Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t get it, why are they so popular? It is because they are for people that can’t afford sleepaway camp?
Eww. What a gross statement.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t get it, why are they so popular? It is because they are for people that can’t afford sleepaway camp?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not in. I am seriously pissed. Sixth year in a row and now she's out. This is not the organization for us any longer. Way too inept.
So no new girl scout sisters should get a fair shot because your daughter has always gone? Doesn't seem sisterly. More demand than supply, but you are special? Okay....
My kid is as special as yours. The way this whole thing has been handled is unprofessional and chaotic. The largest GS Council in the US mucks it up again.
FWIW, I offered five different weeks. We were not picky.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t get it, why are they so popular? It is because they are for people that can’t afford sleepaway camp?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a spot during the original registration fiasco, but did not get in by lottery. We never win the daycamp lottery either so DH is half convinced camp doesn't exist.
Sucks because I was a lifelong girl scout who went to camp every summer, and want DD to have those experiences.
Same here. We were in during original go. Girls who went through this should have been give preferred placement. Brokenhearted twice sucks.
Just do what PP mentioned and go to one in PA? The scout camp I went to in NC is way nicer than Winona or PW and cheaper [and has horses, a major draw for her]. My gal is heading there this summer instead.
+1. Camp registration in the DC area sucks in general, it's not just Girl Scout camp (though the registration fiasco was a special brand of absurdity). My DD is going to zoo camp, Girl Scout camp, and language camp near her grandparents because they're all cheaper and less competitive to get it. Then other more generic camps in DC for the rest of the summer. If you don't have the ability to relocate for a few weeks for the specialty camps, Girl Scout camp is the best to do out of the area because it's residential and just one drop off and pickup. It TOTALLY sucks, but it's a DC area issue, not a national Girl Scout issue.
+2 The women whining on the PW facebook group is not a good look.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We had a spot during the original registration fiasco, but did not get in by lottery. We never win the daycamp lottery either so DH is half convinced camp doesn't exist.
Sucks because I was a lifelong girl scout who went to camp every summer, and want DD to have those experiences.
Same here. We were in during original go. Girls who went through this should have been give preferred placement. Brokenhearted twice sucks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are these people who haven't already let their girls know there was a registration snafu and that you are trying to get them in but it isn't guaranteed? Or am I the mean Mom who told my kid the truth through the process. Your eight year old can handle it unless you project your own anger about it on them
My daughter knows she might not get in, but this doesn't mean she won't be sad about it.
It's okay for kids to be sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are these people who haven't already let their girls know there was a registration snafu and that you are trying to get them in but it isn't guaranteed? Or am I the mean Mom who told my kid the truth through the process. Your eight year old can handle it unless you project your own anger about it on them
My daughter knows she might not get in, but this doesn't mean she won't be sad about it.
It's okay for kids to be sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Who are these people who haven't already let their girls know there was a registration snafu and that you are trying to get them in but it isn't guaranteed? Or am I the mean Mom who told my kid the truth through the process. Your eight year old can handle it unless you project your own anger about it on them
My daughter knows she might not get in, but this doesn't mean she won't be sad about it.