sing, but for a package, they get to spin the
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Wheel of Misfortune. If they get two packages in one day, they still only spin it once.
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Spaces on the wheel are things like:
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• no chair (at the dining hall for entire cabin at next meal)
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• no silverware (same as previous)
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• kiss Bucky (camp deer head on dining hall wall)
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• dunk tank (three shots in counselor in tank)
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• firing squad (water balloons at camper that spun)
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• chicken space (act like a chicken for 30 seconds)
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• free candy
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• polar bear swim (whole cabin gets early swim time)
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• kitchen raid (prearranged chance for cabin to eat some leftovers)
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• pie in the face
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• ring the chapel bell
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• ride in director’s golf cart
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Mail Call has become an event and yes it takes a long time this way, BUT the campers look
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forward to spinning the wheel every year and don’t seem to mind waiting in the sometimes 75
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person long line. We get them through as fast as possible.
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THE GUINNESS GAMES
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We have been doing this since 2000 For junior high campers only.
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Campers are able to set and break any record they want as long as it’s witnessed by a staff
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member. We have a form that they fill out and turn in at the office. We then record and post the
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records so others can have the opportunity to break them.
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Over the years we have had to “ban” food records because they got to be wasteful and just
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disgusting. Some records we have include (there are hundreds of records now!!!):
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• longest time not talking at camp
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• longest time wearing a life jacket
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• longest time tapping nose
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• longest time banging head on a #3 Frisbee golf sign
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• most free throws
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• most t-shirts worn at one time
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• longest time underwater
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• most shoes brought to camp
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• tallest junior high camper
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• fastest time from dining hall to chapel running
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This works great with junior high because they are able to do the records themselves without
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3 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
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--- PAGE 9 ---
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help. The younger campers would need too much supervision and the high school campers are
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just way too cool to do something like this. This is a GREAT USE for junior high dorky energy.
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They LOVE IT! We have been doing it so long that now some of our counselors still hold records
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from when they were junior highers and their campers are trying to break them! So fun!!!
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KEY TO THE TREASURE
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We have an award system at camp to keep the cabins excited and participating in all activities.
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Keys are awarded to cabins for different activities, challenges and events. For example:
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• first cabin to an activity gets a key
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• cabin who wins a game gets a key
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• cabin that does something helpful gets a key
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We have a large chest with a chain and a lock on it. At the end of the week we play the mission
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impossible theme music and let the cabins come up and try their keys in the locks. The cabin that
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is able to open the lock, wins a chest full of goodies!
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MARK TWAIN DAYS
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When we held this theme we had 8 units of approx. 36-40 girls each.
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FIND THE PIE
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During the week the girls were responsible for finding a pie (made from paper mache and
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painted) like the ones Aunt Polly placed on the window ledge to cool, in one of the units that
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had to be hidden in plain sight. The trick is to do it when no one is looking, then write your unit
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name on the underneath side each time you had it.
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This was a fun, ongoing activity for the week of day camp but on the one overnight, we had the
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competitions, i.e.
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FENCE WHITE-WASHING
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We had some materials donated from Home Depot to make 8 short picket fence panels about 2’
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wide and 4’ tall. We staked these into the ground for stability. During the event the girls had to
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use fly swatters for paint brushes and race to brush a mixture of white paint and water about 1:3
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onto the panels to see how much of the panel they could cover in a minutes time. They also wore
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the disposable rain ponchos that you can get 2/$1 at Dollar Tree.
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FROG JUMP RACE
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We had 8 frogs indigenous to the area so they could be released into the creek area after camp.
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The frogs were lined up and the girls had to prompt the frogs, without touching them, to reach
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100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 4
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--- PAGE 10 ---
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a finish line. Just know, frogs don’t really cooperate well but it was a great laugh.
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MINI-RAFT BUILDING
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Each unit was given materials at the beginning of the week to build a raft by lashing. The materials
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were six 1/2” dowel rods approx. 6 inches long and twine or jute was used for rope. During the
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competition we had a molded pool of water to see which ones floated and which didn’t.
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Of course they all floated but it was a great way to hone their skills and fun to see how each unit
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decorated their raft. Some were pretty elaborate.
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PIE EATING CONTEST
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The “Pie Eating Contest” was fun which involved the unit leaders (adults). The pies were thawed
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crusts in tin pans filled with pudding and topped with whipped cream. We all know how a pie
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eating contest works. Hands behind the back and go to it. The girls loved seeing their leaders a
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mess and they were really good about cheering them on. Good sense of being a team.
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3-LEGGED RACE
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We found a Feed and Seed store that was
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willing to donate burlap feed sacks which
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we washed before hand.
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AWARDS
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Ribbons were given on the last day of
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camp for the competitions and everyone
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walked away with at least one ribbon
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even if it was just a participation ribbon.
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SPECIAL GUEST
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We had a college student from a school
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of thespians come in costume as Mark
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Twain and tell the story of his life on the
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river with Huck Finn and Joe. This was
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their bedtime story after competitions to
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settle them and they might’ve learned
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something along the way.
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TALENT/NO TALENT SHOW
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Talent Shows are pretty common, but since some people don’t have GOOD talents they can
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share like singing/dancing, we let people share their untalents as well.
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We have a panel of judges who sit at the light table. (We drilled 4 holes in a table and, wired up
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light bulbs to light switches on the tables). So when judges like a performance or are impressed
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5 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
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--- PAGE 11 ---
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by a performance, they light up their bulb.
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At the end of the talent night, the judges converse and come up with Best Talent, Best No Talent,
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Honorable Mentions. The no-talent performance usually add comedic relief. We’ve had cabins
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go up and eat a chocolate bar as their no-talent, do infomercials selling tap water, and horrible
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singing performances.
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We make it mandatory for all cabins to participate so we have enough acts to fill up the hour,
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and some kids add in extra performances. There are also those who actually do have impressive
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talents, as well.
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ROCK THROWING AREA
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One of favorite programs in our camp is our Rock Throwing Area.
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We paint rocks about 1 inch in diameter different
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colors. Each rock is worth a certain number of
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points based on it’s color. We then set up different
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targets for the boys to hit, or hoops to throw rocks
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through, or different object to throw the rocks into
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such as toy dump trucks or buckets. For every
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target hit the boys earn the point based on the
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color rock they thew. The boy with the most points
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receives a prize.
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This area is set up the same as an archery or
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shooting range with a firing line and taped off area
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all the way around. Sometimes the boys just want
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to see what will make the loudest noise.
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This has been very successful for us as our camp
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||
is all boys(cub scouts) ages 7-10. We all know boys
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love to throw rocks! It keeps them from picking
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up rocks in other areas knowing they will have the
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opportunity to do it safely. The boys also receive
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points for the number of rocks they return to the
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bucket after throwing (they don’t even realize they
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are just cleaning up after themselves).
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||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 6
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||
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||
--- PAGE 12 ---
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||
BEAD TRADE-IN
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I just implemented the bead reward system. The kids have responded terrifically. We are a
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||
church related daycare camp, so we added in “fruits of the spirit” for kids that show kindness,
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||
self control, joy, etc.
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||
They earn common beads for showing up and everyday behavior, silver and “gold” beads for
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being good friends, rare beads and ultra rare beads for exceptional behavior.
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They can trade in 10 common beads for a rare bead. I am the director and the kids can’t wait to
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show me how many they earned in the morning or afternoon.
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||
OUR CAMP’S GOT TALENT
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||
This is the event of the summer for the kids. We start putting this in the newsletter at least two
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||
weeks before.
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||
JUDGES STAND
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||
Appoint three counselors to be the judges. Let them sit by a long square table and face the stage
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||
( **Give them a big cup that says “Coke”)
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||
RED CARPET
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||
A few years ago we made a red carpet, it took us a
|
||
few hours but now we have it for every year. Roll
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||
out a long sheet of butcher paper, and use a paint
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||
roller (like what you would use for a wall) to paint
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||
it red. Leave it over night. The next morning set up
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||
the chairs in isles and put the red carpet in between.
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||
OTHER DETAILS
|
||
• Assign a Photographer
|
||
• Name Tags for all kids singing
|
||
• Prizes for winners
|
||
• Assign an MC and a DJ – when the children fill out the form they should specify if they
|
||
are going to need music if yes. Be sure to have them all in order ready to go so you have
|
||
a smooth event.
|
||
As each child comes up put on some music and flash the lights!! The MC will introduce them
|
||
and say what they’re doing.
|
||
We did not let the judges give their opinions at the end of each child’s performance as there are
|
||
a lot of children to go through and it would take too long. (This is a nice idea though if you do
|
||
not have a lot of children participating).
|
||
7 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 13 ---
|
||
At the end each child should get an award. We use a plastic medal that looks really cute and you
|
||
could pick it up from the dollar store. The winner and runner up should get a prize!
|
||
WESTERN NIGHT
|
||
The campers rotate throughout the evening so no two groups are at the same station...
|
||
STATION ONE: ROUND-UP
|
||
We had a gentleman teach the campers how to lasso....they then
|
||
took turns trying to lasso the horn on a saddle...ribbons were
|
||
given at the end of the evening for those who were successful
|
||
with the least attempts.
|
||
STATION TWO: RODEO
|
||
This was an obstacle course relay....barrels were set up....large
|
||
tunnels (opened ended barrels) were put in different places,
|
||
bales of hay to climb over..., etc...the team with the fastest time
|
||
received ribbons at the end of the evening.
|
||
STATION THREE: HORSES
|
||
We had local horse ranchers bring in their riding horses and
|
||
we set up an area where the campers could ride the horses in a
|
||
circle path...counselors lead the horses.
|
||
STATION FOUR: CAMPFIRE
|
||
We incorporated the evening snack in our western line-up....the
|
||
campers made and ate s’mores at this station.
|
||
FINALE
|
||
A professional line-dance caller taught the campers a few line-dances to some great country
|
||
music.
|
||
PAY IT FORWARD
|
||
The concept of paying it forward....each child takes upon himself to do three good deeds to
|
||
others within camp. I do for someone else and someone else “pays it forward”. This can be done
|
||
within an individual bunk/ an entire division/ whole camp.
|
||
Children learn that by giving, they receive and are a huge part of others lives. One kind word,
|
||
helping a friend, cheering on another, it’s endless and ongoing and can impact their entire
|
||
lifetime. Children can create cards to pass on and it cycles throughout the camp.
