Camp News Archives

Ohana Camp, Hulbert, and all of Aloha bids farewell to Deb & Andy Williams

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Sunday, January 1st, 2012

Deb & Andy WilliamsAs we ring in 2012, Aloha bids farewell to two people who, as much as anyone over the past quarter-century, have embodied The Aloha Foundation’s spirit and traditions. Deb and Andy Williams, who ran Hulbert Outdoor Center for two decades and Ohana Family Camp for the past six years — are retiring. They’ve introduced hundreds, perhaps thousands, of people to the Aloha experience during their time here, and broadened that experience to include people of all ages.

On a still-warm day in December, they sat in the sunroom of their Norwich, Vermont home and reflected on their own Aloha experience. Not surprisingly, they talked a lot about their work at Ohana, the family camp they helped build over the past decade.

“One has very few opportunities in a career to start something from scratch,” said Andy. (more…)

How wizards spend a hot summer’s day at Horizons Day Camp

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Monday, December 12th, 2011

Vermont's Horizons Day Camp plays QuidditchImagine if Hogwarts had a day camp for aspiring young wizards. That thought wasn’t too far a stretch one afternoon this past summer at Horizons. It was “choice” period at Horizons, the only non-residential camp of The Aloha Foundation. On a broad grassy playing field, Chipmunks to Falcons — campers ranging in age from kindergarten graduates to nearly-out-of-middle-schoolers — were preparing for an important match. They wriggled into green or yellow pinneys and chose carefully among a pile of brightly colored swim noodles. Some of the children taped big letters — B, C, K — to their pinneys. At the ends of the playing field, three tall wooden stakes held hula hoops aloft — yellow, pale green, and, higher than the other two, pink. Together, the stakes and the upended hoops looked like enormous bubble wands — but were actually goals for the quaffle. The lettered pinneys stood for Bludgers, Chasers and Keepers. And the field was set for an all-out, campers against counselors, game of Quidditch. (more…)

Hulbert School Programs

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Monday, August 22nd, 2011
Tower

The challenge to get to the top is physical and mental

One morning late last spring, 30 eighth-graders from Claremont, New Hampshire, walked off a school bus at Hulbert Outdoor Center. They’d heard about this day from students who’d graduated before them at Claremont Middle School. They’d heard their teacher, Jessica Warkentien, call it “a culminating experience.” Her phrase captured the day’s double purpose — both a celebration of the end of middle school and a series of challenges that would test the students in new and perhaps surprising ways.

They followed a wide path from the bus into the woods, where five instructors trained in experiential education were waiting to guide the students through a ropes course. With the help of the Hulbert staff, the young teenagers ambling up the path would learn — perhaps discover — how they assessed risk and limits, how they performed under pressure, how they gave and received support from others. (more…)

Behind the Scenes of an Aloha Tradition

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Friday, July 22nd, 2011
Director Downey watches the performance

Director Downey watches Friday night's performance.

Anne Downey, Department Head of Aloha’s Performing Arts Department, had just called a short break from rehearsals for this year’s show, “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat,” and the Hale, Aloha’s music building was quiet and almost empty. In two days, families and friends would arrive for Show Weekend and the back-to-back musical performances that have become a much anticipated and grand Aloha tradition. Downey gave the confident, matter-of-fact sense that she’d been through this nervous period before and that this year’s cast would be just fine. Still, she was now counting the remaining preparation in hours.

Some girls shuffled off to the main building to refill water bottles. Others retreated to shade under trees or on the porch. A heat wave was cresting over New England, spreading even as far north as Fairlee. Every door in the building stood wide open to welcome small gusts coming off Lake Morey or slight forest breezes. Downey waved her copy of the script like a thick fan and explained that after the break, the cast would do a complete run-through of the show. “We want them to see what they can do,” Downey said. “We have girls on lights, backstage, on stage. This is big-girl camp. Every girl plays an important role.” (more…)

Pulling as One

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Wednesday, July 20th, 2011
Beginner rowing at Aloha Camp for girls

Beginners get one-on-one coaching on the Aloha crew dock

Aloha Camp was in full summer swing last week, one perfect day following another. On Tuesday afternoon, the sun beamed down full, adding sparkle to Lake Morey’s brilliant blue. Four campers walked down to the lake past the ARC (Aloha Rowing Club), where Aloha Crew counselors Emma and Arielle waited for them on a short dock.

Among the colorful beach towels draped over dock posts and the boisterous splashing of swimmers, the girls gathered around a sleek, gray, metal rowing machine. Harper settled into its sliding seat. The rowing machine, a Concept 2 ergometer, mimics the action of rowing. Olympic and collegiate crews train on Concept 2 ergometers year-round. While other campers watched, Arielle talked Harper through the sequence. Harper grasped a handle connected to a coiled chain inside the flywheel of the “erg” and pushed her hands away from her body — “as if they’re going across a little tabletop and then coming back underneath it,” said Arielle, impressing upon Harper the importance of keeping her hands level. “We don’t want any divots in the table.” Next Harper leaned her upper body forward, maintaining the extension of her arms. Finally, Arielle asked Harper to add legs to the sequence. The camper slid all the way to the front of her slide until her body was tightly compressed at what rowers call “the catch.” On Arielle’s command, Harper uncoiled in the reverse sequence, pushing down her legs, unfolding her back, and pulling her arms and the handle in above her waist. The flywheel whirred. (more…)

Preventive Medicine for Homesickness

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Friday, June 10th, 2011
Ohana porch breakfast

At Aloha, there are many moments that help to create close, loving community for girls.

