We
held our Summer Camps & Activities Fair in April and nearly 3,000 people
came to see the 93 booths we had representing camps, birthday party venues,
schools, health care professionals and more.
What
we don’t see a lot of at our Camp Fair is middle and high school students
looking for summer programs and that’s a shame. It’s really too bad because as
we gather all the information we can find about camps in the Bluegrass for both
our April and May issues, we find dozens of great opportunities for kids in the
12 and older age bracket.
We’ve
been putting together our Camp Directory for 16 years now and one of the trends
I’ve seen grow just in the last few years is colleges and universities offering
programs for middle and high schoolers to give them a week or two living on
campus trying out some of the programs the college offers.
Take
a look at what Asbury is offering this
summer. They have nine, five day, overnight, college-like experiences for high
school students that include all food, housing, equipment, and evening
activities. Older kids can explore equine, film worship arts/audio production
themed programs as well as creative writing, film, environmental science,
theatre and music.
Midway College
offers day camp opportunities for girls up to 14 years old including
their famous “Between the Ears” equine camp, plus the Girl Power camp for ages
6-12, and co-ed camps for writing art, exploring the out-of-doors and science.
Speaking
of science, Newton’s Attic has hands-on science
and engineering camps for kids from 6-18. Learn robotics, create wrestling
robots, make a catapult and other ingenious mechanisms and even a bow like
Katniss’.
Local
private schools like Seton Catholic and
Sayre have program of interest middle schoolers as well as younger kids.
Learn interactive web programming at Seton and a whole variety of things like
horseback riding and chess at Sayre.
For
kids with an interest in the arts there are a whole slew of programs for teens.
Broadway Bound Summer Camps offer
programs for singers and actors and the Lexington
Children’s Theatre and Camp Shakespeare also offers acting camps all
summer. Kentucky Mudworks and The Mad
Potter hands-on clay and ceramic camps for all ages (even grown-ups). The Living Arts & Science Center
has programs that also go all the way up to the teen years. Lexington Music Education can put your
teen in a rock band this summer. Morehead
State University also has a summer arts program for high schoolers.
For
teens with special needs check out Central
Kentucky Riding for Hope, Parks & Rec’s Therapeutic Recreation Fun Camps
and Seton Catholic’s All Abilities Drama Camp.
For
teens interested in sports check out some of the residential sports programs at
Central Kentucky colleges and
universities. UK, Transy, Midway, Asbury and Morehead State all offer them.
Whatever
their interests, your teens have NOT outgrown camp yet, and while they may be
holding down jobs this summer, a week or a few days of summer camp might be
just as beneficial to them as money.
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