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Summer Camp at Summit Review


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Scoutmaster Burkhardt Reviews Summer Camp at the Summit

 

This is a review of summer camp as experienced by Scouts and leaders at the Summit's “James Justice National Scout Camp” in early August, 2020.  The Summit is known for its role in hosting jamborees and is used for high adventure and training activities.  However, this review will focus solely on the summer camp operation.  I am wearing my hat as Scoutmaster to inner-city youth from the District of Columbia in writing this.  Late in the review, I will make limited comparisons to council summer camps as I have experienced them as a Scoutmaster and (in my earlier days) camp staffer.  Finally, I will share a thought about a potential future role for the Summit.

 

Basics.   The cost to attend was about $400 per youth and adult, with two complimentary fee waivers for adults.  The summer camp normally runs from Mid-June through early August.  During jamboree years, the summer camp has a shorter season.  Sign-ups and merit badge scheduling use the same on-line system and program that council camps use.  Camp starts Sunday and ends Saturday morning, although there is an option to arrive early on Sunday for a small additional fee.  

Arrival.  Troops arrive at the Summit Visitors Center, which is a large and modern structure similar to national park service visitors centers.  You can arrive by vehicle, commercial air (30 min. away) or Amtrak (20 min. away).  Buses are available to transport you to the visitors center.   It is complete with a trading post, museum exhibits, small climbing wall and plenty of space and activities for Scouts to explore while unit leaders submit all of their medical, waiver and other forms.  This includes a swim test report, because the Summit requires units to conduct their own swim tests prior to arriving.  This summer, the interior of the visitors center was not open because of the COVID virus, but I was able to get inside later in the week for a look.  The center is located off-site, assuring that persons do not access the Summit until they are fully cleared.  I have never experienced a more meticulous clearance process.  I can assure you, not a single Scout or leader is going to access the Summit without a complete set of medical and other forms, including a current YPT form for each leader.  They make no exceptions, which is good in this day – but would be a real problem if you do not have your forms accessible.  We were missing a couple of things and were able to have them e-mailed from home.  Once cleared, the troop heads to an entrance location.  Off base, there are no direction signs to alert an uninformed driver that a BSA installation is nearby.  Security at the gate is very tight, with three personnel carefully re-checking authorization to enter and taking final temperature checks before opening a heavy security gate.

Campsite.  Campsites for those attending Summer Camp are located in Sub camp C, which is one of the many sub camps used during the jamborees.  We followed the map and well-marked road system to our site and were met there by a “rover”, which is the Summit title used for commissioner-like staffers.  The sites are in open fields and include pre-set Coleman tents specially manufactured for jamborees.  They are similar in shape to the 3-person Coleman Sun Dome tents sold at scout shops, but slightly taller and made of a tougher gauge material.  Each participant gets an army-style cot.  Each site has a sturdy dining fly structure mounted on a steel frame and two picnic tables.  We brought along an extra dining fly and the Summit provided two additional picnic tables.  The sites are directly adjacent to solidly built shower/flush toilet facilities.  The showers are cold, but leaders can walk to a leader-only facility that has hot showers.  I was told there are a limited number of sites back in the woods, but did not view them.  One of our leaders was there earlier in the summer with a contingent group and prefers the open field sites.

Food.  There is a very attractive dining hall close to the campsites, which serves all meals.  The food quality was similar to a high school cafeteria, which disappointed some.  However, the food was filling and satisfying in a basic way.  Snacks were laid-out and accessible at all times for Scouts to take with them.  Because of COVID, most preferred to take their food and eat outside on the many picnic tables set on a broad lawn.  I hope that COVID is not a major factor in the summer of 2021, so I will not provide a detailed explanation of the anti-COVID procedures other than to say they were extensive, effective and firmly encouraged by the friendliest staffers I have seen do such things.

