Friday, June 29, 2012

Check out our work...

Now summer camp is well and truly under way, we would like to cast your minds back a month or so to our Outdoor Education program this spring. We had such a blast teaching our sixth-grade visitors about the beauty and value of earth, and we believe they had a great time too!

Take a look at this short video which shows some pages of the students' workbooks, along with audio clips of the kids talking about their favorite memories of visiting the center.






We want to say a big THANK YOU to everyone who took part in our Outdoor Education program this past spring! See you next time...


- Marie and Alli, Directors

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

What’s cooler than cool? Ice Cold!

That is what the dining hall is going to be this summer! Just kidding, it will be climate controlled for sure. If you remember those couple times last summer when the floor of the dining hall looked like a lake and we were always telling you to walk slow and be careful, I am sure you do if you worked in the kitchen, mopping up all that dirty water after meals!

AC units on east side of Dining Hall.
Well, fear no more! This spring we installed two air conditioner units. This will help out with the humidity issues we have in the dining hall and make a much more enjoyable place than it already is. Remember, rain, sun or snow, we eat 3 times a day, the only activity that goes on no matter what! I am excited to put them to use!

Until next time, stay cool!!

- Chris Mathiowetz, Director

Friday, June 15, 2012

Quick check up with Shane

Shane F.
We are busy preparing all of the details for Camp Foley to be ready in time for summer, and I had the chance to have a few questions answered by 2nd year camper Shane F. from Edina Minnesota. Looking back on Shane’s first year at Foley I can see that he was a “busy camper,” no pun intended! Shane left 2011 with 8 awards and also went on a 3 day canoe trip! 

I asked him what he remembers about his first day at camp. “It was very welcoming, but I was a little confused at first. The camp counselors explained everything and took care of me and put me at ease.” His favorite activities were shooting rifles, his three day canoe trip, and fishing.

How has camp changed you as a person? “It has made me more independent and confident.” And lastly I always ask for some advice to give to a first time camper. “Don’t be afraid to try new things, even if you have never done them before.”

This returning year Shane will be accompanied by his sister, so he must have been talking all about it when he left Foley…

- Adam Ashley, Assistant Director.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Why the world needs summer camp

It is not easy for parents to make the decision to send their child away into the waiting arms of strangers who promise to take care of them – people who promise to show them the wonders of nature, fun, new skills, and friendships.

Jeff Merhige, executive director of YMCA Camp Kern, believes the world needs the next generation to be more tolerant of each others views, ideology and beliefs. Summer camp is an opportunity for children to be exposed to the best of human character. Trends show that children are making more friends online than at any other time in the past. This in itself is a startling statistic because it lends itself to children to desire to spend more and more time online and therefore away from a healthy real-life social environment.

Camp Foley... where kids can be KIDS!
Camp Foley enables campers to meet kids and staff from all over the world - from many races, cultures and socioeconomic cultures! Foley teaches children valuable skills, including social skills and challenges in a wide range of physical activities. These skills could never be taught from a computer screen.

Camp is a place where kids interact with people face-to-face, and at the same time, learn about themselves and others around a camp fire.

Growing up in the UK, summer camp was simply not an option for me as a child. Unfortunately the United Kingdom does not offer these kind of precious opportunities. I believe that the youth of the UK would benefit greatly from being able to attend summer camp much in the same way that American kids can. Personally I would have loved the opportunity when I was young. My advice: truly embrace this opportunity!

- Ricky Searson, Assistant Director

Saturday, June 9, 2012

Busy Spring weekend

The weekend of April 14th and 15th was a busy but extremely fun weekend! We had our first ‘work weekend’ of the new season. We tackled a little spring cleaning, erosion, shingling, and stick-pick-up! It all started on Friday the 13th, scary right? Actually it went very well! We handled a little rain but muscled through it! We tore the shingles off Nature, Crafts, and Kildare! Our goal was to finish 1 roof a day, so in the shingling department, due to rainy weather on Sunday we fell short! But we did what we could do. You will have to look close next time you come to camp!

Emma helps with the shingles
We cleaned the newly redone windows in Mic/Sac, they are too fancy! We also worked on conquering some erosion that gives us trouble in the spring time. We back-filled troublesome places on the main tarred loop of camp along with some giving some trees some much needed new black dirt.



Jake helps with some pickup

I would like to say thank you to our wonderful helpers of the weekend... Tom, Emma, and Jake Ryan, Jim Welch, and Perry, Amy, Matthew and Thomas Greenfield.


Until next, stay handy…

Chris Mathiowetz, Director

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

What's eating you?

It’s a bird, it’s a plane, it’s the unofficial state bird...the mosquito! There are very few animals on Earth that evoke such a feeling of misery like the mosquito. And, if you have ever visited Camp Foley I am sure you have had the pleasure of being woken up in the the middle of the night to itch one of those mosquito bites, which almost always end up in the most awkward place possible. Mosquitos are a natural, and healthy part of our environment here at Foley, and even though you might not stop disliking them, my hope is that you will have a new-found understanding of them.

Female Mosquito feeding.
Mosquito is Spanish for “little fly” and there are over 3,500 species in the world with about 50 of those species living in Minnesota. Mosquitos begin their lives in water, about 10 days, as larvae. They feed on organic matter that lives in stagnant water and breathe oxygen through little tubes called siphons, which look a lot like a snorkel! Over the next 10 days they will eat and grow into an adult mosquito and fly away. If you think that they grow up fast, it is because the average mosquito only lives about 6-8 weeks.

During the course of their short lives, they spend their time doing two things....eating and laying eggs! As far as eating goes, only female mosquitos eat blood. That is right ya’ll, females suck blood from people and animals, while male mosquitos feed off of plant nectar. Human skin produces over 300 chemical odors that smell like dinner to the mosquito. They can also detect body heat. So, really it is almost impossible to keep a mosquito from finding you!

So even though you may think mosquitos are very annoying creatures, they do play a role in our ecosystem! They are a reliable source of food for thousands of animals including bats, birds, frogs and fish. So, the next time you head outside, grab that mosquito repellent and don’t let the mosquitos take a bite outta you!

- Carrie Stageman, Assistant Director

Friday, June 1, 2012

Climbing to success


Foley Outdoor Education students Maria R., Tyler K. and Jordan P. take a moment to talk to us all about the climbing and team games activities here at camp. These three students joined us along with the rest of their 6th grade from St. Boniface school. Here is what they had to say...









- Marie and Alli, Directors.