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 8
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 14 ---
|
||
This program is great!! It is creative as well and the opportunities for the children is fantastic!!
|
||
There is the movie Pay it Forward- however I would recommend it only for the counselors to see
|
||
so they grasp the idea and pay it forward as well.
|
||
THE SPIRIT OF CAMP - CAMPFIRE
|
||
Our best program is most definitely closing camp fire on the last night of camp.
|
||
This is not your typical camp fire. This is much more of a closing camp reflective ceremony. It
|
||
begins with a tiki torch lit path towards the camp fire. This walk is done by cabin and campers
|
||
and staff walk in silently. One the way to their seats each staff member receives a candle.
|
||
All campers and staff are in their seats at the camp fire except for 4 staff members who are
|
||
positioned with an unlit tiki torch around the campfire, as if they are representing a compass.
|
||
Each of the 4 compass points represent the following (as we are a Y camp): Spirit, Mind, Body,
|
||
Community.
|
||
The person representing Spirit begins with an illustration (story, song, poem) that represents
|
||
camp spirit. After they have completed their 3 minute illustration they pass the flame by lighting
|
||
the person representing “mind” torch. This process continues through all 4.
|
||
After all 4 have shared, the camp director then instructs the 4
|
||
compass points to share their flame by lighting the candle of
|
||
another staff member and the flame is passed until all candles
|
||
are lit. A deep reflective talk is given about this process
|
||
representing camp spirit and our need to pass it.
|
||
We also have campers look into the flame and reflect on the
|
||
following: Who made it possible for you to come to camp?
|
||
reflect on the new things you tried that you were scared to do?
|
||
Reflect on all the new friends that you made.
|
||
After this, half of the staff members are instructed to blow out their candles. The speakers says,
|
||
“think of how much different your week at camp would be if these staff members had not been
|
||
here.” Then the candles are re-lit and the brightness returns to the darkness.
|
||
A period of reflective songs are song and campers quietly dismissed.
|
||
9 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 15 ---
|
||
HARRY POTTER WEEK
|
||
Our best program is the Harry Potter week. First, we sort the kids into their houses. Then some
|
||
of the kids begin to create the house flags (which are huge). The art room is full at this time. We
|
||
also have an odd sock contest. Then we play Quidditch and the counselors get into full roles and
|
||
garb. The feast is made of the house colors on the tables, balloons and flags. The counselors sit
|
||
at the head tables and some younger counselor serve the kids.
|
||
Food served is cream soda and butter, mud pie with gummy worms, mini dogs, jello with eyes
|
||
balls, and whatever the staff comes up with. The kids love it!!!!
|
||
MINUTE TO WIN IT STATIONS
|
||
For a camp wide activity we did our version of Minute to Win It. We had
|
||
different stations set up around camp with various activities from the
|
||
television show. Groups rotate through the stations. At each station we
|
||
provide an explanation of the activity they are to perform just as they do
|
||
on the tv show. At each station a different member of the group tries the
|
||
activity so that each kid gets at least one chance to participate.
|
||
It is a very fun activity to do that provides a lot of entertainment. You can keep score by giving a
|
||
point if they can do the activity and have a prize at the end or you can just do it for fun.
|
||
CHANGE THE WORLD
|
||
Today I Am Going to Try to Change the World is something I did last year in my devotions
|
||
program. In the morning we listened to Johnny Reid’s song “Today I Am Going to Try to Change
|
||
the World” and in my program I read “If I Could Change the World I Would” from the Chicken
|
||
Soup for the Kid’s Soul book.
|
||
The kids then were to think of how they would change the world if they could. They then wrote
|
||
it on a index card or drew a picture. At the end of the program I read them allowed so that they
|
||
would know what their fellow campers would do to change the world.
|
||
At the back of the lodge I had a big world with the words Today I am Going to Try to Change
|
||
the World. I hung their cards up around it for them to read and think about.
|
||
It is a rewarding a meaningful program for not only the campers but for the staff and the
|
||
counselors as well.
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 10
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 16 ---
|
||
SUPER SECRET GUEST
|
||
Kinder programme (we have 4 year olds in daycamp)
|
||
Tell the kids we have a very special super secret guest coming to camp and we need to get ready
|
||
for them. Hint at who it might be throughout the programme.
|
||
WHERE WILL THE SUPER SECRET GUEST STAY?
|
||
Have kids dress up in construction gear (hard hats, fluorescent vests, workbelts, etc.). Get all
|
||
of your recycled boxes, styrofoam, plastic bottles, tarps, sheets, tape, etc. and build the special
|
||
guest a fort to sleep in. Next, have them decorate the fort.
|
||
WHAT WILL THE SUPER SECRET GUEST EAT?
|
||
If you have baking/ cooking facilities this would be a fun time to bake cupcakes or mini pizzas
|
||
or something. If not, it’s a great opportunity to make fabulous mud/ stick/ moss pies.
|
||
WHAT WILL THE SUPER SECRET GUEST DO?
|
||
Turn on music and play musical statues, make a conga line, get out puppets and make up a
|
||
puppet show (some form of entertainment for the super secret guest).
|
||
IMPOSTOR!
|
||
Have the super secret guest show up...but make it an impostor??? Have the impostor run off with
|
||
the cakes/ pizzas/ mudpies that were made for the super secret guest. Have the kids hunt down
|
||
the impostor and the cakes. Have the real super secret guest arrive in time to eat the mudpies
|
||
with the kids, and then watch their puppet show/ magic show/ dancing and move into the fort.
|
||
SUPER COOL VEHICLE DAY
|
||
We did a “Super Cool Vehicle Day” last summer and are waiting till next summer to do it again
|
||
because we want to keep it special.
|
||
We contacted business and agencies with cool vehicles and asked them
|
||
to come to camp for 4 hours. Some of the vehicles that came were:
|
||
• Huge 18 wheeler moving truck
|
||
• Snow Plow and Dump Truck from the County DOT
|
||
• A cement mixer (kids got huge brushes and could scrub
|
||
the truck). It was filled with water and the operator would
|
||
release some!
|
||
• Dumpster truck that picked up and put down our camp
|
||
dumpster
|
||
• Red Cross Disaster Relief Vehicle
|
||
• A limousine van
|
||
• A double Decker tour bus
|
||
11 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 17 ---
|
||
• A county Sheriff’s car
|
||
• SWAT team vehicle
|
||
• Police motorcycle with side car
|
||
• K-9 Van with dog
|
||
• A sign company’s cherry picker
|
||
• Fire Engine
|
||
• Ambulance
|
||
• State Police Car
|
||
• Mail Truck
|
||
• Supermarket 18 wheeler FREEZER truck (they brought rulers, crayons and insulated
|
||
lunch bags to hand out)
|
||
• And the best of all, the County Police sent a helicopter that landed while the entire
|
||
camp was at flag-pole in the morning.
|
||
The day was awesome- agencies and business were wonderful to work with – it was a ton of
|
||
work to organize.
|
||
Total cost was less than $100 for cold water, ice pops and pizza that we gave to all the vehicle
|
||
operators.
|
||
YOUTH FITNESS
|
||
It incorporates general physical education principals
|
||
(stretching, exercise, movement) along with the
|
||
educational classroom component (teaching about
|
||
the food groups, eating healthy).
|
||
Each AM the kids receive their pedometers, before
|
||
they go home in the PM they record how many steps
|
||
they took for the day. At the end of the week - the
|
||
campers receive a certificate for the total number of
|
||
steps for the week!
|
||
We include line dancing, games for all ages and
|
||
abilities, jump-roping, obstacle courses, etc.
|
||
At the end of the week we have a large ceremony
|
||
celebrating the kids and their successes! Parents are invited to come and dance, eat healthy
|
||
snacks and celebrate with us!
|
||
This program runs for 1 week. The alternate week to this camp runs with doing fitness activities
|
||
in the AM and then we go to the pool after lunch for the afternoon. This camp is called Fit ‘N‘
|
||
Swim.
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 12
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 18 ---
|
||
WILD WEST AUCTION
|
||
The biggest hit I’ve had recently was a new addition to our already popular Wild, Wild, West
|
||
Day. As always, we had the campers go dig for gold in a nearby creek. Usually we just allow
|
||
them to turn their gold in for prizes, and that’s that. The twist this year was that they could turn
|
||
in their gold for money this year at the “money changer booth.”
|
||
Once the campers had their money they were warned by “old-time 49ers” (a.k.a. counselors and
|
||
CITs) to save their money and not waste it away in “Boom Town” because greater riches might
|
||
await them later in the day.
|
||
The campers were then led to “Boom Town” which was located in our forest area but could
|
||
really be in any grassy field, etc. There were stations with hawkers everywhere trying to get
|
||
the campers to spend their money on rootbeer floats, cheap little prizes, a chance to shoot an
|
||
arrow at a bullseye, face-painting, enter into a raffle for a big prize, buy some little candies at the
|
||
“candy store”, a bag of popcorn, basically anyway to try to entice them to spend their money….
|
||
just like the ones who struck it rich in the old west. Many of the campers spent it all and had a
|
||
great time in “Boom Town.” Others saved their money for the hint of greater riches later in the
|
||
day. Either way, “Boom Town” was a wild, fun time for them all.
|
||
After Boom Town, the campers were led to our Hall where we had a stage, chairs and microphone
|
||
all set up like an auction house. They were really minimal decorations. We just did one big red
|
||
sign with “Auction House” on it. On Amazon I had bought a couple of great prizes (which really
|
||
weren’t that expensive, but better than the oriental trading prizes they were used to).
|
||
Some prizes:
|
||
• Various pool toys - alligator inflatable, orca whale inflatable (these were cheap but took
|
||
up a lot of space on stage and looked very impressive to the campers)
|
||
• Make-up kit
|
||
• T-shirt tie-dye kit
|
||
• Nerf guns
|
||
• Some of the bigger, nicer looking dollar tree toys
|
||
• One blow-up pool
|
||
We also had some “experience prizes”. For example:
|
||
• Push a counselor in the pool
|
||
• Popsicle party with a counselor of your choice
|
||
• Camp Director for the day
|
||
• Ride on the fire truck (next to fire station)
|
||
• Pizza for lunch, etc.
|
||
A spirited counselor was the auctioneer and each
|
||
camper had a paddle. We auctioned off all of the prizes
|
||
and the kids loved it! The ones who had their fun in
|
||
Boom Town took it with a laugh and the ones who had
|
||
saved money went into bidding wars. Overall, it was a
|
||
really fun addition to our Wild, Wild, West Day.
|
||
13 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 19 ---
|
||
BUTTON TRADING
|
||
We started button trading in 2013 and this was our 2nd year doing it. We have buttons (size 1.25)
|
||
for EVERYTHING. Staff, buildings, activities, favorite camp foods, inside camp jokes…literally
|
||
everything and more.
|
||
Campers collect them and wear them around a lanyard. Staff wear them on their staff name tag
|
||
lanyard. If a camper wants to trade with a staffer, the staffer MUST trade with them the one that
|
||
the camper wants.
|
||
It has been a HUGE addition to our camp culture and is actually
|
||
a pretty decent moneymaker as well in our camp store. We
|
||
sell the buttons for $1. We have a Monday Starter Pack Special
|
||
where they get 6 buttons and a lanyard for $6. Then after that,
|
||
every button is $1. The buttons are made for pennies once you
|
||
have the button maker.
|
||
We purchased our machine from American Button Machines.
|
||
I wondered how it would carry over for the 2nd year, but it
|
||
was great because all of the sudden we had “vintage” buttons
|
||
that were no longer being made that campers brought back.
|
||
We even had “immunity buttons.”
|
||
ICE WATER DAY STATIONS
|
||
Here are your options of games to play: The materials will be set up and you just rotate your
|
||
group along with you through the stations. You can go back to a station if desired. Towards the
|
||
end, after everyone has done all of the stations together, they can usually have some free play in
|
||
the water and whatever is left of the balloons. Just keep an eye on them. There will be a first aid
|
||
box outside as well. Make sure they go to the bathroom BEFORE water games. Try to limit the
|
||
number of inside wet traffic to avoid a soaked floor and slips!
|
||
ICE FISHING
|
||
• Divide into two teams
|
||
• Camper will stick his/her feet in a tub of ice and try to pick up marbles with toes.
|
||
• The one with the most - wins.
|
||
HAILSTORM
|
||
This is a team relay. One team is the storm throwing splash bombs soaked in ice water up in
|
||
the air. The other team tries to make it, one at a time,through the course with out hail damage
|
||
(getting hit). This works like an obstacle course. You can set up obstacles to run through.
|
||
ICE MELT
|
||
Each person gets a piece of ice and the goal is to melt it using their body (except their mouth).
