Posts Tagged ‘summer camp traditions’

It’s a Camp Thing

Friday, November 18th, 2011

If you have children who attend sleepaway camp, work at a sleepaway camp, or know anyone who attends or works at a sleepaway camp, chances are that you’ve heard this at least once in your life: “It’s a camp thing.”  For those of you wondering what that means, here’s an exclusive look inside the world of sleepaway camp and exactly what constitutes “a camp thing”.

We’ll begin with a definition.  “A camp thing” is an experience or tradition that is unique to summer camp.  It’s also actually “camp things” rather than a singular “thing”, since there are a host of experiences exclusive to the summer camp environment.  For instance, have you ever sang a song about pretending to have a moustache on your face or danced around the dining room waving your napkin?  Nope?  Yep.  “Camp things.”  How about taken part in a competition, spread over several days, that divides the entire camp into two teams and requires contestants to do such things as cover their heads with shaving cream so that a teammate can attempt to make cheese curls stick to it or dress in team gear that includes crazy garb such as tutus, mismatched socks, and face paint?  Nope?  Do you know why?  They’re “camp things”.  Ever sat alongside several hundred other people around a campfire while you watch friends and staff members perform crazy acts, sing songs or participate in games?  Nope?  Yeah…it’s another “camp thing”.

In case it’s not obvious, “camp things” happen every day at camp, from that first moment when you get off the bus and see your camp friends and your new counselors holding your bunk signs for the first time to the last when you’re saying ‘goodbye until next summer.’  Camp things are being part of a league sports team, whether it wins or loses, going on a special trip out of camp to get ice cream, performing rituals and eating s’mores around a campfire, sitting with your friends at cookouts, taking part in the traditions that are unique to each and every summer camp, and understanding the feeling of being part of a camp family.  Camp things are having sleepovers with your bunk or having a venue in which you and your camp friends can pretend to be a rock band, DJs, or magicians.  Camp things are that special inside joke that your friends  share all summer, end-of-the-summer trips out of camp, sing-a-longs when you’re arm-in-arm with your camp friends.  And hugging some of your best friends while singing your camp alma mater and watching candles burn or fireworks explode, knowing that you might not see them again until next summer, is definitely the most precious of “camp things”.  If only everyone could experience “a camp thing”…

Summer Camp: Defining Routine and Ritual

Friday, September 30th, 2011

Routines.  Everyone has them.  For some, they encompass everything that takes place from the time we wake in the morning until we go to bed at night.  For others, they come in short bursts throughout the day, such as at mealtimes or bedtime.  However, establishing routines as daily parts of our lives is important, especially for children.  Childcare experts agree that establishing regular routines for children is essential for healthy development.  The Center on the Social and Emotional Foundations for Early Learning reports that “Studies have documented that schedules and routines influence children’s emotional, cognitive, and social development.”

It’s no secret that summer camps provide loose routines that allow room for healthy creative development through structured daily programs and schedules that maintain consistent meal, activity, and bedtimes.  Maintaining a routine throughout the summer is also valuable in easing the transition from summer to fall and back into summer again.  However, one special aspect of summer camp that is often overlooked is that it helps children learn to understand the difference between routine and ritual—what makes one necessity and the other tradition.

Barbara H. Fiese, Ph.D., Syracuse University, defines routine as something that “involves a momentary time commitment so that once the act is completed, there is little, if any, afterthought.”  However, she defines ritual as “symbolic communication” that has “continuity in meaning across generations.”  Rituals take place within the home family setting.  However, for children, it’s not always clear how to tell the difference between what is done simply to be done and what is  done because it’s significant to their heritage.  This is where the summer camp ritual takes on a special significance.  Even executives such as Michael Eisner have publicly recalled the important role that summer camp rituals have played in their lives.

Summer camp often draws a distinct line between routine and ritual.  Campers understand, for instance, that cleaning their bunks or cabins everyday is part of a routine.  That following an activities schedule is part of routine.  That hearing TAPS in the evening to signal bedtime is a part of routine.  They, too, understand that campfires, however regular, are rituals.  They are more than just a fire that they gather around to eat s’mores.  Campfires have meaning that goes far beyond the fire itself.  The same can be said about opening night shows, closing, and fireworks.  Campers understand that these are not just routines done merely to achieve a goal.  They’re rituals that make their summer camp the place that it is and them a part of it.