For the staff and counselors of the Aloha Camps, a new season means a new outbreak of seasonal sickness. Not the flu or even a summer cold — but homesickness, a discomfiting ache for home that can trouble mind, body, and spirit. Luckily for the sufferers, homesickness is generally not hard to cure. And reassuring for all of us, recent research highlights the successful strategies that Aloha staff and families have used for years. (more…)

Facebook Ruined Our Trip!

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Thursday, March 10th, 2011
Girls' Expedition Travel Vermont Hulbert

Although it is possible to connect virtually, close, authentic relationships evolve slowly, and in person.

Facebook ruined our trip!” It was Day 18 of a 45-day wilderness journey through Alaska’s Brooks Range, and it had been raining steadily for days. The group of young women, irritable, soaked to the skin, and their two instructors had stopped for one of the myriad decisions on such a trip — what route to follow, when to stop, where to set up camp, what to cook, who leads, who follows — when 17-year-old Mallory Brooks burst out with her cry of complaint.

Like the other girls standing in the rain, Mallory considered the trip a rite of passage, the culmination of many years of preparation. That preparation had begun at the camp they’d all attended in Wisconsin, where Mallory had spent seven summers. Many campers chose to go on expedition trips before they returned to the camp on staff. Mallory had been looking forward to the Alaska trip ever since she’d returned from a 28-day backpacking trip through the Wind Rivers the year before. (more…)

Winter Solstice at Hulbert Outdoor Center

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Tuesday, December 21st, 2010
Aloha Camps Vermont Winter Landscape

This quiet winter scene does not reveal winter residents working hard to stay warm.

Last week I found myself strolling across a blanket of fresh snow that had fallen on the campus of Hulbert Outdoor Center.  I criss-crossed, meandered and then turned in circles as following the footprints left in the snow from our local wintering residents - red squirrels, raccoons, black-capped chickadees and shrews to name a few.  Campers, school groups and families have long since bid their farewells to Lakes Morey and Fairlee, the vibrant greens of summer and fiery oranges of fall are now just memories as various shades of white dominate the landscapes of the Aloha Camps. Just this week, the last sections of open water on Lake Morey were closed off by the growing surface ice, leaving no room for the large groups of mallards and merganser ducks that had been socializing near the waterfront.

(more…)

Housekeeping! Sharing Some 2010 Summer News That Got Away!

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Sunday, September 19th, 2010

The months of June, July and August passed in a warm, sunny blur this year.  Hot, summer days in Fairlee were filled with activity seven days a week, on all five Aloha Foundation campuses. Hundreds of staff and campers swelled Fairlee’s summer population and in the office, we  enjoyed the excitement that the camp season brought.  It is hard, however, to keep up with all the fun that goes on, and even more difficult at times to share the news with our fans.  Now that the tents are put away, the docks pulled and campers, counselors and staff alike back in school, the full time employees in Fairlee are able to catch their collective breath a little, before we begin the preparation for summer 2011 (yes, we are already thinking ahead!).

Before we leave the summer of 2010 behind, here are a few stories you might have missed.

Vermont National Guard families enjoy respite, recreation and relaxation at Ohana – and Ohana enjoys their company.

Vermont National Guard member enjoys time with daughter at Ohana Family Camp.

Vermont National Guard member cuddles his daughter at Ohana Family Camp.

Fifteen families of Vermont National Guard members currently deployed in Afghanistan – about 55 parents and children in all – took up residence at Ohana Family Camp from June 27th through July 2nd. They came from all over the state — Georgia, VT, way up in the NW corner to Bennington at the southern tip. Written words can’t portray the experience better than does this short video report that appeared in a television news broadcast on the CBS affiliate in Burlington, VT. Many donors contributed toward the $20,000 cost of this tuition-free week at Ohana for Guard member families, including $5,000 from Vermont National Guard Charitable Foundation.

Ohana Camp Vermont National Guard Letter from Bernie Sanders

Senator Sanders letter to The Aloha Foundation.

Vermont’s United States Senator Bernie Sanders wrote this to us, in part: Allow me, on behalf of a of not only Vermont but a grateful nation to thank [you] for providing a week of joy, fun and relaxation at Ohana Camp for Vermont National Guard family members, while their loved ones are serving overseas…I applaud the vision, commitment and compassion demonstrated by the Aloha Foundation…to reach out to these family members faced with lengthy separation…[and] feel certain that the memories of the week spent at Ohana Camp will help assure the families that there are many of us who care about them…and want to offer support and gratitude…Aloha! Congratulations on a job well done.

After the VNG week was over, an article in our local Valley News about the Ohana family camp week caught the eye of a Lyme, NH, philanthropist. The anonymous donor — not previously a contributor to the Foundation — has pledged $25,000 to support the entire cost of next year’s edition of the Guard program. In addition, the donor has offered to pay the way for any families left on the waiting list for this summer’s Guard Week who wish to participate in New Year’s Family Camp at Hulbert in December. (more…)

2010 Opening Day at the Aloha’s Vermont Residential Camps

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Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Aloha counselors ready to meet incoming Aloha maidens on opening day!

Opening Day at Aloha Hive Camp for Girls in Fairlee, Vermont

The welcome crew at Aloha Hive

June 23rd is Opening Day at Aloha, Aloha Hive and Lanakila, the three residential summer camps of The Aloha Foundation. Campers from all over the US as well as many foreign countries arrive by car with their parents, on buses from major cities like Boston and New York as well as by plane into two airports, Manchester, NH for domestic flights, and Logan Airport for international campers.  Camp directors, counselors and staff are all on stand by waiting to meet each arriving camper in a warm, special way.  Happy summer 2010!

Vermont's Lanakila Camp for Boys in Fairlee, Vermont

Barnes Boffey waits for incoming vikings on opening day.