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 14
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 20 ---
|
||
They must hold it somewhere and must be the first one to melt the cube completely.
|
||
SNOW BIRDS SKEET SHOOT
|
||
Using Slingshots – Water bombs, one team is hunting and the other team is the flock of birds
|
||
trying not to get hit.
|
||
ICE TOSS
|
||
Divide into two teams. See how many pieces of ice can be tossed into a group of buckets one at a time in a
|
||
30 second period. Let each team choose one person at a time to hold the team bucket for them.
|
||
EXTRA ACTIVITIES
|
||
• Sprinklers
|
||
• Enjoy the water
|
||
• Bubbles
|
||
• Have fun
|
||
• Water balloons
|
||
Can play any variety of water balloon games or relays:
|
||
• Toss and step back
|
||
• Hold between your legs and run/waddle to the cone and back
|
||
• Over-under relay
|
||
• Stand in a circle and call a name and toss it (get really creative and assign a cartoon
|
||
name to each kid then call that name)
|
||
• Run down sit on a balloon in a chair to pop it Relay
|
||
MYSTERY TRIP
|
||
Our camp is a traveling summer camp-- which means we take a field trip every day. While
|
||
that sounds exciting, the campers (and staff) begin to get a little bit jaded towards the end of the
|
||
summer.
|
||
This summer we instituted a Mystery Trip. The trip was towards the end of the week, which
|
||
enabled me to give out clues in the days leading up to the trip.
|
||
For example, the older group’s Mystery Trip was going to this really cool movie theater /
|
||
restaurant. Their first clue was a chicken (I had pre-ordered chicken fingers and French fries for
|
||
everyone). The second clue had something to do with a couch potato. Looking back, I wish I
|
||
had them play some sort of competition to EARN their clue. Definitely something to remember
|
||
for next summer.
|
||
No one in the entire camp knew where the Mystery Trips were. The campers and counselors had
|
||
all sorts of crazy ideas and theories-- even going as far as to predict what their next clue would
|
||
be, and what it could mean.
|
||
15 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 21 ---
|
||
By mid-week, everyone was very excited about the clues, their guesses and the whole mystery
|
||
idea. Parents were even stopping me in the hallway to ask questions-- and were shocked when
|
||
I wouldn’t tell them!
|
||
THEMED TRAILS
|
||
I have been experimenting with themed trails at camp. I
|
||
find that many of our younger campers do not enjoy
|
||
hiking because they dislike the mosquitoes and
|
||
deer flies, or their parents have them terrified about
|
||
getting Lyme disease from ticks. I decided that it was
|
||
time to create a distraction.
|
||
“ANIMAL TRACKER” TRAIL
|
||
We attached animal track rubbing plates (from Nature
|
||
Watch), a laminated picture, and a few facts on each
|
||
animal to wooden signs. I then screwed the signs to metal fence posts, which were spaced along
|
||
the trail. Then, using animal track resins purchased from Nature Watch, I made tracks in cement,
|
||
painted them brown, and hid them along the path. The campers are given booklets and a crayon
|
||
for taking rubbings of the tracks, and then they have to find the footprints for that animal. The
|
||
campers walk eagerly to find the next post. Yet once they are there, they have to slow down to
|
||
take turns for the rubbing and for finding the animals prints. This forces them to stop and take
|
||
a look around them, often making other discoveries. At the end of the season, the signs and
|
||
footprints are collected and stored. This idea works great for our regular campers and for our
|
||
nature education program with visiting elementary schools.
|
||
Other ideas are as follows:
|
||
TREE IDENTIFICATION
|
||
Find a trail that has the most variety of trees along it. Place signs near the tree that needs to be
|
||
identified. See if they can find the trees’ seeds underneath the canopy. Campers can take leaf
|
||
and bark rubbings. One year I had my campers, take bark rubbings in a patchwork pattern on
|
||
a large sheet of paper. In the center of the paper, they wrote diamante poems about trees, and
|
||
then they framed them with bark of trees we had already cut down. They had something really
|
||
special to take home.
|
||
STORY TRAIL
|
||
Cut apart and laminate a book to make a story trail. They read the next page as they find it. My
|
||
favorite book for young campers is Dirt Boy by Erik Jon Slangerup. It is about a little boy who
|
||
is tired of being clean, runs off into the woods, and finds a giant. The book could change every
|
||
week.
|
||
FAIRY TRAIL
|
||
I picked out a trail that has fascinating stumps, unusual tree trunks and moss for the fairy trail.
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 16
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 22 ---
|
||
Campers construct homes, dishes, furniture, and paths for fairies out of natural materials they
|
||
find on the forest floor. Campers have fun walking along the trail to see what other campers
|
||
have done. I hang tinkling wind chimes out of sight. There are some really neat fairy rubbing
|
||
plates as well for them to collect.
|
||
AMPHIBIAN AND REPTILE TRAIL
|
||
We have some wetlands and two vernal pools on our property where campers love to catch
|
||
frogs. This trail leads to this area, and they learn about the creatures they will find along the way.
|
||
FOLKLORE TRAIL
|
||
Our campers have been making loads of forts in the woods. Sometimes, it is mysterious to walk
|
||
by these groupings of abandoned shelters. We build on to local tales and make up a few of our
|
||
own. There’s a tree where I hang percussion and chime type instruments for them to play as
|
||
background effects for some of the storytelling. I may use geocaches to hide the folklore tales for
|
||
this trail.
|
||
MOVIE QUOTE SCAVENGER HUNT
|
||
One big hit for us is our movie quote scavenger hunt. The kids start with a quote from a movie.
|
||
They have to figure out which movie the quote is from.
|
||
The title of the film is the clue to the next location. For example, their first clue was a quote from
|
||
the Lego Movie. When they figured out it was the lego movie, they knew where the next hint
|
||
would be – in the Lego bin in the rec room. Then they got a quote from ...
|
||
• Frozen (freezer)
|
||
• Harry Potter (broom)
|
||
• Up (on the ceiling)
|
||
• Finding Nemo (on Australia on a world map)
|
||
• and finally with Willy Wonka which led to our candy stash.
|
||
The kids go through it quite quickly, but you can make it as hard or as easy as you need to, and they had
|
||
a blast.
|
||
TRICK AND TREAT NIGHT
|
||
We had a holiday theme. The thing the kids loved best was our trick-AND-treat night. We had
|
||
people set up all over camp with a small gift or candy for the kids. The kids were broken up into
|
||
small groups and each group was given a clue to their first destination. We made sure they all
|
||
got different clues so they all went to different destinations first.
|
||
17 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 23 ---
|
||
Once they reached their first destination, they were required to do a performance for the person
|
||
passing out their treat. They may have been made to sing a song, such as Mary Had a Little Lamb,
|
||
sing a song they learned at their campfire, say the Pledge, or recite their alphabet (something
|
||
each child would know). If it’s a church camp and they’ve been learning verses all week, you
|
||
could have them recite a verse. Along with their treat, they are given their next clue.
|
||
CREATING CAMP MAGIC
|
||
One of the biggest changes that we made recently was adding
|
||
the “creating magical experiences” to our mission statement
|
||
for camp. Placing these three words in such a prominent place
|
||
allowed us to focus on being very intentional about it.
|
||
The challenge that we gave each and every counselor, and the
|
||
what we held them to by the way, was to each week have that
|
||
“one” moment that they did something for their campers that
|
||
was outside of the “norm.” It couldn’t be an activity that we
|
||
already offer at camp. It had to be special, creative, and have a
|
||
surprise element to it.
|
||
Each staff meeting we’d ask our counselors to report on if they
|
||
had completed their “magical moment” yet. To this day, I still
|
||
hear from parents, not about zip line or swimming or the great
|
||
evening programs, but about that thing the counselor did with
|
||
their cabin.
|
||
Here are a few magical moments that I’ve seen our counselors create for their campers:
|
||
• Late night camp kitchen raids
|
||
• Bringing all of their sleeping bags and pillows to the flagpole before any arrived and
|
||
giving their appearance that they slept there all night
|
||
• Placing a huge blanket over their dining hall table and eating under the table as if
|
||
they were in a cave
|
||
• Nighttime camp store raid
|
||
• Organizing every cabin to surround my house at 5 a.m. and singing a song
|
||
• Driving to Dairy Queen on their time off to buy ice cream for their cabin
|
||
What are some of the ways your camp could do very little things that make a lasting impression?
