Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids 8 and 10 are going to a camp that runs 9 am to 5 pm, which I got my registering them fat 6 am in January. No before or aftercare. I feel lucky I was able to get both kids into the same camp. I am not sure where all these unicorn camps with before care and aftercare are. Here, those ones are held at the schools and lacks anything interesting.
Here’s my plan: if I have a meeting and I can’t leave at 4:30 to pick them up, I will pick them up at lunchtime or at 3 pm. If I have an all day meeting, then they will stay home with a sitter and skip camp.
My kid loves the camp at the school. But I guess did it make you feel good to crap on the affordable summer child care? Either way, I have care til 6
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids 8 and 10 are going to a camp that runs 9 am to 5 pm, which I got my registering them fat 6 am in January. No before or aftercare. I feel lucky I was able to get both kids into the same camp. I am not sure where all these unicorn camps with before care and aftercare are. Here, those ones are held at the schools and lacks anything interesting.
Here’s my plan: if I have a meeting and I can’t leave at 4:30 to pick them up, I will pick them up at lunchtime or at 3 pm. If I have an all day meeting, then they will stay home with a sitter and skip camp.
My kid loves the camp at the school. But I guess did it make you feel good to crap on the affordable summer child care? Either way, I have care til 6
My kids go to aftercare at their school for the full school year. I try my best not to sign up summer camps using public school facilities because it probably is not that exciting to them, similar structures like their aftercare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You pick camps that work with your work schedule and/or you pay for extra care as needed.
I don’t get why summer after summer people are so confused about this. Probably because COVID and related policies spoiled people. You pay for care like the rest of us.
I don’t understand the reason to continue piling on with this comment. Of course it would have been better to pick camps with longer hours, the OP knows that. Things can change drastically from camp sign up in Jan to now. The spouse could have had a job changed adding travel or OP’s had last minute meetings added.
For example, in Jan and Feb when we signed up for camps, I was working part time from home and my husband was full time outside the home. We picked camps based on interests and not pick up times. None were full day and not all weeks were scheduled due to travel plans. In late April, my husband lost his job. I immediately went full time. Now he’s trying to balance drop-off and pickup with his job search. I’m trying to get all my hours in and work done while having the kids at home part of the time. We’re going day by day. Kids will probably skip camp if he has an interview so I don’t have to take my small amount of pto to drive them around.
That doesn't seem to be the case with OP. She picked camp without considering her pick up needs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kids 8 and 10 are going to a camp that runs 9 am to 5 pm, which I got my registering them fat 6 am in January. No before or aftercare. I feel lucky I was able to get both kids into the same camp. I am not sure where all these unicorn camps with before care and aftercare are. Here, those ones are held at the schools and lacks anything interesting.
Here’s my plan: if I have a meeting and I can’t leave at 4:30 to pick them up, I will pick them up at lunchtime or at 3 pm. If I have an all day meeting, then they will stay home with a sitter and skip camp.
My kid loves the camp at the school. But I guess did it make you feel good to crap on the affordable summer child care? Either way, I have care til 6
Anonymous wrote:My kids 8 and 10 are going to a camp that runs 9 am to 5 pm, which I got my registering them fat 6 am in January. No before or aftercare. I feel lucky I was able to get both kids into the same camp. I am not sure where all these unicorn camps with before care and aftercare are. Here, those ones are held at the schools and lacks anything interesting.
Here’s my plan: if I have a meeting and I can’t leave at 4:30 to pick them up, I will pick them up at lunchtime or at 3 pm. If I have an all day meeting, then they will stay home with a sitter and skip camp.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You pick camps that work with your work schedule and/or you pay for extra care as needed.
I don’t get why summer after summer people are so confused about this. Probably because COVID and related policies spoiled people. You pay for care like the rest of us.
I don’t understand the reason to continue piling on with this comment. Of course it would have been better to pick camps with longer hours, the OP knows that. Things can change drastically from camp sign up in Jan to now. The spouse could have had a job changed adding travel or OP’s had last minute meetings added.
For example, in Jan and Feb when we signed up for camps, I was working part time from home and my husband was full time outside the home. We picked camps based on interests and not pick up times. None were full day and not all weeks were scheduled due to travel plans. In late April, my husband lost his job. I immediately went full time. Now he’s trying to balance drop-off and pickup with his job search. I’m trying to get all my hours in and work done while having the kids at home part of the time. We’re going day by day. Kids will probably skip camp if he has an interview so I don’t have to take my small amount of pto to drive them around.
Anonymous wrote:You pick camps that work with your work schedule and/or you pay for extra care as needed.
I don’t get why summer after summer people are so confused about this. Probably because COVID and related policies spoiled people. You pay for care like the rest of us.
Anonymous wrote:OP - will I get in trouble if my oldest bikes home (its about a mile), someone drops off other kid and they both stay home alone for a few hours? They are 10 and 8 years old.