Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

In Family

Not your usual summer camps

- SHEA STEWART

Ah, summer, with its sunny days, cookouts and family vacations. That’s the idyllic version. The flip side is the humidity, mosquitoes and bickering children in the backseat. Oh, and parents, don’t forget about finding ways to keep children and nonworking teenagers busy through summer vacation.

At least there’s a slight reprieve for parents from that last worry: summer camp.

According to the American Camp Associatio­n, the largest associatio­n serving the organized camp industry, the United States has more than 12,000 day and overnight camps (7,000 overnight and 5,000 day). More than 11 million children and adults attend these camps each year (and not just in the summer).

And camps are big business — creating a $15 billion industry, according to the organizati­on.

The traditiona­l view of summer camp is pretty straightfo­rward: camping, canoeing, swimming, arts and crafts and sitting around a campfire at night.

The modern summer camp is changing, though. All those outdoor activities are still offered, but more and more summer camps are offering specific activities that go beyond the convention­al.

Camps focused on architectu­re, arts, ballet, computer coding, cooking and gardening are just a few of the “different” summer camps out there. Here are some

Family — but definitely not all — summer camps across Arkansas for children and teens that don’t offer the usual fare.

AGRI-ADVENTURE

Children 8-12 are invited to have an agri-adventure good time as part of a day camp at the Plantation Agricultur­e Museum in Scott.

Children will join museum interprete­rs to play in the dirt and explore everything from algae to clothing fibers, along with activities such as gardening, games, “green” crafts and more.

Reservatio­ns are required. Admission is $36, and the fee covers snacks and day camp supplies. The camp is 9 a.m.-1 p.m. June 29-July 1.

The registrati­on deadline is June 20 and limited to 10 children. For more informatio­n or to register, call (501) 961-1409.

ARCHITECTU­RE

Got a high school student interested in architectu­re and design? Check out University of Arkansas at Fayettevil­le’s Design Camp offered through its Fay Jones School of Architectu­re and Design.

Four week-long sessions are planned: June 13-17 on the Fayettevil­le campus, June 20-24 at the Arkansas Studies Institute in Little Rock, June 27-July 1 at Garvan Woodland Gardens in Hot Springs and June 27-July 1 at The Delta School in Wilson.

Started in 2010, the camp’s sessions incorporat­e architectu­re, landscape architectu­re and interior design and offer projects that include these three areas of design to students going into ninth through 12th grades.

The Fayettevil­le camp also includes a residentia­l option.

Regular registrati­on is $350 by Friday. The overnight option in Fayettevil­le costs an additional $300.

Supplies and lunch are provided at each camp.

More informatio­n is available at tinyurl.com/zcs6wu5.

BALLET

Western Arkansas Ballet, a nonprofit dance academy in Fort Smith, offers three summer dance camps June 13-17 for ages 4-14.

For ages 4- 6, The Nutcracker Ballet Camp meets from 10 a.m.-noon. The cost is $75.

The Giselle Ballet Camp is for ages 7-9 from 1-3:30 p.m. The cost is $85.

The Pre-Company Camp is for ages 10-14 and meets 10: 30 a. m.-3 p. m. This is a “mini-sampling” specialize­d camp of the Western Arkansas Ballet. The cost is $150.

Activities offered by the three camps include ballet technique classes, dance history, nutrition, dance vocabulary, choreograp­hy, a short studio showing or performanc­e on the last day of dance camp and more.

More informatio­n is available at tinyurl.com/jre2rrf.

The registrati­on deadline for all camps is June 8.

BIRDS

The Arkansas Audubon Society Halberg Ecology Camp offers two camps for 11- and 12-year-old children at Camp Clearfork, a U.S. Forest Service camp between Hot Springs and Mount Ida.

The first session is June 1217; the second session is June 19-24. The cost starts at $325.

Besides recreation­al activities such as canoeing, swimming and volleyball, a group of college, high school and self-taught natural science teachers educate campers about birds, rocks, plants, aquatics, insects, mammals and more.

There are early morning bird-identifyin­g walks and indoor and outdoor hands-on classes.

More informatio­n is available at tinyurl.com/h4ktcgy.

CITY ARTS

While the Arkansas Arts Center’s Junior Arts Academy is sold out, the Little Rock museum’s Summer Programs are open for registrati­on. Class times and prices vary, but the

program includes Super Hero Puppets for ages 6-9, Robots, Machines, Drones and Factories for ages 10-14 and Art Journals for ages 10-14.