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 18
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 24 ---
|
||
THROUGH THE AGES
|
||
We started a new week theme: Through the Ages
|
||
MONDAY - Caveman/woman
|
||
• Campers dressed up and “Bones” were awarded for the best dressed
|
||
Activities:
|
||
• Dino tracking—before camp started we stamped prints all over camp—some leading
|
||
places and others in dead ends
|
||
• A maze—best time wins
|
||
TUESDAY - Maidens and Knights
|
||
• Campers dresses up and a crown was awarded to best dressed.
|
||
• We had a fingers fest (no silverware used)—soup, campers stew and rolls—what a
|
||
mess!
|
||
Activities:
|
||
• Jousting—hula hoops hanging from trees—campers run and collect hoops on their
|
||
swords
|
||
WEDNESDAY - the 60’s
|
||
• Tye Die galore
|
||
Activity:
|
||
• All campers tye dyed something
|
||
THURSDAY- the decade you were born
|
||
(this is also field trip day—no group activity)
|
||
FRIDAY - The Future!
|
||
• Dress as if it is 2099
|
||
Activities:
|
||
• Campers made time capsules for future campers.
|
||
• We had a time machine and past staff came back for the afternoon
|
||
There was a station race that went through each time period
|
||
1. Time machine to the caveman era—here campers had to create a “home” from various
|
||
materials (boxes, tubes, string—generally anything extra around camp) and former staff
|
||
judged it
|
||
2. Knights and maidens here the groups jousted again—it was so much fun they asked to
|
||
do it again—the twist this time—we had two electric kids cars and they rode them like a
|
||
horse to get the hoops
|
||
3. Decade you were born in- we had a dress your counselor – with clothes that the campers
|
||
brought in for this event
|
||
19 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 25 ---
|
||
4. Create a robot camp groups had X time to create a robot from things they found around
|
||
camp—one group made their counselor into a robot (think outside the box)
|
||
MISSION PROJECTS
|
||
We have one mission camp each summer. The younger campers have to stay on site with me
|
||
during the mission projects, because many of the ministries we visit will not allow volunteers
|
||
under 13.
|
||
The guys help my husband with construction things and the girls do something crafty with me.
|
||
We have (tried) to crochet scarves for homeless ministries, we’ve (relatively successfully) made
|
||
diaper cakes for pregnancy care centers, and several other projects.
|
||
TOBOGANNS
|
||
This year a friend with a Romanian mission asked if we could make toboggans (beanies) to send
|
||
with her on a trip. It’s been our most successful project yet!
|
||
Step 1: Collect fleece (search the bargain bin at the fabric store for months, hit up the clearance
|
||
blankets at Dollar General, ask for donations, etc.)
|
||
Step 2: Cut fleece and sew into tubes (or get a volunteer to do it at your annual camp workday).
|
||
I’m not sure the measurement on these. The volunteer was much smarter than I and free
|
||
handed X, S, M, L, XL using various models (ahem, other volunteers) who were present
|
||
that day.
|
||
Step 3: (Enter teens) Have the teens cut strips about ¾ in. wide and 2+in. deep into one end of
|
||
the tubes. Notes: We eyeballed this. This is similar to how you make a tie together fleece
|
||
blanket.
|
||
Step 4: Tie the strips together at the top of the toboggan, fold/roll the edge at the bottom of the
|
||
toboggan. Viola!
|
||
We also used knitting looms to make toboggans out of yarn. A few of the teens enjoyed this,
|
||
but the fleece thing was on everybody’s skill level and they all enjoyed it. We even had a special
|
||
needs teen that did very well with this project despite challenges in the past.
|
||
KINGDOM KATASTROPHE
|
||
KINGDOM KATASTROPHE - A Medieval-Themed Counselor Hunt
|
||
This summer (as we do every summer) we always program a theme related version of counselor
|
||
hunt into the schedule. I think the kids loved this one more than any other counselor hunt we’ve
|
||
ever done. It actually wasn’t really a counselor hunt because the counselors weren’t hiding, but
|
||
this is what we did:
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 20
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 26 ---
|
||
1. All our counselors had a character for the summer and our program was broken down
|
||
into 2 kingdoms “battling” against each other for land domination. Each kingdom had a
|
||
king, a queen, prince, princess, knights, townspeople, etc.
|
||
2. The counselor had all “lost” a part of their costume/outfit (played it into a storyline) and
|
||
needed help finding it. They hid their items and then thought of their own clues as to
|
||
where to find it.
|
||
3. The campers would find a character and ask them, “What did you lose?” Then the character
|
||
would give the first clue, “All I remember when I had it last, I could hear running water.”
|
||
The first 15 minutes of the game, campers were going around getting all the first clues
|
||
that they could get. The clues were not very revealing.
|
||
4. At the 15 minute mark, the siren would sound to signify the second clue could be acquired.
|
||
So the process began again...the 2nd clues were a little more revealing. Many items were
|
||
found after the 2nd clue. And at the 25 min. mark, the siren would sound again and the
|
||
third and final clue would be revealed by the characters when it was asked of them. This
|
||
clue was very revealing and all items would be found quickly after this siren.
|
||
5. When an item was found, the campers would have to return it back to the character then
|
||
bring the character to the program staff to receive their points. Kings were worth 5 pts.,
|
||
Queens 4pts., Prince and princess 3pts., and so on.
|
||
The points were shown to all in the slide show prior to the game. (pictures below)
|
||
This is a very visually appealing game, with counselors all in costume and kids moving all
|
||
over the property. It created a great atmosphere, even for bystanders. The teen campers loved
|
||
this game as well. I’m not sure why this version was a hit more than other years, but the kids
|
||
absolutely loved it. And it could be done with any theme, any characters created. Kids just love
|
||
looking for stuff!
|
||
CAKE WARS
|
||
Campers were broken into groups of 4 with a CIT to help them. I had the lead counselors giving
|
||
direction. Our elective time during the day is 10:30am-12pm for the 5 days. My original thought
|
||
was to have the campers make/bake the cakes day one and decorate the cakes Tues-Thurs and
|
||
21 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 27 ---
|
||
be judged Friday. As it came closer I realized that would take way too long.
|
||
I called local grocery stores and tried to order sheet cakes undecorated. They all would charge
|
||
me $25-$30 for a ¼ sheet cake. Too expensive!
|
||
I decided each group needed:
|
||
• 2 - 9X13 cakes
|
||
• 2 - 9” round cakes
|
||
• 1 – 9” square cake
|
||
I went to the local Dollar store and bought the pans. I bought store brand white cake mixes for
|
||
about $2 each. (They are not eating these cakes so it doesn’t matter how they taste.)
|
||
I made the cakes at my house the weekend before the elective started. Let them cool and didn’t
|
||
cover them, kind of wanted them to get stale.
|
||
I bought:
|
||
• store brand white frosting
|
||
• craft store fondant
|
||
• craft store fondant dye
|
||
• craft store fondant rollers - 1 for each group (Walmart/AC Moore)
|
||
• in the cake decorating section they have cardboard cake platters for the cake to be
|
||
decorated on
|
||
DAY 1
|
||
I sat all campers down and explained we were in a cake battle to be displayed and judged Friday
|
||
by all campers. Our theme for that week was Safari Week (the other week was Under the Sea).
|
||
We broke them into teams, explained how to use the fondant (Google it), how to dye fondant,
|
||
and how to use the store frosting as a base before the fondant. Then I gave them a piece of paper
|
||
to design their creations before starting to decorate. Then I gave them their cakes. We used
|
||
plastic knives and they cut/created the base of their cakes. DON’T cover the cakes with plastic
|
||
wrap. I just took paper table cover and put it over them.
|
||
DAY 2-4
|
||
The groups learned to work with the fondant, crated figures, rolled it out and decorated the
|
||
cakes. Most were done by Thursday. Some needed the finishing touches on Friday (early).
|
||
DAY 5
|
||
Friday – The cakes went out to be judged. Each camper got one ticket to put in the box of the
|
||
cake they liked the best. We took the count and gave certificates at the ending of the day at flag
|
||
pole. I also brought in cupcakes for them to decorate and EAT!
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 22
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 28 ---
|
||
BUZZWORD
|
||
The one thing I did last summer that was a hit (well actually, it was responsible for creating
|
||
many hits) was coming up with a “buzzword” for evaluating the quality of activity planning.
|
||
Our buzzword was “EPIC”:
|
||
Exciting, elaborate
|
||
Phenomenal, priceless
|
||
Incredible, innovative
|
||
Creative, climactic
|
||
We taught the EPIC concept during staff training and
|
||
did some exercises in which we took existing camp
|
||
activities from previous years and discussed how to
|
||
make them more EPIC. We outlined how an EPIC
|
||
program will engage all of the campers’ senses and
|
||
leave them wanting more.
|
||
Of course, not every activity can be totally EPIC, or it would lose its effect. It’s important to
|
||
choose those special moments when an EPIC experience will make the most impact on your
|
||
campers. The best (but not only) times for an EPIC experience are on the FIRST and LAST day
|
||
of a session (week). We called this the EPIC SANDWICH.
|
||
The EPIC concept really made a huge impact on our programming. We have always been really
|
||
GOOD programmers, but this summer we had many more WOW moments. It amazed me how
|
||
it made a difference at every level, from our counselors who plan activities for their cabin’s rest
|
||
time after lunch, to our programmers who plan and execute the majority of our programming,
|
||
to senior staff in charge of special events.
|
||
I saw a first-year counselor who stole all her mother’s extra bedsheets from home so her cabin
|
||
could build one GIANT blanket fort. I also saw a senior staff member who staged a “discovery”
|
||
of a pirate chest (as a set-up for the following day’s colour war) that was so convincing that
|
||
campers were sure it was real.
|
||
Part of what I think made this so successful was that we boiled a concept down to a single
|
||
word, taught what that word meant to us, and then referred to it consistently in all of our
|
||
training, weekly meetings, and evaluations. It made it extremely easy for our staff to know and
|
||
understand what was expected, and this is something I am going to look at again in preparation
|
||
for this summer. I’m sure that there are other parts of our training that we could simplify greatly
|
||
by creating an appropriate buzzword.
|
||
FIRST TIME COLOR WAR
|
||
Here is what we tried after participating in the Color Wars Round Table. I was very interested in
|
||
23 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 29 ---
|
||
doing a Color War theme for one of our weeks in camp and it was awesome!
|
||
We dedicated an entire week to the event and did a number of things to make it fun for all age
|
||
groups.
|
||
We kicked it off on Monday as we start the camp in our theater with the division of teams. We
|
||
did this by placing color tabs under their seats that they were not aware of until we told them to
|
||
take a look. We also tied our Color War to the Star Wars theme and played the theme song on the
|
||
way into the theater. We had ordered special camper shirts in red, blue, yellow and green and
|
||
assigned all high school counselors to teams as well. The college staff were given Black t-shirts
|
||
with Jedi Counselor on the back which they loved.
|
||
On Monday the teams were given one hour together to come up with a team name, hand
|
||
out shirts and create a team cheer. We met back in the theater to award our first points of the
|
||
competition. The kids loved it and really got into the week. We are a day camp and were getting
|
||
more and more drop-ins for the week then we have ever in the past.
|
||
Each day we started in the theater with a crazy challenge and on the first day it was the cola in a
|
||
can drank through another contestants sock! Obviously we used high school counselors for this
|
||
event and they got into it big time. The kids were cheering and everyone had a great time. At the
|
||
end of the day Color War was all they were talking about with their parents!
|
||
As the week progressed we continued with crazy challenges and we made sure each age group
|
||
had appropriate challenges that they could accomplish. Here are some examples: for the 4-5
|
||
girls we did a coloring challenge, the 4-5 boys we did a big wheels race, 6-7 girls did a friendship
|
||
bracelet challenge. There were great activities the entire week.
|
||
We ended the week with a wrap-up of the Great Race. An entire age group race that I read about
|
||
in the Color Wars roundtable that took over an hour to run but was awesome. We filmed a lot of
|
||
it and showed the clips that afternoon to the kids at the awards ceremony.
|
||
THINGS TO IMPROVE
|
||
Film more of the events during the week, order more t-shirts for drop-ins so they immediately
|
||
feel a part, definitely center on a theme, Start wars was great. Find a more clever way to designate
|
||
teams. They will be looking for the tabs next year. Also, DEFINITELY keep siblings on the same
|
||
team. This was mentioned last year and to be honest I shrugged it off and thought it would not
|
||
matter…. It matters!