By being able to tell the difference, children are able to accept routine as something that needs to be done and prevent rituals from simply becoming routine by understanding the value in them.  Dr. Fiese says that children will often revisit memories of rituals in order to “recapture some of the positive.” experience.”  This perhaps explains why so many camp rituals remain sacred to campers far passed their camping years.   At Camp Starlight, several rituals come together throughout the summer to create an atmosphere of family, friends, and tradition:

The rituals begin almost from the moment campers arrive.  The Opening Night show is a first night tradition in which the staff formally introduces itself in always creative and entertaining ways, veteran campers and staff reacquaint themselves with some of their favorite sing-along songs (Singin’ in the Rain, Can’t Smile without You, and the Starlight Alma Mater, anyone?), and campers and staff who are new to Starlight become familiar with one of the most symbolic and important gathering places on the Camp Starlight campus—The Starlight Playhouse.  For everyone, it’s the initiation into the Starlight family.

Campfires play an important role at Camp Starlight throughout the summer as well.  At the beginning of camp, they help campers and counselors alike bond by setting a theme and introducing Starlight values.  At the end of camp, as the scenes of bunk plaque presentations to directors Allison and David, they provide closure.  Bunk plaques are emblems through which each bunk has the opportunity to show what its campers and counselors are taking away from the summer.  The Starlight Dining Room is adorned with them and everyone at Starlight spends countless hours reminiscing about and reflecting on their significance.

The end of the summer at Camp Starlight is full of rituals that bring the fun to a meaningful close.  Every year, around the first week of August, campers can be heard chanting “1,3, 5, 6, we want Olympics!”  The always secretive Olympic break is a hot topic of conversation from the day campers arrive and,  inevitably, one of the most exciting moments of each summer.  But perhaps the most unique thing about Olympics is that even though it’s a competition, it’s actually about coming together as a family and respecting how each and every individual makes valuable contributions to that family.  Within Olympics are such valued rituals as the always crazy and exciting Apache Relay, which is a race in which campers are given the opportunity to demonstrate what they’ve learned over the summer; Rope Burn, a sacred event for Senior campers and one that many former campers list for years to come as one of the most significant events of their camp careers; and Sing, an event that comes near the end of Olympics and involves the two Olympic teams dueling through song.  The themes are always awe inspiring, the lyrics nothing less than impressive, and the sets fabulous….especially considering that such a wonderful show is put together in less than a week by some very passionate campers and staff members.  Sing never fails to be as emotionally significant as it is entertaining.

A banquet and a fireworks display (known as the “burning of the lake”) close out the summer.  Banquet is a family meal.  It’s a time when everyone formally says, “thank you” for all of the great times over the summer and exemplary staff members are honored.  Banquet is even more significant for the Upper Senior Girls, who work tirelessly every year to come up with a theme, décor, and a menu.  The “burning of the lake” isn’t just any fireworks display.  It’s symbolic in many ways.  It’s a night when everyone says goodbye, when the camp alma mater takes on a different kind of significance for many older campers, and the year is quite literally burned away to make room for the next.

Everything I Need to Know, I Learned at Summer Camp

Friday, September 9th, 2011

Back in 1988, the book Everything I Need to Know, I Learned in Kindergarten was written by Robert Fulghum. However true the points the author makes may be, it is arguable that those who go to summer camp would feel otherwise. Although summer camp is packed full of fun times, arts and crafts projects, and songs around a campfire, it is also an experience rich in life lessons that carry on far into adulthood. Children who are still of camping age probably think that a crazy concept.  To them summer is simply two months filled with sports, activities, and bonding time with their friends. But those who are past the age of those simple days of fun in the sun feel certain they have taken far more from their summers spent at camp.

The years a child spends away at summer camp are the years when development is at an all time high. It is the age when a children build the foundation of their personalities, life attitudes, and personal relationships with others. The most basic lesson hidden in the experience of going to summer camp is the independence found in leaving the familiarity of family and friends at home. Going off to a new place without mom or dad around to help manage time and personal space is a giant step in the right direction for learning personal responsibility. In joining a group of kids their own age as a unit, the children learn to accept compromise, share, and respect others in a fun environment. As they step into the bunk, they also learn the roles of new authority figures in their counselors, instructors, and camp administration.

The relationships founded between counselor and camper are bonds that are remembered for many years past the days spent in the bunks together. These friendships teach respect and acceptance of the new adult assuming the position of summer caretaker for the child. It is a gentle transition, as the role of a counselor is generally focused on the child having a great time but also ensuring the child is safe, fair, and well-taken care of. Children learn that authority figures are not to be seen solely as someone who tells them what to do, but as someone who genuinely cares about their welfare, progress, and interactions with those around them. Camps enact policies such as group clean-ups and team building exercises utilize the necessary time spent doing chores and outdoor activities to become educational experiences for each child. The concepts of personal responsibility and teamwork become second nature at camp, and they are indispensable as the child moves on to college and adulthood.

