Camp has changed my kids lives (and they’re not even campers yet)

I have understood the power that camp has to change your life ever since I worked at overnight camp back when I was in university. Ask me to tell you stories about transformations I’ve seen in MKDC campers and I’ll tear up every time. But what I never expected is to experience so vividly this affect on my own boys… years before they’ve even been assigned to a cabin group.

My sons are not even close to being old enough to officially attend camp as campers, but they are with us at camp everyday, and the impact it is already having on them is nothing short of magical.

We had two spring babies, so when Gaelan first went to camp he was only three weeks old. Doyle’s first summer he was 7 weeks old. Each were carried around their first summer by just about every possible staff member at one point or another, and often cuddled by moms of long-time campers at pickup. Occasionally, when I was desperate to be hands-free for a few minutes, I’d sneak over to the Heartwood Girls cabin, open the door just enough to slide in a baby, then close the door and run – the giggles of thrilled pre-teen girls following in my wake.

Gaelan hanging out with his favourite camp staffer

Neither one of my boys showed a single moment of the “stranger danger” phase that typically hits somewhere around the age of one, and I blame camp. They’ve happily been cuddled and carried by such a variety of caring adults that it’s always just been part of their routine. (And so when I say that my staff are chosen carefully because they are looking after my kids too, I really mean it!)

Having a toddler with you at camp is not for the faint of heart. Gaelan, who is now a 3-year camp veteran at the ripe old age of 2, struts about the property like he owns the place. And… to a certain extent he does. I’ll look up to see that he’s wandered just out of my sight again,  and before panic has the chance to set in a staff member says, “don’t worry, N has him.” And N is a nine year old boy, and that’s perfectly acceptable. Because at camp we’re all learning to look after each other.

One of Gael’s favourite books is “The Berenstain Bears Go To Camp”

(And that’s the thing, right there. I would trust the large majority of our campers with my kids. Our campers are amazingly caring, gentle, trustworthy citizens of the world. Is that because the parents who understand the value of camp are the kind of parents who raise that kind of kid? Quite possibly. Is it because the unique atmosphere of camp itself is bringing out those traits in them? I’d love to think so.)

But it’s when we’re not at camp that I really see how being a camp kid is affecting Gael. This is the kid who RACED to the back door to see the campers coming up the hill each morning, and having to explain to him why there weren’t any kids at the end of the camp season was nothing short of heartbreaking. This is the toddler who will go up to random kids in the grocery store (even those much older) and introduce himself, because in his world everyone is his friend. This is the toddler who orders his own lunch in a restaurant, and chats away as he shows his toy to the woman at the next table, because he is accustomed to conversing with adults.

One of the things I love most about camp is our ability to create a unique space in which our lofty ideals about how the whole world should be, can be realized. At camp, everyone respects everyone else. At camp, being yourself, doing your best, and contributing positively to the community are the things that matter most. At camp, technology is a tool, but it always takes a back seat to real one-on-one facetime. And for now, while I can keep it that way, I am thankful that the camp world is the world I am raising my babies in.

0 comments

Knights of the Round Maple

*New for 2017* In this LARP-ish major, campers will develop “knightly virtues” as well as their creativity as they join a “house” of knights and prepare to defend their castle.

  • Construct and design your own suit of armour. Work independently or collaborate with your team. Spikes, fins, scales, plates, helmets, gauntlets, shields limited only by your imagination. Add your sword, ax, mace, halberd, spear or other “deadly” accoutrements.
  • Develop group identities and team strategies to defend or storm the castle in daily competitions of capture the flag and other games.
  • Take a lead role in our all-camp “Fortress” wide game

That’s just the tip o’ the iceberg! Read about the rest of our majors here.

0 comments

Live from Camp: Podcasting Major

Campers will fully embrace new media in this exciting major! Your child will learn the process for creating both audio broadcasts from start to finish. Campers will work as a team to produce complete podcast episodes, using technology as a tool rather than a time-waster.

Skills learned will include:

  • Content writing
  • Appropriate care and use of microphones
  • Desktop and mobile apps for audio recording
  • Basic editing

That’s just the tip o’ the iceberg! Read about the rest of our majors here.

0 comments

Trackers & Treehuggers Major (Week 4: July 24 – 28)

The Trackers & Treehuggers major is designed to help campers spend some quality time with their Mother Earth.

Trackers & Treehuggers majors will…

  • Learn to identify different native plants
  • identify tracks and scat of different local animals
  • create nature-inspired works of art
  • plant their own tree and/or other local plant

That’s just the tip o’ the iceberg! Read about the rest of our majors here.

0 comments

Major: Wood & Ashes

Under the guidance of an experienced staff member, Wood & Ashes majors will use a variety of hand tools (and sometimes get help with power tools) to create a wood-based project, and then learn to use a wood-burning pen to embellish it. One of our most popular majors every summer!

Instructor: Ron Cosens is our own much-loved program director, but in the off-season he is also the owner/artist of Wood & Ashes Woodworking & Pyrography. He specializes in custom orders and replicating photographs as unique burnings.

