Week
|
Jordan
|
Aaron
|
1
|
Day hiking (Evergreen)
|
Puget Sound Sea Life/Sports Medley (Evergreen)
|
2
|
Jedi Academy/Fencing (Evergreen)
|
Nature Intelligence/Ukulele (Evergreen)
|
3
|
Boychoir tour camp
|
Rockets and Astronauts (Villa)
|
4
|
Boychoir tour
|
Family trip to SF
|
5
|
Boychoir tour
|
Art with Morah Bibi (SJCS)
|
6
|
Boychoir tour
|
Camp Leatt
|
7
|
Grandma camp
|
Grandma camp
|
8
|
Boychoir camp (SPU)
|
Boychoir camp (SPU)
|
9
|
Aunt Kari camp
|
Aunt Kari camp
|
10-11
|
Zoo camp
|
Zoo camp
|
I asked them to rate each of their summer camps on a scale of 1 to 10. They had fun with this task, and it was fun to find out that they were fantastically happy with almost everything they did this summer and would eagerly do it again. (I'm happy to share specifics if other parents are interested.) I also learned about their values; Jordan especially loves to have a lot of excitement and challenge and novelty, whereas Aaron especially loves to be with family.
All of this is good to know, because I think we have a couple more years of summer camps before the next era. What is that next era -- summer jobs? Yowza. I guess that's what it was for me. My elementary school was year-round so it wasn't an issue, but starting in middle school I volunteered at the zoo and worked as a receptionist at the JCC. Or was that high school? I think I was 14 before I was a summer nanny. I did not have summer childhoods full of camps - I only remember a week here and there in the basement of the California Academy of Sciences, some fun and some boring. Our kids have it pretty good. And we both work all summer, which I think my mom did not. My memories are surprisingly vague.
No comments:
Post a Comment