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Camp recipes needed! | Main | Sexual assaults at Orlando water parks ยป

July 08, 2009

Tell us about your child's summer camp

I did laundry every day last week when my older son was at the Boyd Hill Nature Preserve Pioneer Camp. If you are familiar with it, the kids who attend the camp are generally dirty every day and then get hosed down at the end of the day. So every day he was soaking wet after playing in the mud, getting in the line of fire of squish (it's rotten food than is basically squished by a sledgehammer) or going through the pudding gauntlet. It used to be the pudding pole but the gauntlet is fun too, only maybe dirtier.

And even though I was tired of the daily laundry routine by the end of the week, for the third year in a row Mom_summercamp my son was as happy as a clam. He couldn't wait to get there every day and when my husband picked him up, he couldn't wait to talk about the expolits, whether he worked in leather, made a shelter with a team of kids or learned a new joke or riddle. If I had some stock in Tide, I would probably send him every week each summer.

So, now we want to hear from you. A few weeks before school ended, Go Momma ran an extensive list of bay area summer camps. But that's only part of the information we want to give you. We want to be able to share what other parents and kids thought about the camps. We want you to tell us about your child's summer camp experience. Did she love it so much she can't wait to get back next year or next week? Or would she rather stay home alone than go one more day? Do your feel like you are getting your money's worth or will you look elsewhere next time? Does it offer extra care or are you out of luck when noon hits? We want to know everything, so Mommas and Poppas, please fill out this questionnaire on your child's camp experience and let us know what you think. Once we have gathered your tales from summer camp, we will share them with readers in the coming weeks.

Thanks in advance for your help. Here's to lots of laundry in your future.

-- Sherry Robinson

[Douglas R. Clifford, Times: Summer Horse Camp counselor Kaylee Rimes, 17, of Tampa, rides through a wetland area near Hire A Pony Riding Academy while on one of several rides Tuesday while supervising riders at the academy.]

Comments

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Marousa

Thanks for the kudos on Farm CAmp!
I have a few openings for next week if anyone is interested in our animal farm camp in Odessa. This is VERY unusual as we book out quick.
www.NoahsARkonWheels.com

Teacher

Discovery Point Trinity School Agers Class/ Summer Day Camp is so interactive! They go to so many places (the aquarium, inflate world, library, movies etc). When they aren't on the move they are baking cookies or having water play. My son literally wakes us up at 6AM raring to go to camp. I highly recommend this for those who need constant care for their kids.

TT

Noah's Arc farm camp in Odessa! My 5 yr old daughter LOVED it!! Highly recommend and well worth the $$. Boy Scout camp... great price, really poor, untrained supervision. Would not return if it was free.
We still have art camp at the Dunedin Fine Art Center, Ruth Eckerd and Brooker Creek Preserve to go.

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Whoa, Momma! thinks there's no such thing as TMI when it comes to raising kids and dishing about life as a parent. Our blogging moms aren't shy about the hot topics and won't back away from a good debate on any parenting issue. Bottle or breastfeed? Public, private or homeschool? Stay at home or work outside the home? And sex -- it's all open for comment. Don't sit on the sidelines -- pull up a bouncy seat and join the chat.

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Sharon Kennedy Wynne has sunscreen in her blood. She may have been born in Buffalo but she got here as fast as she could, in time for kindergarten. She grew up in St. Petersburg, graduated from the University of Florida journalism school, and even got married at Sunken Gardens. She's one of the few adults we know who actually loves taking her kids to the beach. She has two sons and with 10 years of parenting under her belt, she's starting to feel a little less out of her league. She comes from a large family and loves to debate, so brace yourself when the hot topics come up.

E-mail Sharon Kennedy Wynne:
wynne@sptimes.com

Amy Hollyfield is a workaholic mother of two young daughters, blessed to have a work-at-home husband who makes their life possible. She was born in Detroit and moved around a lot as a kid (read: Air Force brat). She has lived in Florida since the month after she graduated from Northwestern University. She lives for the yelps, hugs and kisses that greet her on nights that she makes it home before bedtime.

E-mail Amy Hollyfield:
ahollyfield@sptimes.com

Sherry Robinson was born in the Sunshine State but she feels more comfortable inside a mall than outside at the beach -- thank goodness her husband is the outdoorsy type. He takes their two sons on night hikes, beach runs and bug hunts while Sherry does her best to take care of the homestead -- and find out what is new on the store shelves. A graduate of the University of South Florida in 19noneofyourbusiness, Sherry has been at the Times for nearly 20 years. And with nearly 10 years of parenting experience, Sherry is eager to offer up some great dish on raising kids and keeping your sanity.

E-mail Sherry Robinson:
robinson@sptimes.com

Guest blogger Tracey Henry, a.k.a. Suburban Diva, is a frantic, slightly frazzled mother of four. She is a freelance humor writer and author which is the only thing that parenting four children ages 12-1 trains you for, except perhaps court jester and professional bull rider. She and her husband have lived all over the country, but settled in Florida eight years ago because the beachcombing is so much better here than on the banks of the Mississippi. Their family time includes a lot of sport -- both watching and playing -- and fun in the sun and surf. Catch her in Whoa, Momma! and on her site, suburbandiva.com and subdivablog.blogspot.com.

Sherri Day and her husband welcomed their daughter into the world in early 2008. So far, she describes parenthood as exciting, exhausting and exhilarating. A self-described Southern belle with small-town values and big-city idealism, Sherri was born in rural Georgia. She received her bachelor's degree in journalism from Clark Atlanta University and her master's of journalism from the University of California at Berkeley. She is the Brandon bureau chief for the Times. Sherri moved to Tampa from Brooklyn four years ago.