The Howard County
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VOL.14, NO.7
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More than 30,000 readers throughout Howard County
Summer camps for grownups
JULY 2024
I N S I D E …
PHOTO BY JEAN HALL
By Glenda C. Booth Many people recall the ups and downs of summer camp as youngsters: campfire songs, leaky tents, latrines and s’mores. At today’s “adult camps” — whether at a campground, on a college campus or at a high-end ranch — you can revisit some of those experiences more comfortably. Every summer, an estimated one million older campers spend a week or two away to take music lessons, sharpen their writing skills, explore their creative streak, nourish their well-being, unplug and slow down. Camps exist for music, cooking, quilting, language learning, writing, fishing, kayaking, archery, carpentry, yoga, healthy living, nature study, horseback riding and even pickleball. At the Wooden Boat School in Maine, for instance, you can build your own boat. At Space Camp in Huntsville, Alabama, you can train on simulators and sleep and eat like an astronaut. Or you can start that novel you’ve always wanted to write at the Putney School in Vermont.
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Offline at nature camp
Julie Dunlap, a teacher who lives in Columbia, spent a week at Audubon’s Hog Island Camp on Bremen Island, Maine, several summers ago. With biologists, ornithologists and naturalists as her “counselors,” she studied the flora and fauna of the Maine coast, including puffins, seals, eider ducks and other wildlife. She also hiked, boated and met people from around the country. “The best part was when I first got there and I realized I was surrounded by people who wanted to have a delightful time looking at birds in a beautiful place — a geeky time,” Dunlap said. Open for 80 years, Hog Island Audubon
Adult campers at Hog Island Camp in Maine attend an outdoor nature class during their camp session. Every summer about a million adults go to summer camp to hike, study ecology, write, and sleep in cabins.
Camp is located on a 335-acre island with spruce fir forests and a shoreline of tidal pools. Photographers, writers, artists, educators and students teach and learn about nature in sessions about everything from birding to art to photography. Between activities, campers can hike the island’s wooded trails, search the tidepools for mussels and barnacles, listen to the loons or just contemplate the peace and beauty of it all.
“It was an amazing break from everyday life,” Dunlap said. “The peace of being unavailable to my inbox was indeed a thrill.” Dunlap, who teaches wildlife ecology at the University of Maryland Global Campus, made friends with several of her instructors and has stayed in touch with them, she said. “I mostly enjoyed being around the famous ornithologists and learning about See CAMPS, page 21
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