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 24
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 30 ---
|
||
CHAOS
|
||
This summer during staff training we had all of our staff take a part of CHAOS. (This idea we
|
||
learned about through an ACA conference, though I cannot remember who is owed the credit.)
|
||
CHAOS stands for...
|
||
Counselors
|
||
Have
|
||
Awesome
|
||
Outstanding
|
||
Skills.
|
||
For this activity each counselor or staff member thinks about something that they enjoy and are
|
||
good at. They then think about ways in which they can adapt this skill or talent to camp life as
|
||
well as how they can present it to the other staff in 15 minutes. (Example: one of my staff enjoyed
|
||
beading, so she created a life-size loom and demonstrated the skill for us using large noodles and
|
||
ropes, creating a very enjoyable demonstration and obstacle course. Another enjoyed learning
|
||
about body language, so she showed us some great ways to relax our minds and ways to quietly
|
||
and purposefully earn the attention of a group. And yet another impressed us with her talent
|
||
performing Step routines, and how we could easily get our campers engaged and attentive.)
|
||
This was an incredible opportunity for my staff to gain confidence in a setting that was new to
|
||
many of them. It not only gave them practice teaching but also helped them realize that they all
|
||
had something different to bring to the table. This activity allowed them to see value in learning
|
||
from each other and to respect each other.
|
||
I had the staff prepare for their skill demonstration and then throughout staff training we broke
|
||
up the loads of information with 1-3 presentations by staff members (which was a big hit!).
|
||
Though I cannot take credit for the idea, I believe that implementing CHAOS into our staff
|
||
training allowed my staff to grow in immeasurable ways, to see that they each had something
|
||
to offer as well as develop a strong culture of acceptance and community. Not only that but it
|
||
gave them more examples and resources of activities that they then could use with our campers.
|
||
REVERSE SCAVENGER HUNT
|
||
At camp we play a game called the, “Reverse Scavenger Hunt”
|
||
Here is how we play:
|
||
1. After dinner, keep cabins at their dining table. Explain to cabins that they will have 20
|
||
minutes to head back to their cabin. They will pick one sleeping bag and put everything
|
||
they think will be on the scavenger hunt list. Then bring sleeping bag back to the lodge.
|
||
2. Once each cabin is back, explain to cabins that we will review each item on the list. Each
|
||
item has a different point value. The girl cabin and boy cabin that has the most points,
|
||
wins a prize.
|
||
25 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 31 ---
|
||
3. Only items that came into the lodge inside the sleeping bag counts.
|
||
4. We also explain that everyone in their cabin can search through the sleeping bag for
|
||
the specified item, but only the counselor may present the item to their specified judge
|
||
(director). If there is an item that is borderline, then the judges will confer and come to a
|
||
decision.
|
||
5. Tally up the points and see who wins.
|
||
Here is a sample list of random items from a previous year at camp. It changes each year. Some
|
||
items are subjective enough that anything may work.
|
||
Points Item
|
||
10 Bandana
|
||
10 Camp log
|
||
10 Candy
|
||
10 Dental Floss
|
||
10 Dirty sock
|
||
10 Hat
|
||
10 Left handed hammer
|
||
10 Pajamas
|
||
10 Piece of clothing with pink on it
|
||
10 Pinecone
|
||
10 Rock
|
||
10 Shoe
|
||
10 Something that has camouflage on it
|
||
10 Glasses
|
||
10 Kilt
|
||
10 Toolbelt
|
||
10 Toothpaste
|
||
10 Water bottle
|
||
20 Leftovers from tonight’s dinner
|
||
50 A piece of the creek running through camp
|
||
50 Anything with stripes on it
|
||
50 Anything with tye dye
|
||
50 Baby bottle
|
||
50 Camp song book
|
||
50 Cowboy hat
|
||
50 Missing assignments from school
|
||
50 Poncho
|
||
50 Something that you can use to start a fire with
|
||
50 Something you can use as an instrument
|
||
50 Stuffed animal
|
||
50 Tail light fluid
|
||
100 Wedding ring
|
||
100 Cabin flag
|
||
100 Eye patch
|
||
100 Pillow
|
||
100 Something that would work as a beard
|
||
100 The most embarrassing thing you have
|
||
100 The smelliest thing you have
|
||
100 Welding mask
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 26
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 32 ---
|
||
150 Anything that has YMCA on it
|
||
150 Dirty underwear
|
||
150 12th man flag
|
||
400 100 points each: Authentic Signature of Husky, Buttercup or Scuttle
|
||
500 Cash
|
||
1000 Anything with Seattle Seahawks on it
|
||
1000 Anything with Seattle Mariners on it
|
||
1000 Picture of your family
|
||
1000 Something that is older than dirt
|
||
1000 The most awkward thing you have
|
||
1000 The most random thing you have
|
||
1000 The scariest thing you have
|
||
10000 Total Points
|
||
HIT LIST
|
||
We decided to try a game that is ongoing for a whole week. Other camps have many names for
|
||
this game but we call it Hit List. Our campers loved it!
|
||
Mechanics:
|
||
• Each camper is given the name of one other camper as their target. You have to try and
|
||
get your target out.
|
||
• Each camper is given a small styrofoam ball. Anything small and light will work though.
|
||
• To get your target out you have to hit your target anywhere on the torso with the styrofoam
|
||
ball.
|
||
• Once a successful hit is made, they report it.
|
||
• The camper who was hit is out of the game, and the camper who made the hit is given a
|
||
new target. Basically the target of the eliminated camper becomes the new target for the
|
||
camper that made the hit.
|
||
It’s important to set boundaries and times when the game is on and off. For us, the game is off
|
||
in the dining hall, swimming pool area, main hall, and while activities/classes are ongoing.
|
||
Basically it’s on mostly during travel times when kids are walking around from place to place or
|
||
free time. You play until there’s one camper left who wins the game.
|
||
It took one week for the game to be completed, and we gave out a big prize for the winner. The
|
||
campers loved it and wanted to restart a new game after it finished.
|
||
CARDBOARD BOAT REGATTA
|
||
We did a card board boat Ragtta, and oh man was it a hit! Our teen campers made the boats, and
|
||
they were divided in teams based on their color war color. Then the younger campers that were
|
||
27 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 33 ---
|
||
on the same color war team, got to watch, cheer and support their teen boat team. It turned out
|
||
great!
|
||
Teens were given the same about of basic supplies: Cardboard boxes, duct tape and markers (we
|
||
did not allow paint because they race would be held in our pool). They were told they could
|
||
bring any recycled materials from home to use on the boat however, if they brought something
|
||
then it HAD to go on the boat. So they had to have a plan.
|
||
We gave them one day to plan out and design their boat on paper. Then they had two days to
|
||
construct the boats. They also had to create a paddle if they remembered that they needed one.
|
||
On the day of the race they all brought their boats to the lap pool. Each team had to pick a
|
||
captain of their boat who would ride in the boat and paddle in the race to the other side. It was
|
||
great fun and all the boats made it.
|
||
Please be sure and practice safety first - we had lifeguards on both sides of the pool and one in
|
||
the water, plus each captain wore a life jacket.
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 28
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 34 ---
|
||
CARNIVAL ANSWERING MACHINE
|
||
We build an “Answering Machine” from a large table covered in bright paper for our weekly
|
||
carnival. There is a slot cut into the paper on the front that is reinforced with another layer of
|
||
paper around it. A sheet of paper is taped on the back of the slot from inside the machine. Small
|
||
pieces of paper and bright felts are provided for campers to write questions on and slip into the
|
||
Answering Machine. An answer is fed out the same slot.
|
||
What the campers don’t know at first is that a person is inside the machine (under the table)
|
||
providing the answers. Younger campers are the best with this activity as they don’t try to figure
|
||
out “who” is in the machine but just take great joy in receiving their answers and thinking up
|
||
new questions. One volunteer needs to staff the machine on the outside, helping campers think
|
||
of questions and / or writing their questions for them. The person inside benefits from hearing
|
||
the conversations going on outside and can use that info to answer the questions.
|
||
The sillier the questions and answers the better. Don’t try to give true answers, arbitrary and
|
||
bizarre answers are often most appreciated! Answers that refer to funny things that happened at
|
||
camp that week are great too. The machine takes on a personality of its own.
|
||
Caution: make sure the paper surrounding the table is secure and peek-proof, the fun depends
|
||
on the suspension of belief and one glimpse of the person under the table ruins that instantly.
|
||
The person on the outside must guard the paper sides from being ruined and keep campers
|
||
from peeking in the slot. Provide the person under the table with some fun candy, a drink, a
|
||
pillow or cushion and lots of pens. Sound effects are good, but you may need another person or
|
||
a recording to provide those as the answering machine can get very busy! We place the machine
|
||
nearly against a wall so that the back side of it can be entirely open to the air as it gets hot inside!
|
||
Some campers will spend nearly their whole time at the answering machine!
|
||
ALICE IN WONDERLAND / UN-BIRTHDAY PARTY
|
||
We had a few different stations for this themed afternoon. First, we gave our kids a letter from
|
||
Alice asking for the kids to help her on her way through Wonderland. Our kids were sent to
|
||
Alice by the water (Alice - our staff member was
|
||
dressed in a blue dress and it just so happened that
|
||
she had blonde hair as well, so she really looked
|
||
the part), their task as a group was that they had
|
||
to create the best bubble snake.
|
||
BUBBLE SNAKE (CATERPILLAR)
|
||
To create the bubble snake, in advance I cut off
|
||
the bottom 1/4 of plastic water bottles, I then got
|
||
a handful of elastic bands, 1 cloth per bottle and
|
||
created a soap and water mixture. Once the kids
|
||
29 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 35 ---
|
||
reached their location they had to put all the things together to make the bubble snake.
