Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids are 6, 8, and 10.
I start a spreadsheet right around now for every camp I’m considering and put in weeks, cost, and if they have before/after care, registration opens, etc.
Then I have another spreadsheet with each week of the summer and start filling in camps. I have a first choice and second choice for each week.
I have found that my kids don’t like trying a new camp each week - so I don’t sign them up for less than 2 weeks at any camp. I also pick camps with multiple options at the same location so I don’t have to manage multiple pickups/drop offs.
Internet search and asking around is the best way to find camps - there are many, many camps in this area, so there isn’t really a single place to learn about them. And even then, it might not be a good fit for your kids - there have been three camps which were absolutely not the right for for my kids, and we just didn’t repeat those again. And one camp has been such a huge hit that my kids want to do it all summer (but I want them to branch out a bit, so I usually sign them up for at least 3 different camps).
OP here. This is helpful, thanks!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I send them both to 4 weeks of overnight camp. Then 2 week vacation around the 4th and one week of watching tv.
I see posts like this a lot. What do you do the other 3-4 weeks (since summer is 10-11 weeks long?) TV?
Anonymous wrote:I send them both to 4 weeks of overnight camp. Then 2 week vacation around the 4th and one week of watching tv.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are these all day camps for childcare, or just camps for fun? That would make a difference.
OP here. Sorry, what is the difference? My elementary school aged kids don't have school during the summer and I am looking for something fun, that's not a logistical nightmare and will not break the bank to keep them occupied.
Why do defensive? Sounds like you are a SAHM. They aren’t all going to like the same camps at the same time. You have to decide how much you want to cater to their interests vs do what’s easiest for you. I am a SAHM and each of my 2 girls picks 3-4 weeks of camp they want. I don’t care if it overlaps or is convenient for me, I suck it up because they are specific camps for certain weeks at certain locations. Several of the camps they like are only offered 1-2 weeks the whole summer, they can’t just “pick a different week.” Then we vacation or relax the other weeks. I would handle it much differently if I would also juggling a job.
OP here. Not sure what is defensive, I didn’t honestly understand the question. I think another PP clarified it for me. Thank PP.
FWIW I am not a SAHM, and camps last year was a bit chaotic with 3 drop offs but one was walking distance. And we found a car pool for the other kid. I am trying not to repeat that lol. So any tip is welcome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are these all day camps for childcare, or just camps for fun? That would make a difference.
OP here. Sorry, what is the difference? My elementary school aged kids don't have school during the summer and I am looking for something fun, that's not a logistical nightmare and will not break the bank to keep them occupied.
Why do defensive? Sounds like you are a SAHM. They aren’t all going to like the same camps at the same time. You have to decide how much you want to cater to their interests vs do what’s easiest for you. I am a SAHM and each of my 2 girls picks 3-4 weeks of camp they want. I don’t care if it overlaps or is convenient for me, I suck it up because they are specific camps for certain weeks at certain locations. Several of the camps they like are only offered 1-2 weeks the whole summer, they can’t just “pick a different week.” Then we vacation or relax the other weeks. I would handle it much differently if I would also juggling a job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are these all day camps for childcare, or just camps for fun? That would make a difference.
OP here. Sorry, what is the difference? My elementary school aged kids don't have school during the summer and I am looking for something fun, that's not a logistical nightmare and will not break the bank to keep them occupied.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We always organized summer like this:
10 weeks of summer
1-6: hired babysitter to watch all three kids, they all did summer swim team and activities around our neighborhood.
7: sleep away camp, each kid picked their own from ones that were affordable
8: family vacation
9 and 10: day camp, same location for all three.
We just started almost this exact approach with our kids last summer and really liked it.
The hard part of this is finding a babysitter for full time work for only 6 weeks.