Another indispensable quality learned through staff member relationships with campers is the characteristics of “coach-ability”; the acceptance of instruction and constructive criticism. Every summer, children are excited to spend time on the fields and courts during athletic activity periods. While they are learning the proper way to shoot a lay-up, they are also engaging in a fun, educational lesson in observing and learning from others. While they obviously enjoy one area more than others, they are expected to both try and improve in the all activities. They spend the day with others in their bunks or divisions who have different interests and strengths and, through those performances, are able to see that everyone has their own niche and range of capabilities. This builds the early cornerstone of mutual respect amongst others and the idea that they can learn something from another person, even if that subject matter does not necessarily spark their full interest. The camp implementing full participation expectations from every child also teaches them the idea that they should always play a part in the activity and do their best at the task at hand.

The final lesson most prevalent in a child’s growth in camping is the sense of pride that is found in being part of a group and engaging in its traditions. For years to come, former campers will reflect on campfires, evening activities, sing-alongs, and the everyday routines of their camp days as fond memories spent at a place where they found their summer home. There is a spirit of pride and camaraderie when they see a person from their camp get into a highly renowned university, publish their first book, or take the field as a collegiate or professional athlete. A shared sense of accomplishment for that person shows the strength of the bonds found in camp friendships and the acknowledgement of others’ personal victories. Those in their post-camping days find that through painting their faces, raising their voices in a round, and taking roles on as senior campers stick with them in later years as a sense of unity amongst a group of people. By taking part in something that stood before them and has continued on without them, they carry with them the role they played in a part of the history of that place. The good feelings and happiness found both in the moment and in years to come instills in a camper the value of relationships with others and taking pride in an establishment. This further develops loyalty and commitment in other organizations ranging from teams, sororities or fraternities, community service projects, and even in the professional corporations they find themselves in later in life.

In conclusion, it may seem that the issues at hand make a simple summer spent with friends too serious. However, those who look back on their experiences in camping with fond memories know the things they learned at camp are still with them. The relationships built often outlast those of neighborhood and schoolyard friends, and in them they find some of their greatest confidantes and oldest friends. The tools gained through taking part in summers at camp haven proven useful in the obstacles faced years later. Therefore, it is quite obvious to those who at some point called themselves a camper that they truly learned everything they needed to know at camp!

Another Summer Has Come to a Close…

Wednesday, August 17th, 2011

We can’t believe how fast another summer flew by.  It truly is a privilege for us to be able to host so many campers each summer.  We’re sad that the Summer of 2011 has already drawn to a close, but excited to begin planning for the Summer of 2012.  For us, our greatest challenge is to make each summer better than the previous.  That’s a hard thing to live up to when the current summer has been so amazing!  Collectively, we really couldn’t have asked for a better group of parents, campers, or staff members.  We know that all of you are what makes Camp Starlight!  We can’t wait to meet those who will be joining us for the first time in 2012 and to welcome back all of our friends!  To everyone, here’s to living 10 for 2…until our next 2!

Camp Memories – Alumni Blog #2

Saturday, July 16th, 2011

Dani S was writing in blog class today about how time seems to go by very differently at camp to when she’s at home.  To quote, “At Camp Starlight, the days are long but if you blink, you’ll miss a week,” and she couldn’t have put it more precisely.  Visiting Day is upon us already and it seems like only yesterday since the campers first got off the buses.  So, for those people who are no longer able to come to Camp Starlight, the memories are so vivid it seems like only yesterday since you were here, yet in the same way it seems like such a long time ago.

As Camp Starlight celebrates its 65th anniversary, we look around and see while campers and staff may come and go, they all leave their mark.  At the start of this summer there were 2,652 bunk plaques hung on the rafters in the dining hall.  From the ten bunks who started it all in 1947, to the 50 bunks we have today, every camper who has ever spent the season with us is literally ingrained into the fabric of the building.  Every time you look up you see a plaque you never noticed before, read new names and wonder who they were and what their time was like at camp.

This morning, David pointed out two stars which had been buried in the ground by the flagpole forty years ago to celebrate 25 years at Camp Starlight.  These were only discovered a couple of years ago and had been hidden in the flowerbed for safe-keeping.  They are now proudly on show for all to see and remind us of summers past.  This year we are collecting various pieces of camp memorabilia to go into the 65th anniversary time capsule for future generations to find.  Live for the present, remember the past and look for the future and you can be guaranteed that the best memento of camp life is the memories which will never die.

Alumni blog #1

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

If you’ve ever spent the summer at Camp Starlight then the chances are that when the end of June comes around each year, your mind starts to wander back to those days spent in the gorgeous Pocono Mountains.  Once you’ve been part of camp then it has a special place in your heart which never leaves you. 

Just because our alumni can’t be here with us in person each year, doesn’t mean that they can’t continue to be a part of Camp Starlight.  Just look at the plaques on the rafters of the dining hall and every one of you has a place forever here.   You form part of the traditions and spirit of Camp Starlight which the campers here today enjoy, not forgetting you’re part of the ever growing Starlight family. 