Majors are special programs for our Heartwood campers (aged 9-12) to choose from each week. Read about the rest of our majors here.

1 comment

Steampunk’d Major

Strap on your goggles and get ready for an odyssey of pure fantasy! Steampunk is a fascinating sub-culture that is heavily influenced by the elements of the Victorian period of history as well as the novels of H. G. Wells and Jules Verne. It is a made-up, fantasy period of history (or the future) that imagines what it would be like if the Victorians had used steam power and clockwork to make modern gadgets. It is part science-fiction, part invention, part arts & crafts, and part fashion. Any camper that is creative, likes building/inventing, and has a great imagination will love bringing this concept to life.

Cyberpunk Variation: While Steampunk is set in a fictional past, Cyberpunk is set in a fictional future.


Click here to return to the Heartwood program.

.

0 comments

Puppetry (Week 7: Aug 14-18)

*NEW for 2017* Puppetry is the focus for this year’s performing arts major. We are thrilled to announce that Adam Zimmerman (aka “Eccentric Adam”) will be visiting as a guest artist to guide campers as they take a puppet character all the way from conception to reality.

The puppetry major program will include:

  • character concept sketching
  • puppet fabrication using a variety of techniques and materials
  • puppet manipulation skills
  • preparation of a script
  • use of our new puppet theatre for a final presentation

Instructor: Adam Zimmerman has been a featured entertainer at the Puppets Up! festival since it’s inception. With a degree in Theatre from the University of Ottawa as well as Certification in the Art of Clown from Advanced Studies – USA Virginia, he is a talented and versatile performance artist with skills in clowning, circus, balloon sculpting, puppeteering, music, and more. Adam is currently working on a new puppet production featuring giant mechanical dinosaurs.

 

 

That’s just the tip o’ the iceberg! Read about the rest of our majors here.

0 comments

Zombie Apocalypse Survival (Week 2: July 10-14)

*NEW for 2017* Would you be able to survive?

Current popular culture is obsessed with zombies! From TV shows to board games, you can find them everywhere. Prepare for a zombie epidemic by learning essential skills like tracking and camouflage, bushcraft, self-defense and packing a bug-out bag. (Skills that will help you survive any kind of disaster, not just the Zompocalypse!)

Zombie Apocalypse majors will…

  • learn traditional survival techniques
  • perfect the art of zombieflage (impersonate a zombie to avoid detection)
  • learn “hand-to-rotting-hand combat” (self-defense techniques only) from a qualified instructor
  • put their skills to the test in a simulated “outbreak”

That’s just the tip o’ the iceberg! Read about the rest of our majors here.

0 comments

Maple Key Print-and-Colour Valentines

 

Click here to download your MKDC Valentines

Instructions:

  1. Download & open PDF
  2. Print on cardstock (be sure to select “fill entire paper” or equivalent to maximize space)
  3. Cut on the dotted line
  4. Colour & personalize
  5. Give them out to all your favourite people!
0 comments

Call for Supplies: Makerspace

What is a makerspace?

A makerspace is a physical location where people gather to share resources and knowledge, work on projects, network, and build. Simply put, a makerspace is an area with the tools and supplies needed to create.

Maple Key is transforming “crafts” into something much more meaningful. A Makerspace allows campers to have much more choice and control over their creativity – which means a higher level of engagement, more confidence, and the freedom to pursue skills that are most relevant to each individual camper.

We need your help

To have a successful makerspace, we need tons of materials to allow kids to fully and creatively express themselves.
Many of these supplies are common items you may have around your house that we will use in uncommon ways.
If you are interested in donating any of the following, please contact us.

Makerspace Wishlist

  • Babyfood jars (cleaned, please!)
  • Beads
  • Blocks
  • Buttons
  • Clear plastic storage tubs in a variety of sizes
  • Clothes pins
  • Cookie cutters
  • Craft supplies-paint, glue, scissors, pipe cleaners, googley eyes, puff balls
  • Crepe paper
  • Egg cartons
  • Fabric scraps
  • Feathers
  • Felt
  • Heavier duty materials to build with or glue to (wood scraps, Masonite board, etc.)
  • Magazines- both to cut up (camp appropriate, please) and to use as inspiration (anybody subscribe to Make?)
  • Marbles
  • Mason jars (cleaned, please!)
  • Nuts, bolts, and nails
  • Old belts, purses, and bags
  • Paper -different textures, weights, colors, styles, etc.
  • Paper towel and toilet paper tubes
  • Plastic bottles (cleaned, please!)
  • Popsicle/craft sticks
  • PVC pipe
  • Sandpaper
  • Scrabble tiles and other board game bits
  • Sewing supplies
  • Socks (used is okay but not gross, please)
  • Stencils
  • String, yarn, shoelaces, and rope
  • Tin cans (no sharp edges, please)
  • Tissue paper
  • Tools – especially small hand tools like hacksaws, hammers, and screwdrivers
  • Scrapbooking tools such as embossers, punches, etc
  • Wire
  • Any kind of odd or end that you think might inspire our campers
0 comments