Summertime Blues? Try a Camp for the Cure
- Share via
It’s that time of year again. The school bells are silent, the playgrounds are collecting weeds and you’re itching to burn some energy.
“The Price Is Right” is no longer a challenge and the rest of the channels are filled with unrecognizable talk show hosts. It’s too hot to venture to the park and too far to go to the beach.
You’re caught in a summer stagnation. A case of the doldrums is sure to follow.
This scenario may have been the case a decade ago, but the energetic children and busy parents of the ‘90s have more suitable options during the summer months.
Summer camps have become so specialized that parents can choose between a half-day program or a three-month excursion. Or spending the summer learning to surf, learning a foreign language, losing weight or gaining culinary skills.
No longer is summer camp associated with long nights in a stuffy cabin, four strangers sharing a single flashlight and mosquitoes snacking on their extremities.
Choosing a summer camp is like watching cable TV. If one doesn’t catch your attention, there are plenty of others to choose from.
Shirley Walch, executive director of the American Camping Assn., which promotes and accredits summer programs, said there has been a change in the way summer camps are designed.
“Day camps are growing rapidly because both parents are working these days,” Walch said. “It’s a sign of the times.”
Therefore, for some, summer camp is no longer an option, but a necessity, Walch said.
The ACA follows strict industry and government standards relating to health and safety, aquatics, program, administration and transportation in its accreditation process, Walch said.
The ACA accredits 230 camps in Southern California and 2,000 nationwide.
Walch said parents are most concerned with safety and supervision at the facilities and during transportation. The ratio of campers to counselors is also a popular question.
The rush to get enrolled in a program begins early in the year. By March, most of the brochures have been mailed and by mid-June the sleep-away camps are usually full.
Camps such as the YMCA and school district-operated programs don’t have a limit for their day camps, which cost about $100 a week, enabling the late-comers to find a place.
“We can always hire another counselor or get another bus,” said Richard Chevalier, community program director for the North Orange County Family YMCA in Fullerton.
The YMCA also has another advantage that privately operated camps do not: the ability to subsidize for families who can’t afford to send their children.
“Nobody gets turned away here,” Chevalier said. “If somebody can’t afford to pay, they can always get a scholarship from us.”
Privately operated camps tend to be more expensive, with limits on the enrollment and no scholarships for the underprivileged.
At the Summer Surf Camp located in Sunset Beach Park and Salt Creek Beach Park, the cost to ride the waves on loaner equipment is $195 a week. At Camp Los Cab, a sports camp at Los Caballeros Sports Club in Fountain Valley, a dose of cardiovascular fitness costs $395 a day.
Other private institutions attract academically motivated campers.
At Computer Camp, which is run by FutureKids Computer Learning Centers in Rancho Santa Margarita and San Juan Capistrano, children ages 7 to 15 create their own computerized storyboard and learn the basics of music on a computer.
Meanwhile, the 3- to 6-year olds use educational software to explore numbers, letters, shapes and colors.
The Carden School in La Habra offers a six-week course with instruction in Spanish, computers and science. Field trips are scheduled every Wednesday with trips to an airport and an airport museum on the list for this summer.
“The families like the calm, peaceful atmosphere at the school,” Director Carol Tracy said. “It encourages people who want to work on academics to attend.”
Scott Kambak, an educational psychologist in Fullerton, said it’s a tremendous advantage for kids to continue to think and be active during the summer months.
“In my work, kids who get away and experience different environments over the summer have a real advantage over those who do not,” Kambak said. “That’s why studies have shown in favor of year-round schooling, especially for those with learning disabilities.”
(BEGIN TEXT OF INFOBOX / INFOGRAPHIC)
Camping Out
Here’s a look at some of the many summer options available for Orange County kids this summer:
* Anaheim Child Developments
Now-Sept. 6
Ages 2-6
Balance of academics, adventures and on-site field trips
Full-day rate: $70 a week; Half-day rate: $55 a week
(714) 821-3520
* Arrowhead Ranch
Location: San Bernardino National Forest
June 30-July 27
Ages 6-14
Traditional summer camp
$210 a week (equestrian program is extra)
(909) 867-7041
* Astrocamp
Location: Desert Sun Science Center in Idyllwild
Now-Aug. 10
Ages 8-15
Explore the wonders of the universe
$500 a week
(800) 645-1423
* Camp Frazier
Locations: Four in Orange County
Now-Aug. 23
Preschool age to 15
Variety of recreational activities
$35 a day
(714) 837-1200
* Camp Heritage Oak
Location: Yorba Linda
Now-Aug. 30
Ages 3-Grade 8
Science, sports, arts and crafts, field trips and cookouts
$65 Registration fee for grades 4-8; $55 registration fee for preschool-grade 3; single day from 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. is $30
(extended day rates also available)
(714) 520-1350
* Camp Launch Pad
Location: Crystal Court
July 8-Aug. 9
Ages 7-12
Five days of scientific discovery
9 a.m.-2:30 p.m. is $120 a week; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. is $160 a week
(714) 546-2061
* Camp Los Cab
Location: Los Caballeros Sports Club, Fountain Valley)
Now-Aug. 30
Ages 5-13
Wide variety of team and individual sports
Full day $395; half day $220
(714) 546-8560 ext. 247
* Carden School
Location: La Habra
July 15-Aug. 23 (Six-week programs)
Ages 3-Grade 8
Educational experience in safe, relaxed atmosphere
Full time: $750 a program; Part time: $480 a program
(310) 694-1879
* Children’s Choice Summertime
Location: Laguna Niguel
Now-Aug. 30
Ages 3-10
Wide variety of recreational activities
$50 enrollment fee; Two full-time days a week is $50; Three full-time days is $80; Five days is $100; $5 an hour for partial days.
(714) 495-5162
* Computer Camp
Locations: Santa Margarita, San Juan Capistrano
Now-Aug. 22
Ages 3-15
Computer technology with themes and subjects
Each of five themes range from $149-$199
(714) 589-5433
* Lazy J Ranch Camp
Location: Malibu
Now-Sept. 7
Ages 5-13
Variety of recreational activities on 140-acre resident camp
One week $529; Two weeks $1,050
(310) 457-5572
* Mark Cresse School of Baseball
Locations: Five Orange County sites
Now-July 26 and July 29-Aug. 23
Ages 6-16
$275 a week
(714) 892-6145
* North Orange County Family YMCA
Location: Fullerton
Now-Aug. 30
Ages 6-17
Day camp featuring beach and amusement park trips
$99 a week
(714) 879-9622
* Skylake Yosemite Camp
Location: Yosemite
Now-Aug. 17
Ages 7-16
Wide variety of outdoor activities
Two weeks is $1,170; Four weeks is $2,250
(209) 642-3720
* Summer Games
Locations: 17 in Orange County
Now-Aug. 7
Kindergarten graduates-Age 12
Adventure playing games, sports, water play and field trips
$114 a week; $75 for optional field trips
(714) 540-4750
* Summer Junior Tennis Camp
Location: Newport Beach Tennis Club
Ages 6-17
Now-Aug. 30
Instruction in basic fundamentals, drills and court etiquette
$130 a week for members, $148 for non-members
(714) 644-0050, ext. 29
* Super Surf Camp
Locations: Sunset and Salt Creek beach parks
Now-September
Ages 8-Adult
Instruction in surfing, bodyboarding and other beach games
$195 a week
(714) 680-4000
* YMCA Camp Oakes Rangers
Location: Big Bear Lake
Now-Aug. 18
Ages 8-14
Camping experience on 225-acre mountain facility
$295 a week
(310) 642-2014