Everything to Plan for Your Adventure Camps
♫ Thursday, November 10th, 2011Going to summer camp can be an entertaining learning experience for adolescents. They can attend a traditional summer camp where they can choose their favorite activities (such as outdoor recreation, arts, and crafts) from a list and spend as much or as little time on each activity as they choose. Teens having a certain interest can join specialized camps that target their instruction on one activity.
Some adventure camps include scuba diving certifications, marine biology expeditions, sailing and perhaps even expeditions to tops of glaciers. Predictably, these kinds of activities demand specialized gear, so this kind of summer camp is more costly than just a traditional summer camp. Common cost is about $1000 to $2000 a week, and might not include transportation cost back and forth from the beginning and ending points.
Due to the cost, registering for an adventure tour for teens is simply not for everyone. Furthermore, there might be language skill requirements if the group will be visiting an area where English isn’t largely spoken. As an example, a summer camp in several Latin American countries such as Costa Rica requires participants to get at least one year Spanish study.
Adventure camps last anywhere between a couple weeks to almost a month and may take individuals to other states or countries, dependent upon the concentration of the camp. For instance, an adventure camp conducted in Alaska may target activities such as kayaking, backpacking, glacier ice climbing and whitewater rafting. An adventure camp trip to Australia is definitely exciting and features activities such as scuba diving, surfing, an outback ranch stay, ATV’s and whitewater rafting.
Besides the adventure and travel element, an adventure tour for teens helps teens develop values like self-sufficiency, leadership, resilience, adaptability and cooperation. A few programs integrate community service activities that contribute to the environment and towns visited. For instance, students are able to do volunteer work in preservation parks such as tree planting, eliminating unpleasant plant types and collecting seeds.
Safety is essential to coordinators of adventure camps, so applicants are screened before they are allowed to enter the program. They are interviewed to determine their level of commitment to find out if the program is the correct summer camp choice for them and matches them together with an appropriate summer program (based on age group). Individuals are often given a packet that contains information such as a detailed clothing list, reading list, medical form, insurance form and participation agreement to help them prepare.
