Boys Summer Camp | Overnight Summer Camps | Camp O-AT-KA

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  • Опубликовано: 24 окт 2024
  • www.campoatka.com
    Boys Summer Camp, Camp O-AT-KA is about living close to nature, and it's also about developing skills and having fun. We are pleased to provide exceptional, well-maintained facilities to make that possible.
    Camp facilities include 22 wooden cabins. These provide natural and ideal group living quarters. The Goff Center, a seven-studio arts center, is home to our extensive crafts program. We have rifle and archery ranges, as well as a private sandy beach and protected cove for swimming and aquatic sports.
    For land sports, Camp O-AT-KA offers a covered basketball court, an adventure challenge course, a climbing wall, and two large outdoor playing fields. The Wheeler Tennis Center features three clay courts and two hard-surfaced courts.
    The Great Hall is ideal for drama, dances, and movie nights. Campers come to the dining commons three times daily to enjoy family-style meals prepared by camp chefs. The camp also has a screened woodland chapel used daily for Password and Sunday services.
    The seven-bed infirmary enables the nursing staff to properly attend to the campers needs.
    Our Overnight Summer Camps at Camp O-AT-KA have all the facilities and quality equipment boys need for a summer of fun and challenge!
    Camp O-AT-KA offers opportunities for fun, challenge, and growth. Our campers are divided in three age groups: Juniors, Middlers, and Seniors--life at camp is slightly different for each.
    The primary difference lies in structure vs. independence. As the boys grow and develop, they are given more opportunities to be independent, to be leaders, and to make their own choices and decisions.
    Juniors
    The junior unit campers are the youngest boys at our boys summer camp, ranging in age from eight to eleven years, entering third through sixth grades. These campers have a very structured program of activities throughout their day. When the campers are not in their individual activities, they participate in group games, supervised rest time, and other activities in their own woodland unit. They enjoy their special role at camp and look forward to becoming Middlers and Seniors in the years to come.
    Middlers
    Boys entering seventh and eighth grades, usually age 12-13, make up the middle unit. These campers can choose from a wider range of activities, and are given the opportunity to develop a greater sense of independence in all aspects of their daily lives. Evening program and trip days continue to be organized as all-unit activities. Middlers also have the opportunity to go on extended wilderness trips.
    Seniors
    The oldest campers at camp live in the senior unit. These boys are entering ninth and tenth grades, and are as old as 16. As befits their status, seniors are given greater autonomy and choice, both in their daily schedules and in their unstructured time. They respond well to this opportunity, and many seniors strive to make a good impression so that they will be chosen to participate in the Counselor in Training program during the summer before 11th grade.
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