We will be running a special blog throughout the summer which will hopefully bring those memories flooding back to you and make you feel like you’re almost here too.

The photo illustrating this blog was requested by Shelley Shapiro Nolan who joined as a camper aged just seven in 1947 and rose through the ranks to become a counselor, spending her last summer here in 1959.  Hope you like it Shelley!

Starlight Stars

Saturday, July 2nd, 2011

Anyone who has been lucky enough to spend the summer at Camp Starlight will know that on a clear night, away from the lights, the sky is simply breathtaking.  It’s like you can see every single star in the sky and if you look long enough you’ll almost certainly see a shooting star.  It surely must have been the inspiration when giving the camp a name.

Our website allows all our campers, staff, parents and alumni to see the camp sky whenever they want through our “Name a Star” page which can be found at http://www.campstarlight.com/#/view-stars  Not only can you dedicate a star in your name, but you can write about your favorite Starlight moment for everyone to see.  Jake Z’s best moment was winning Olympics in his first year as a Lower Junior, and for Sydney it’s about waking up on Krispy Kreme mornings.  Camp Starlight means so many different things to so many people.  On our 65th Anniversary, please take the time to leave your own message in the Starlight sky and leave a lasting memory for us all to share.

Campfire

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Campfire night at Camp Starlight is a very special night, with both boys and girls having their own campfires at their respective lakefronts.  Everyone has met their camp big brothers and sisters and a real sense of family and friendship can be felt.  For the seniors it is also a time to share what camp means to them.

Allison and David met everyone at their respective campfires and tiki torches were lit for each of the Camp Starlight values.  The seniors who had been at camp the longest were then invited to light the campfire. This summer is about making memories that will last a lifetime, having a giant sleepover every night with such special people and knowing that there are so many old friends you can always count on.  For every child there’s the knowledge that each summer there is a second home waiting for them and they can treasure every moment of camp life. 

The evening progressed with lots of singing and sharing of thoughts and feelings, including messages from counselors who used to be campers.  There were also smores for everyone – a campfire wouldn’t be a campfire without them!  Campfire brings us all closer together and for many is one of the highlights of the summer.  At the end of the evening we all looked up and through the broken cloud a single star could be seen.  We all made a wish for the summer on that same star, knowing that the Starlight magic would make it come true.

Senior Spotlight #1

Monday, June 27th, 2011

The 65th summer at Camp Starlight is going to be extra special for one group of campers in particular.  For the Upper Seniors this will be their last year as campers and it’s invariably going to be a rollercoaster of emotions.  The blog this summer will therefore dedicate a whole section to what it is like to be a Senior at Camp Starlight – thoughts and feelings, reminiscing about summers past and looking to the future.  Please join us on this very special journey.

Opening Night Show here reminds us of the core values of Camp Starlight – Spirit, Tradition, Adventure, Family and Fun.  From the very first day our Seniors joined us they have learned how camp enriches their lives and they were keen to lead by example in the show.  The boys presented the banners representing the values of Camp Starlight in an opening ceremony and the girls took part in the very moving tradition of the passing of a candle from a CA to one of the Upper Senior girls that have been at camp the longest.  The girls all then sang the “Alma Mater” by candlelight and it must be said that there were a few teary eyes.  The annual opening night camp sing-a-long is where the Seniors came into their element with “Singing in the rain” on stage with David and Allison being a real highlight. 

Being a Senior at Camp Starlight really is something special.  They are already young leaders, eager and ready to pass on the gift of camp to younger children.  Let’s make this summer the best one yet!

The Starlight Playhouse

Wednesday, May 25th, 2011

As the summer of 2011 approaches, the Starlight Playhouse will soon come alive. There are images of the Rec Hall lights dimming while a hush rolls over the roar of the crowd running through my mind.  I hear Jeff Moss announcing “Ladies and gentleman and children of all ages, the Starlight Playhouse proudly presents…” At that moment, electricity ignites the lights, speakers, and microphones and the red velvet curtains open, displaying the talented and dedicated actors and performers that deliver once in a lifetime performances that the socks off the delighted audience.

As we wait to find out what the 2011 show production line-up has in store for us, we are excited to announce the return of the Starlight Playhouse staff. The one and only, master of ceremonies, Jeffery B. Moss will be returning for his 44th summer at Camp Starlight as Theater Director. Denes Van Parys, better known as DVP, will be tickling the ivories and striking up the band all summer as Musical Director. Behind the scenes, you will find Lindsay Jennings meticulously creating new and exciting costumes, while Stephanie Rubenfeld works hard as Jeff’s right hand woman, helping the campers learn their lines while encouraging them from start to finish. We are very thrilled to introduce the new Technical Director, Christopher Goslin. He is a Technical Director and Adjunct Professor at Miami Dade College with an abundance of knowledge and experience that he looks forward to sharing with us this summer.

Qynn