SmokeSignals Blog

SUMMARY - Answers to parents' frequently asked questions about going to summer camp.

IMAGE - Photograph of a campers on the mountain top.

IMAGE CAPTION - What a view! What a summer! Come join us at Merri-Mac!

Camp Friends

October 26th, 2010

I was recently asked to speak to a class about the importance of community in the way we work as a business. I was reminded that it is not just important to us, it is what we do.

About ten years ago we set out to answer three questions: what do we do, how do we do it, and what if we did it intentionally? The idea was not to decide what we wanted to do, but rather to try to figure out what has been happening here all along, and then decide how we can get on board. What we discovered was that the primary factor for why camp is so effective, the reason our campers come back, and the reason our staff fall in love with camp every summer, is very simple. Friends.

We are made to live life together. It is in our DNA. Put another way, we are made in God’s image and at the very center of who he is is relationship (the Trinity). So it is no surprise that placing career or accomplishments ahead of family and friends usually ends poorly.

In most places developing community, is means to an end, a by-product of what they are there to do. Schools want strong community to create a better learning environment. Businesses want strong community to create more effective sales teams. Even reality TV stars want community to avoid getting voted off the island. But camp is different. For us community is an end in itself, it is what we are here to do.

We also have a leg up over other groups. We live together, like families. In other words, we do not just spend some time together and then go back to our real lives at home. For a short period each summer camp is our home. This is why camp friends are different, closer, than any others. We are made to live life together, and at camp doing that is not a strategy; it is the end itself.

Adam Boyd

What Camp Offers

December 16th, 2009

You have probably heard from a million different people the benefits of camping for kids.  Or as you scour the web for the best camp for your child there are aspects of each that seem to “fit” what you think your child needs and then there are others that don’t.  The fact is that there are so many types of camps (and so many types of children) that bringing the two together (your child and a camp) is not an easy!  As a parent and a camp director I have found one common concern that I think most parents can relate to:

We want our kids to find success.  Whether it is in a particular sport, the arts, social skills, or spiritually, there is nothing quite like seeing a child excited about something that they are personally investing themselves in.  The problem I hear about from most parents (which I can absolutely relate to with my own family) is that their child has not yet found their best avenue for success.  At this point the path of least resistance is often to gravitate towards video games where no one knows if you try and fail!  Insert a good summer camp here.

A good summer camp will provide:

  • Plenty of activity options for your child to gradually invest themselves in.   No child is the same and there should be a healthy variety of interesting possibilities to choose from.
  • The opportunity for each camper to measure their success within each activity.  They need to see their own progress and be rewarded for their efforts.
  • An environment where failure is not a source of fear.  Some children are so afraid of failure that the possibility paralyzes them from pushing ahead.  Camp can be a unique environment to try new avenues of success without fear because:
  1. Everyone is learning new things at the same time so it becomes part of the culture.
  2. A child is in an entirely new surrounding both socially and physically.  This offers them the opportunity to re-make themselves into a person who thrives in this new, uplifting camp environment.
  • Counselors who care about the children finding success.  The greatest part about camp for me as a boy was the fact that these amazing, college-aged men actually wanted to spend time getting to know who I was.  My parents had told me a lot of things about life that I needed to do (and what to avoid)  but I heard those things only marginally.  However, when my counselors said the same things I hung on every word and incorporated those things into my life immediately!   The result was lifelong.

In the right camp setting, children can walk away from their camp experience with more ability to handle what life throws at them.  They can know finally what success looks like personally.  And they can walk unafraid of failure.   This will help them when they go off to college, get married, make tough business decisions, make tough family decisions, and they might even learn how to tie some handy knots for wilderness survival in the process!

Dan Singletary

Director

Hiring Great Counselors

November 12th, 2009

“How do you find your camp counselors?” is one of my favorite questions from parents.   Yesterday we hired two more Merri-Mac Counselors in Training. (Laura S. and Kelly J.).  These are graduated campers who are ready to make the transition to staff.  Throughout both interviews I was struck by how much confidence I have in them both.  I think there are 2 reasons for this.

Training Camp Staff

Training Camp Staff

First, we know them very well.  Over  their eight years as campers  we have watched each develop a sense of adventure and leadership as they worked their way through White Feather ranks and then into tribal offices.  We have worked with them as they have developed their activity skills, with Laura becoming a strong kayaker and dancer and Kelly excelling in canoeing and backpacking.   And we have seen them display an exceptional ability to care for other people.  In other words, camp has prepared them to be great counselors.

Second, because they love camp they want others to love it too.  This means that they will almost certainly be the among the hardest working staff we can find because doing the things that it takes to make Merri-Mac great does not feel like work to them.   So Laura will not just want her campers to love kayaking, and Kelly will not just want her love backpacking, they will want them each to love kayaking and backpacking at Merri-Mac.

Of course we also hire first year girls to be counselors, and they bring something equally important.  First, the expand our applicant pool, helping us measure our level of professi0nalism with the training they have received in other places.  They also help us look at camp through fresh eyes, evaluating which parts of the camp tradition are the most important.   Every now and then it is our first year girl that has the best idea of the summer.  When this happens we know we have a Merri-Mac girl for life.

From This Haven…
Adam and Ann

Camp Merri-Mac
1123 Montreat Road Suite A
Black Mountain, NC 28711
Directions | Google Map
828-669-8766

Camp Merri-Mac for Girls | 1123 Montreat Rd Ste A | Black Mountain, NC 28711 | 828-669-8766