|
||
They took the cloth and put it on the bottom of the bottle (which you have already cut out), make
|
||
sure the cloth is only one layer and is secured firmly with an elastic band around it. Once it is all
|
||
put together you dip the bottle cloth end in to the soap/water mixture, you then blow through
|
||
the mouth piece and a bubble snake emerges from the cloth (you can add extra fun by adding a
|
||
few drops of food coloring to the cloth itself to create a rainbow effect). - http://www.wikihow.
|
||
com/Make-a-Bubble-Snake-Maker
|
||
THE WHITE RABBIT
|
||
Once the kids had their fun with the bubble snake, Alice told them that The White Rabbit needed
|
||
their help next, so they had to go find him to get the next task. We had another staff member in a
|
||
giant Easter Bunny head costume run this activity (you could use face paint and other costume
|
||
ideas). Once they got to their location the Rabbit said these next few things need to be done as
|
||
fast as possible because he is “late for a very important date!” Set up for the kids was a variety
|
||
of obstacle courses for them to complete (you can be creative with what you do, none of our
|
||
obstacles had nothing to do with the movie, it was just a way to bring the Rabbit into the theme).
|
||
THE MAD HATTER
|
||
Next, the Rabbit thanked the group of kids and said to them that The Mad Hatter (played by
|
||
another staff) now needs their help at his Tea Party. At this time Alice and the Rabbit join the tea
|
||
party. Ahead of time, the staff had made cupcakes and icing. The kids
|
||
were given the opportunity to decorate their cupcake however they
|
||
would like and of course eat it as well. The Tea Party was set up in a
|
||
room that I had decorated earlier in the day. I had set up streamers,
|
||
made a Happy Un-Birthday sign, and the previous night, I had other
|
||
staff help me blow up a ton of balloons, which were scattered all over
|
||
the floors. We had music playing so the kids could just spend some
|
||
time together and enjoy their cupcakes.
|
||
Up next we decided to play a game with the kids, we also had to figure
|
||
out what to do with all the balloons; so we tied a piece of string on each
|
||
balloon and attached one balloon to an ankle of each kid and when
|
||
we said go they had to go around to everyone else with a balloon and
|
||
try to stomp on the balloons and pop them, the last camper with an
|
||
unpopped balloon won.
|
||
LAKE OF TEARS
|
||
At the end of the game, we took the kids to the lake and explained
|
||
that we were going to go for a swim in the lake of tears (Alice in
|
||
Wonderland). At this point we told the kids to just go have fun in the
|
||
water and swim around, but you could definitely come up with some
|
||
Alice in Wonderland water activities.
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 30
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 36 ---
|
||
PANDEMIC - CAMP WIDE GAME
|
||
In creating Pandemic! my goal was to create a game that was exciting, fast-paced, and competitive
|
||
without giving campers the ability to chase each other or cheat and cause more animosity than
|
||
needed. Instead of groups playing against each other, campers play one team against the will
|
||
of the game!
|
||
Pandemic! (based loosely off the board game) was my attempt at simplifying the idea of everyone
|
||
vs. the game. In the end it turned into a glorified, and a little-complicated, themed item hunt
|
||
with a reason to run around. (Rules below)
|
||
Pandemic! required some decisions to be made on the fly by some of the staff leading the game
|
||
to ensure things stayed fun, fresh, and ended at the right time.
|
||
All the campers understood Pandemic! and enjoyed it a lot. The thing that made these games go
|
||
as smoothly as they did was that I knew exactly what I wanted the game to look like and I gave
|
||
specific instructions to counselors on what their goals were. Each game also accomplished what
|
||
I hoped for in the fact that even if some campers didn’t like some parts of the game, they weren’t
|
||
upset AT anyone about it. Since everyone was on the same team, we all win or lose together.
|
||
However, we always win.
|
||
In Pandemic! Campers are now the world’s leading scientists from all over and all different
|
||
fields of deadly disease research. An outbreak of 4 highly contagious diseases threatens the
|
||
safety of the world and it’s our job here at the Center for Disease Control (CDC) to find a vaccine
|
||
and cure each of the diseases. Each disease is represented by a certain color (ex. Blue disease,
|
||
green disease, etc).
|
||
The way campers research and find these vaccines is by physically searching the camp for
|
||
syringes. Don’t worry, they are just pieces of colored paper with clipart on them. These syringes
|
||
are folded or crumpled and hidden behind cracked bark in trees, in the middle of an open field
|
||
mostly covered by grass and rocks, under picnic table legs, and anywhere that would be very
|
||
hard to find. After all 4 syringes are found in a color, the corresponding disease has been cured!
|
||
After EACH syringe has been found and brought to the CDC, enough research has been done
|
||
to release a vaccine for that color! The vaccines are given to each camper with a symbol drawn
|
||
in marker on the back of the hand. All they need to do is show up at the CDC and ask to be
|
||
vaccinated!
|
||
What do they do with these vaccinations? Ward
|
||
off the diseases of course! Three counselors, each
|
||
dressed in the color of a disease are now viruses.
|
||
If a camper is tagged by a virus, they must show
|
||
symptoms of the disease. Symptoms are decided
|
||
before-hand so everyone knows, for example, that
|
||
if they are tagged by the blue virus they must now
|
||
keep their ankles together. Or, for example, if they
|
||
are tagged by the green virus they must keep their
|
||
hands above their head. And if they are tagged by
|
||
31 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 37 ---
|
||
both, they must keep their ankles together AND their hands up in the air.
|
||
They may be healed by either of a couple of medics or anti-viruses or Tylenol running around
|
||
(counselors dressed in white). When they are tagged by the medic, they can be healed but often
|
||
get a “side effect” of the medicine that wears off soon enough. These side effects are decided
|
||
on the fly by the medic. Examples are “hug a tree and yell ‘I love you nature!’” or “run and tell
|
||
Counselor Bob that his guitar playing is Tee-Rific!” We also heal from the CDC. If a camper has
|
||
a vaccine, however, they do not need to display any side effects from being tagged by a virus.
|
||
Every once in a while, the bell will ring and the viruses will mutate. At that point, campers need
|
||
a better version of the vaccine. For the first syringe that is found in a color, campers get a vaccine
|
||
that looks like a line on their hand / The Second syringe gets everyone another line, making an
|
||
X. Thirdly, they get a circle around the x. And when the virus is completely cured, we will fill
|
||
in the circle. Before the viruses mutate, they can be stopped with a single line /. After the virus
|
||
mutate once, campers need an X to stop the virus and so on.
|
||
For the first three quarters of the game, only 3 of the 4 viruses are out running around. The
|
||
campers know that the black virus will come eventually and when it does symptoms are harsh
|
||
(keep both hands on feet). They also know that the black virus needs all 4 syringes before a
|
||
single vaccine can be made. When everyone needs a big burst of energy late game, the black
|
||
virus busts out and tags like mad! This game require us to hide VERY WELL and then give hints
|
||
if syringes weren’t found right away. This allowed us to control the timeline of the game.
|
||
S’MORE BAKE-OFF
|
||
A big hit for us this summer was our S’more recipe
|
||
bake-off. We divided the camp into groups of ten
|
||
supervised by 2 staff members per group. Each
|
||
group brainstormed s’mores recipes and decided
|
||
on one at the beginning of the week and turned in
|
||
a supply list.
|
||
On the evening of the event, we assigned them each
|
||
a cooking space (one of our kitchens or campfire
|
||
circles) and a time limit to gather supplies, cook,
|
||
present, and clean up. The groups then presented
|
||
their recipe to the whole camp and the senior staff
|
||
were the judges.
|
||
We had s’mores pudding pies, s’mores candy apples, s’more made to look like a campsite
|
||
complete with an oreo toilet and pretzel stick/mini marshmallow plunger, s’mores pancakes,
|
||
among others. The winning recipe earned an extra turn tubing on the ski boat the next day.
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 32
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 38 ---
|
||
SKILLS NIGHT
|
||
Every weeknight at our 80-camper, 4-week overnight co-ed Jewish camp we have an evening
|
||
program. I decided to do a “Skills Night” program where the kids would learn a new skill. From
|
||
there, I turned it over to a group of counselors to plan the details of the program and execute it.
|
||
In the beginning, they were not happy to be planning this program, complaining that “it won’t
|
||
be fun”. I insisted that people like learning new things. In the end, I was proven right. Kids loved
|
||
it, and we had some great pictures for the parents.
|
||
This is what the counselors came up with:
|
||
The kids are not separated by gender, but are separated by age. 7 year-olds should learn different
|
||
skills than 15 year-olds.
|
||
• The youngest group (7-10 years old) learned how to properly make a bed and how to
|
||
follow a recipe to make brownies.
|
||
• Our 11-12 year olds learned how to sew (we needed more staff supervision for this
|
||
one to help individuals) at various levels.
|
||
• 13-14 year olds learned how to build a fire and tie ties.
|
||
• Our 15 year olds (CITs) learned how to change a tire and would have done so if the
|
||
tire iron that came with the rental van had been better. Instead, they learned that you
|
||
should buy your own tools. They did learn how to find the tools according to the
|
||
owners manual, where to place and how to use a jack, and how long to drive on the
|
||
“donut”.
|
||
The kids ended up having a lot of fun this night and this is a program I plan on repeating every
|
||
summer, although varying the skills so the returning campers don’t do the same thing twice.
|
||
This ended up being the Evening Program that I was most proud of.
|
||
HARRY POTTER BREAKFAST
|
||
For one of our special event days at camp, we transform our community center into the Great
|
||
Hall of Hogwarts and provide the campers with breakfast for lunch. We encourage the campers
|
||
to dress up as their favorite character from the series and we select staff members to be certain
|
||
characters such as Harry Potter or Ron Weasley, who will roam around quoting lines from the
|
||
books and casting spells. The kids love the food, the decorations and the subsequent fantasy
|
||
themed activities they get to do that day.
|
||
The following were some of our decorating ideas:
|
||
• Arrange the tables into four rows to each represent a House and assign the campers to
|
||
different Houses via a Sorting Hat as they enter the room.
|
||
• Create each House banner to hang up
|
||
• Have a potions table where kids can taste some of the concoctions or create their own (use
|
||
old jars or different shapes and create labels for them)
|
||
33 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 39 ---
|
||
• Create the Whomping Willow out of brown packaging paper going up the wall (we even
|
||
placed the Weasley’s car in one of the branches)
|
||
• Spread out a camp themed “Daily Prophet” on the tables as well as other activity pages
|
||
such as crossword puzzles for the kids to read/do during lunch
|
||
• Hang floating candles from the ceiling using fishing wire
|
||
Lastly, we projected one of the Harry Potter movies on the wall. We played the score from a CD
|
||
instead of the actual sounds from the movie since we have younger campers and didn’t want
|
||
them to get frightened from any loud scenes.