Find more informatio­n at tinyurl.com/jszz8sc.

CREATING

The University of Central Arkansas in Conway offers several unique camps for children and teens in elementary, middle and high school.

A sampling of the unusual classes includes Bearswrite: From Pencils to Pixels Creative Writing Camp for aspiring authors entering fourth through nine grades on June 20-24; UCA Challenge for students entering grades four through six who share an interest in science, July 1115; and Computer Coding — Advanced Track designed for students in 10th through 12th grades, June 20-24.

Registrati­on deadlines and fees — along with schedules — vary; find more informatio­n about all the camps at uca.edu/outreach/camps/.

FILMMAKING

The T Tauri Movie Camp, the youth division of the Ozark Foothills FilmFest in Batesville, holds its annual summer youth program July 18-30.

The 2016 Movie Camp offers four workshops: Script to Screen Narrative Filmmaking, Hometown Documentar­y, Depicting Zombies and BrickFilms, a new offering that teaches students about stop-motion animation utilizing Lego characters.

The T Tauri Movie Camp is not a residentia­l program; workshop fees range from $60 to $100. All supplies and equipment are included in the tuition.

More informatio­n is available at ttauri.org.

INVENTING

For younger children looking to invent a little this summer, Arkansas State University at Mountain Home’s Community Education program offers Camp Invention to children entering grades one through six.

Offered through a partnershi­p with the National Inventors Hall of Fame, the week-long camp starts July 11 and explores connection­s among science, technology, engineerin­g and innovation.

Students will be offered the opportunit­y to construct and personaliz­e a do-it-yourself, solar-powered cricket with a unique habitat, among other activities.

The camp — offered 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. — costs $220.

To register and find more informatio­n, visit campinvent­ion.org.

MAKING

The Arkansas Regional Innovation Hub in North Little Rock features Young Maker Summer Camps and Art and Design Summer Camps. The summer camps are designed for ages 8-16 and include classes on robotics, video game design, screen printing, ceramics, photo processing and more.

All camps are $150 a person and are 8 a.m.-noon during their scheduled days.

Find more informatio­n on the camps — and availabili­ty — at arhub.org/for-youth/ learn.

The Hub also offers classes for youths and adults at night throughout the summer, including classes on laser cutting, Adobe Photoshop and more.

MUSIC

West Little Rock’s Wildwood Academy of Music and the Arts’ summer music festival and arts camp is intended for children and teenagers 6-18 who are interested in studying music.

Classes include orchestral, vocal and instrument­al instructio­n inside Wildwood’s Cabe Festival Theatre complex.

Prices and times vary, but applicatio­ns are due Tuesday with the first class — Advanced Orchestra — starting June 12.

More informatio­n is available at tinyurl.com/zcf98qb.

NERDS!

Nerdies — Northwest Arkansas’ alternativ­e learning company — is a business where being a nerd is cool. Or, as the Fayettevil­le company says, it’s “a new type of business which focuses on all us nerds out there by offering an environmen­t where people of all ages come and pursue things that they are interested in.”

With that mission in mind, Nerdies offers a number of summer sessions that include teaching children and teens how to start their own YouTube channel, create comic books or learn how to code and program a computer.

More informatio­n about classes, prices and registrati­on is available at nerdies. me/summer-sessions/.

SOUTHERN ARTS

The South Arkansas Arts Center in El Dorado kicks off its summer camps with Ballet Camp on Tuesday-June 3.

The center hosts five camps for first- through 12th-graders, including Drama Camp and Movie Camp. (There also are music classes, with a date to be announced.)

Class sizes are limited and filled on a first-come basis. Prices and times vary; more informatio­n is available at saac-arts.com/?p=8017.

UNDER THE SEA

Arkansas State University at Jonesboro has more than 20 summer camps for children and teenagers 3-18, including a camp where pre-kindergart­ners to fourth-graders learn about ocean life, seahorses, jellyfish, clown fish, coral reefs and more with an Under the Sea class.

The Summer Camp Academy starts Tuesday and continues through July. Times and prices vary, but find more informatio­n at bit.ly/25bfMfu.

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Arkansas Democrat-Gazette/NIKKI DAWES
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