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A program badge for Ranger Camp

Campers who are ready to take on the challenge of an exciting wilderness adventure, make new friends, and have fun in a dynamic and safe environment will love Ranger Camp. The program offers a more rugged experience with opportunities for more in-depth development of outdoor living skills. Ranger campers participate in some traditional Kitaki activities, but function as their own community, working together on various outdoor living skills during the week including food preparation and cooking over a campfire; orienteering; fire-building; basic survival skills and safety; minimum-impact camping; and team building. Rangers also get a chance to climb on the Tango Tower, swim, kayak, and plan an offsite overnight camping trip.

Ranger Camp Highlights

Small Community

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Live in a small, self-sufficient community (10 campers, 2 staff, 1 SK).

Prepare Meals

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Work as a team to prepare your own meals.

Overnight Expedition

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Help plan an out-of-camp overnight excursion!

Ranger Camp Details

Goals

Ranger campers will:

  • Live in a small, self-sufficient community (10 campers, two staff)
  • Work as a team to prepare many of their own meals
  • Participate in the Survival Skills Olympics
  • Help plan in-camp expeditions and an out-of-camp excursion as a capstone for the week
Schedule

Ranger campers will participate in some all camp activities like campfire and the dance, but much of their time will be spent in their small community connecting over the cookfire, trekking through the creek, choosing the skills they'd like to master, and reflecting on their experience as a group. 

Check in will be midafternoon on the first day of the program, and check out will be mid-morning on the last day. More details on check in will be emailed with the Parent Guide towards the beginning of May.

Lodging

Ranger campers spend their time at Kitaki in a rustic cabin called Base Camp (with different sleeping spaces for boys and girls). Base Camp is a screen walled cabin and does not have air conditioning. Fans are provided to keep air circulating through the cabin. During their overnight trip, they sleep in single-gender tents.