|
||
ROTATION CELEBRATION
|
||
We are a day camp with about 40 staff members for about 235 campers. Staff are usually hired to
|
||
work with a specific age group and stick with them all summer. However, this year, we decided
|
||
to rotate our staff around every 2-3 weeks so they had the opportunity to work with all ages and
|
||
three different Program Directors.
|
||
At first, returning staff were a little reluctant and new staff didn’t know better. After the first
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 34
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 40 ---
|
||
rotation, everyone LOVED the move. They got to know all the staff better, some realized they
|
||
enjoyed a different age group more than they thought, and they learned that not all camp
|
||
program directors are created equal.
|
||
To celebrate each rotation, we held a “Rotation Celebration.” We held a social event in town
|
||
(optional of course) that counselors could attend and get to know their new rotation group or
|
||
spend time with their old one. We went out to eat at a Taco place, had a pool party at a staff’s
|
||
house, went for frozen yogurt and did a bowling night. I have to say our staff was closer than
|
||
ever and it made the summer not feel as long, since they moved around.
|
||
COLOR OLYMPIC THEME WEEK
|
||
At our day camp we have different themes each week.
|
||
On the last week of camp, which coincided with the
|
||
Olympics, our theme was The Color Olympics.
|
||
Each group of campers picked a color to be their team
|
||
color and a name for their team. Each team was given
|
||
a large banner size piece of white paper on which they
|
||
designed their own banner using their team name and
|
||
colored markers to represent their team color. We had
|
||
a contest to see who had the best banner. The winning
|
||
team received candy as their prize and was given the
|
||
“Olympic Trophy” to have for the day. In the basement
|
||
of our Recreation Center we found an old centerpiece that had an Olympic theme and looked
|
||
like a trophy. It was made from Styrofoam and colored paper. It had the Olympic rings on it, the
|
||
Olympic Flame and American Flags all over the base.
|
||
Our crafts for the week included coloring your own Frisbee and beach ball. Later in the week we
|
||
used these items in some of our “Olympic” games.
|
||
On Thursday we asked the campers to dress up in their team colors using a certain sport or sport
|
||
team theme if they wished. We took a picture of the whole camp dressed up in their colors and
|
||
the campers we able to take the picture home with them the last day of camp. Again, we had a
|
||
contest for the team that was the best dressed. We gave small prizes to the group that was voted
|
||
the best.
|
||
AMAZING RACE AT CAMP
|
||
Our best and most popular theme day every year is the Amazing Race. We base the whole day
|
||
on the reality show. We do this instead of colour war because I don’t like the whole “war” word.
|
||
35 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 41 ---
|
||
We split the campers into two teams...each bunk with the counsellors are in 2 teams. No one gets
|
||
a schedule. Counsellors must participate.
|
||
They race to the “airport” for their first clue which takes them to a “country”. Once at the country
|
||
they have challenges they must complete including roadblocks and detours. The challenges we
|
||
come up with are related to the country they are in.
|
||
They receive points throughout the day and can only get their next clue once the counsellors
|
||
compete in an activity against each other, too. So the
|
||
children do the challenge and then the counsellors
|
||
compete in something as well. The children love seeing
|
||
their counsellors get so involved.
|
||
There is so much, spirit, fun and of course messiness in
|
||
this day of competition. It takes a while to coordinate
|
||
all the clues so bunks don’t overlap, and they have to
|
||
stop at the airport for tickets after each country.
|
||
ADVENTURE CHALLENGE
|
||
We started an “adventure challenge” a couple of summers ago, and it has been going really well.
|
||
It’s a decathlon-type event, using a lot of our outdoor adventure facilities, such as rock climbing,
|
||
archery, riflery, biking, swimming, boating, etc.
|
||
The campers sign up in pairs, and run it like a relay, choosing which of them will compete in
|
||
each event. It takes about 2 hours, we run about 4 heats of 5 teams each, and we run it during
|
||
youth camp. We have a big trophy that the winners get their names engraved on, and we display
|
||
it throughout the summer, even in the younger weeks, to inspire campers to want to come back
|
||
and participate in youth camp.
|
||
MIDNIGHT MADNESS
|
||
A couple of times throughout the summer, we wake up the campers at midnight, and have a
|
||
huge bonfire, and snacks, music and dancing, and games and things. It’s a lot of work, but a lot
|
||
of fun.
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 36
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 42 ---
|
||
HOUSE POINTS
|
||
One of the things we did new this year, was offer ‘House Points’ (we had a Harry Potter Theme).
|
||
Units earned points based on participation in activities, for displaying Girl Scout values and
|
||
behavior, and helping out and various things.
|
||
The unit leaders, program facilitators, and other Camp staff had authority to give points. At the
|
||
end of camp, we tallied the points and awarded a Camp Trophy to the winning unit during the
|
||
Parent Program.
|
||
We are going to have a banner made that we will update each year and will include the winner
|
||
of the Trophy each year, so campers can look back and see when they won.
|
||
We found that campers were more engaged, more helpful, and more willing to find things to
|
||
do to earn points. We did find we needed to address with some of the unit leaders that this was
|
||
meant to be fun. Some unit leaders were right on top of points, others not so much, so when
|
||
one unit seemed to have A LOT more points than the others, there was some discouragement.
|
||
We stressed to the unit leaders, and campers, that they still had the opportunity to earn points,
|
||
allowed them to evaluate the previous day when they were less on top of the points and submit
|
||
points, and that ultimately, everyone is a winner, if they participated and had fun.
|
||
The biggest part of this was getting the Unit Leaders and Older Girl Caddies to remain positive
|
||
about it. If they get discouraged or grumbling about it being unfair then the campers will pick
|
||
that up too, and it would not work as well.
|
||
We had some negative point activities, like being late to flag ceremony, or a program activity.
|
||
Things went so well, that we started flag ceremony 5 minutes EARLY on the last day. And we
|
||
were cleaned up from camp and heading home within 90 minutes (instead of 3 or more hours)
|
||
because so many campers offered to help out during the kaper time on the last day.
|
||
We had ‘special’ paper that points were awarded on...to make sure that all points were official.
|
||
And the sheets needed to say, Who awarded the Points, Which Unit they were for, and What the
|
||
points were for.
|
||
Our points scheme: Points Who can Issue
|
||
Display GS Behavior 10 pts. Any Volunteer
|
||
Pick up litter (no tearing) 1 pt per piece Any volunteer
|
||
Minimal waste at meals 1 pt per person Unit Leader/Caddie
|
||
(this encourages taking only what you will eat)
|
||
Late to Activity -10 pts Activity Leader
|
||
Late to flag ceremony -50 pts Director
|
||
Participation in Activity up to 20 pts Activity Leader
|
||
Special Services to camp varies Any volunteer
|
||
Daily Prophet submission 10 pts Editor (camp newsletter)
|
||
Scavenger Hunt/Hike 1 pt per item found Activity or Unit leader
|
||
37 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 43 ---
|
||
I got so much good feedback from the volunteers about how this
|
||
encouraged good behavior and good participation that we have
|
||
decided that this will continue to be a traditional thing at camp.
|
||
One of the things we did new this year, was offer ‘House Points’ (we had a Harry Potter Theme).
|
||
We used a Whiteboard calendar turned sideways, marked the 5
|
||
columns with each Unit Color (we had 5 units) and then marked with
|
||
colored whiteboard markers each day the points that were earned.
|
||
The unit leaders, program facilitators, and other Camp staff had authority to give points. At the
|
||
This was kept near the Flag Pole so units could check on their progress
|
||
each day. We asked the Unit Leaders to turn in the days points during
|
||
check out, and tallied overnight.
|
||
On the last day, we had a last call just before the closing ceremony, and announced the winner.
|
||
Ultimately, all units were within 100 points of each other so it was a pretty close race, and those
|
||
We found that campers were more engaged, more helpful, and more willing to find things to last minute points helped to make the difference.
|
||
do to earn points. We did find we needed to address with some of the unit leaders that this was
|
||
RED CARPET EVENT
|
||
For the end of summer we did a “Red Carpet” event. This
|
||
The biggest part of this was getting the Unit Leaders and Older Girl Caddies to remain positive was a Talent Showcase for our summer campers to share their
|
||
talents. We had it on a Friday night and invited all the parents,
|
||
it also doubled as a Fund Raiser for our new playground.
|
||
We had some negative point activities, like being late to flag ceremony, or a program activity. The show was Hollywood Theme and everyone dressed for
|
||
Things went so well, that we started flag ceremony 5 minutes EARLY on the last day. And we the red carpet. It was a huge success! We raised $600.00 in 2
|
||
hours. :-)
|
||
because so many campers offered to help out during the kaper time on the last day.
|
||
A few things we did included:
|
||
We had ‘special’ paper that points were awarded on...to make sure that all points were official. • the walk of fame (children’s handprints all laminat-
|
||
ed together to create a side walk look)
|
||
• having our preschoolers do art work that we mat-
|
||
ted ourselves and put on display
|
||
• sold buttons of the kids with pictures we took
|
||
during the summer
|
||
• made a summer camp DVD.
|
||
Pick up litter (no tearing) 1 pt per piece Any volunteer
|
||
The parents enjoyed it so much that I have been ask to do this
|
||
at the end of every summer! Here are some pictures.
|
||
Late to flag ceremony -50 pts Director
|
||
Daily Prophet submission 10 pts Editor (camp newsletter)
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 38
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 44 ---
|
||
SAFARI HUNT
|
||
This is a themed counselor hunt. Take 20 staff members and have them dressed/painted as
|
||
different animals. If you want to add a point element, attach a point value to each “animal”
|
||
based on their characteristics (speed, camouflage, ferocity, etc.). The counselors hide around
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||
camp and the campers are sent out to find them.
|
||
THEMED MEALS
|
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Themed meals - we did a lot of themed meals this summer, and they are always really popular.
|
||
Here are some of the favorites.
|
||
STOP AND GO MEAL
|
||
The camp director and assistant camp director have a whistle, and the meal starts. Every time
|
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the whistle is blown, everyone has to stop what they are doing, and be completely still and not
|
||
talk. When the whistle blows again, they are allowed to move/talk.
|
||
If anyone moves/talks/laughs in between the whistle blowing when everyone is supposed to be
|
||
still, they start to loose items. First, campers will loose their forks, and then knifes, spoons, left
|
||
arm, right arm (so they start to eat with their faces) and then bench, so they start to eat standing
|
||
up using faces (only loose one thing at a time). The campers really enjoyed this, and the more
|
||
times the whistle is blown the better.
|
||
39 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
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--- PAGE 45 ---
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SHIPWRECKED MEAL
|
||
The silverware is taken away from the table, and instead everyone is given just one utensil to
|
||
eat the whole meal with. However, utensils are items like spatulas, large mixing spoons, ladles,
|
||
large forks etc, anything but the conventional fork, knife and spoon. They have to use this utensil
|
||
no matter what the food is, and they only get one utensil.
|
||
Before this meal starts, it is usually announced that the camp has been shipwrecked on an island,
|
||
so we only have strange items to eat with. It is also really funny to see the kids and staff eat a
|
||
chicken breast with a ladle.
|
||
T-REX MEAL
|
||
This meal was made up by a camper. Everyone has to move their arms into the side of their
|
||
bodies, just under the shoulders to give themselves small T-Rex arms. I’m not to sure how to
|
||
describe this, but pretend your arms are imitating a T-Rex dinosaur. Everyone has to eat the
|
||
whole meal keeping their arms like this, so everyone has to bend over to cut their food, pick up
|
||
their water, etc.
|
||
THE AVENGERS EVENING ACTIVITY
|
||
One of the most popular evening activities we had this year was an avengers theme.
|
||
SET UP
|
||
All the campers were brought together, and split into groups of ten and of mixed ages . One staff
|
||
member was assigned to each group to supervise them.
|
||
Prior to the campers being grouped, we had a staff member dress up as each Avenger superhero
|
||
(Captain America, Thor, the Hulk, Black Widow, Iron Man and Hawkeye). The superheroes all
|
||
hid around the camp within a certain boundary.
|
||
Also hidden around the camp, was something each superhero needed. For example, Captain
|
||
America’s shields were hidden, Hawkeye’s arrows, Thor’s hammers (the kids were told they
|
||
were able to pick them up), the Hulk’s gamma bombs, Black Widow’s toy guns, and Iron Man’s
|
||
lights to replace the ones in his suit (we used flashlights). They were hidden away from the
|
||
superheros. So, for example, Thor was hiding by the arts and crafts building and his hammers
|
||
were beside the dining hall.
|
||
Every other staff member was dressed up as an alien, and were hiding all over the camp activity
|
||
boundary.
|
||
THE ACTIVITY
|
||
All the campers were gathered and grouped, and told by the program director that they were in
|
||
the middle of a crises, that Loki and his aliens were wanting to take over the camp, and that the
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 40
|
||
|
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--- PAGE 46 ---
|
||
campers had to find the Avengers and bring them together to fight the aliens, as they were the
|
||
only ones who could stop the take over.
|
||
Each group were given a map of the boundary and a pen, and had to set of to find they Avengers.
|
||
When they found a hero, they explained the situation, and the hero would reply along the lines
|
||
that they would love to help, but they need their ______ (whatever item it is they have hidden).
|
||
The campers would then have to find the item and bring it back to the superhero, who would
|
||
then agree to help, and sign the back of their map.
|
||
When the campers ran into aliens, the aliens would take the superhero’s item from the campers,
|
||
and tell them they could only get it back if they sing a song. answer a riddle/do a dance etc. The
|
||
aliens could decided if they would give it back or not, and they would take how much time
|
||
was left in the game in consideration (if there was a lot of time left, and the campers had most
|
||
of the superhero’s signatures they would keep the item, if they had hardly any superheroe’s
|
||
signatures they would give it back straight away).
|
||
The campers had an hour and a half to do this, and they had to stay with their group at all
|
||
times - no group separation. When the activity ended, all the groups gathered in the center
|
||
of camp, and the program director would ask who found what superhero. Meanwhile, all the
|
||
superheroes gathered beside the campers, and the aliens hid around the corner.
|
||
Once all the superheroes were questioned and it turned out we had all of them, it was announced
|
||
that mosey wood would be safe if there was an attack. At that moment, all the aliens ran around
|
||
the corner towards the Avengers, and the Avengers chased them away. The whole camp cheered
|
||
because they helped get rid of the aliens, and we knew the camp was safe!
|
||
HOLIDAZE CELEBRATIONS
|
||
The best thing we did in our summer day camp that was voted top activity was actually a theme
|
||
week, “Holidaze Celebrations”. Each day had a different theme and the activity pertained to
|
||
that theme.
|
||
MONDAY
|
||
We divided the kids into four groups, each group was assigned a holiday to decorate for. We
|
||
had Christmas decorations mixed in with Halloween and Easter mixed in with Valentine’s Day.
|
||
TUESDAY
|
||
ValenEaster Day Hunt – It was girls against boys, girls were Bunnies and boys were Cupids.
|
||
Staff hid paper hearts filled with valentine candy and plastic eggs filled with Easter candy.
|
||
Bunnies had to find the eggs and Cupids had to find the hearts. Whoever found the most in a
|
||
given amount of time, won the game. The candy was divided evenly among groups.
|
||
WEDNESDAY
|
||
Christmas in July – We had a snowball fight with crumpled up newspaper, sang Christmas carols,
|
||
41 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 47 ---
|
||
played “Pass the Parcel” game. (We wrapped Christmas trinkets and candy between layers of
|
||
wrapping paper and on the wrapping paper was sticky note with an instruction to perform
|
||
something funny, - do jumping jacks while humming Jingle Bells. The parcel was passed around
|
||
the circle as music played. When the music stopped the person holding the parcel unwrapped a
|
||
layer, performed the task and then got the prize.)
|
||
THURSDAY
|
||
Halloween Trick or Treating – the kids made masks in the morning and then they went Trick or
|
||
Treating around to all the staff.
|
||
FRIDAY
|
||
Happy New Birthday Eve Dance Party – the kids made party hats with the year they were born
|
||
on it. We had a special countdown at noon and everyone yelled the year they were born instead
|
||
of Happy New Year. We then had a dance party in the afternoon.
|
||
MAGGOT ART
|
||
Yes, you heard right. Get some maggots from a fly bait place (can order them online too). Squeeze
|
||
a little bit of tempera paint on a piece of paper (construction paper works well) and drop a few
|
||
maggots in the paint, then watch as they squirm around and paint you a picture! Photo below.
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 42
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 48 ---
|
||
WALKING TACOS
|
||
I get a lot of wonderful ideas off of my favorite website- Pinterest. This is one of them and the
|
||
staff and campers are still talking about it- And HOW EASY!
|
||
Walking Tacos- Best meal of the summer!
|
||
Give each kid an individual bag of Doritos or nacho’s- ask them to crush the chips inside
|
||
We then served buffet style the following:
|
||
• Taco meat (ground beef cooked with taco seasoning and water)
|
||
• Shredded lettuce
|
||
• Chopped tomatoes
|
||
• Shredded cheese
|
||
• Salsa
|
||
• Sour cream
|
||
We also prepared Spanish rice and had them served in plastic cups.
|
||
The kids created their own portable tacos! They loved them. Thank you Pinterest!
|
||
TARGET.COM
|
||
BEAD REWARD PROGRAM
|
||
I have to say one of the best things from camp this summer is that we started a bead reward
|
||
program and it was a huge success! I remember reading about it last year in the spring and really
|
||
43 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 49 ---
|
||
wanting to implement it last summer but we just didn’t get it to come together in time, but this
|
||
year we put the finishing touches on it and it was great!!
|
||
We had several colored beads we used for different behavior rewards, as well as others that
|
||
matched specific activities, and more still that were specific to the theme of each week! We too
|
||
used the fuzzy beads during our “blast from the past” week, and the kids loved them!
|
||
Some of our other favorite beads were:
|
||
• Bucket charms-backyard week
|
||
• Jelly bean shaped-cooking week
|
||
• Animal charms-jungle week
|
||
• Sports beads, glow in the dark beads, uv beads and more!
|
||
To help make the idea work with our day camp program, we gave each child a chain necklace
|
||
and alphabet beads the first week, then they collected beads throughout the summer to add to
|
||
the collection. We had a peg board with tacks to hang their chains, and labeled them to keep
|
||
track each day. We took the time during morning announcements to recognize the campers,
|
||
and we rewarded them at the end of the summer with an ice cream social if they reached their
|
||
behavior bead totals (which they all did!)
|
||
Watching the kids look forward to reaching the beads, keeping track of their progress, helping
|
||
friends, they were really invested in it all summer and it was great!
|
||
THE HUNGRY GAMES
|
||
We had the HUNGRY GAMES, which were games based on food, of course.
|
||
• Our campers had to spell as many words as they could out of Spaghetti O’s A-Z’s
|
||
before the other team.
|
||
• They stomped grapes to see how much juice they could fill in a pitcher.
|
||
• They had to pick up marbles in spaghetti with their feet and put them in a container
|
||
without using their hands.
|
||
• They had to find food hidden in whipped cream without using their hands.
|
||
• and many more, ending with S’mores and a hayride.
|
||
The kids had a blast, as well as our staff.
|
||
WISHBOAT CEREMONY
|
||
A wishboat ceremony is where the campers make a boat out of natural material, such as a piece
|
||
100 Outstanding Summer Camp Program Ideas 44
|
||
|
||
--- PAGE 50 ---
|
||
of bark or lightweight wood whatever will float. We then put a small
|
||
birthday candle on the boat, and at the ceremony they make a wish and
|
||
set their boat out to float in the lake.
|
||
We did a ceremony specific to Girl Scouts but it can be used in any
|
||
organization. We also did it where they made boats in units because there
|
||
were too many campers for them to each do a boat.
|
||
I’M A CELEBRITY...GET ME OUT OF HERE
|
||
Our camp was based around the ‘I’m a celebrity...get me out of here’ show.
|
||
We did food tasting, touch and feel, slime boxes etc as well as cooking food for themselves using
|
||
triangas.
|
||
Activities that were popular were orienteering and the assault course.
|
||
The slime boxes were simply boxes filled with
|
||
• soil and shells
|
||
• spaghetti and oil
|
||
• blamanche with plastic spiders
|
||
• an ice filled rubber glove that has had fingers chopped off
|
||
…anything really that will make the girls scream and reluctant to put their hands in the boxes.
|
||
We made it more difficult by adding an incentive to make sure they all felt the need to participate
|
||
- inside some of the boxes would be stars. Each star collected meant more food for the team!
|
||
As for the assault course, we led the girls to a wooded area, gave them some logs, sticks, string
|
||
and tarpaulin. Each patrol had to assemble their own obstacle and then everyone took a turn at
|
||
the completed assault course. Everyone had to vote which obstacle was the best.
|
||
OLD TIME OLYMPICS
|
||
The activities selected were badminton, marbles, jacks, and croquet. Jumprope was a big hit
|
||
with the crowd. Everyone attempted to do double-dutch.
|
||
Each person could rotate on their own and select their activity. Staff was on hand to participate
|
||
if a partner was needed. It was a fun time! Sno cones, popcorn and cotton candy were served.
|
||
45 SummerCampProgramDirector.com
|