Scouting Program.  An overall initial comment is that in comparison to what most councils can field, the Summit summer camp staffers were slightly older and significantly more educated, experienced and talented at what they do.  I suppose this is to be expected at a national base, but as an experienced Scouter, I immediately understood this difference would favorably affect the entire week.  I was right.  As an example, the technical/academic merit badges (like astronomy and archeology) are taught by graduate students in those fields or similarly experienced people.  Traditional merit badges are taught by college-age students or experienced adults on vacation.  Everyone I spoke to seems to have worked there for at least a few years.  Not once did I hear a comment that a counselor was not up to their job.  The record keeping of badge completion was kept current on-line on an everyday basis.

Merit badges are completed in one or two three-hour sessions.  For instance, lifesaving and swimming are taught on Mon-Tues and again on Wed-Thurs, with choice for either morning or afternoon.  Kayaking is a single three-hour session offered at multiple time through the week.  Some badges are in the evening hours.  

Summit does not precisely replicate a traditional summer camp merit badge program.  For instance, it does not offer canoeing or rowing – traditional staples at camps I have worked at and taken my Scouts to.  However, it does offer wonderful merit badges that most summer camps would not normally offer, such as white water.  Climbing and shooting sports are offered at a world-class level of quality in terms of facilities and staffing.  The best practice is to simply go online and see if their merit badge offerings might well-serve your Scouts.

Our Scouts earned an average of five merit badges each, and nobody seemed unreasonably stretched to finish them.  Most merit badges are finished by Thursday evening, leaving Friday for completion tasks. 

The Summit’s new-Scout program takes place on a replica of Brownsea Island.  An actual island.  Our Scouts did not participate in it, but I heard from other Scoutmasters that it was well run.

Use of Jamboree Program Facilities.  Scouts and leaders can use many of the facilities built for the jamborees.  This includes the zip lines, climbing, skateboarding, mountain bike, laser pistol, sustainability treehouse and many other facilities.  Some of these work with merit badge offerings, but all facilities are open to everyone.  These are the same facilities open to “day visitors” during jamborees.

Camp-wide Programming.  We visited during the COVID pandemic when all camp-wide assemblies were cancelled.  Instead, high-quality welcoming and closing videos featuring attending Scouts were professionally produced and broadcast in place of opening and closing campfires.  The videos make a nice camp souvenir.

 

Differences about the Summit.  The Summit is a different place to go to summer camp and is not entirely comparable to a council-owned facility.  After all, it cost hundreds of millions to build and has facilities no council could rationally think about building.  You might say that being at the Summit for summer camp is like being part of something very big and bold, as compared to the intimate feeling you can get at a smaller council camp.  It has staffing capability (both paid and volunteer) that cannot be approached by a council.  For instance, a full-time and on-site fire/rescue/medical team, pristinely built and maintained infrastructure and counselor/staff network of personnel who teach at the national class level.  After a few remaining facilities are completed and nature heals-over some construction evidence, the effect will feel like being in a top-class national park.

Scouts and leaders understand and react very favorably to the quality of instruction and the maturity of the staff.  Troop leaders in particular are very entertained by using the program facilities built for the jamborees.  The beauty of the site, including being surrounded by medium-sized, wooded mountains, favorably affects all.  The sheer quality and size of the built infrastructure is striking -- everything there appears to have been built to last at least 100 years.  Thick, massive and uniquely constructed bridges, shelters, dams, arenas, buildings and sports facilities.  The Summit has already established and is further strengthening a unique staff “culture” like those at the other national high adventure bases and iconic council scout camps.  My sense is that it is personality of Scouting in our nation east of the Mississippi, but welcoming to all.

Burkhardt’s Bottom Line.  I strongly recommend Summit for a Troop summer camp experience.  To oversimplify things for the sake of brevity, let me state that everything seems to work well, everybody seems to know exactly what they are doing and everything about the operation is simple to understand.  The staff – ranging from dining hall, program, medical, maintenance and administrative personnel – live up to the finest we offer at the other national bases and our most-iconic council Scout reservations.  The fact that the staff rose to the occasion of effectively dealing with COVID during the just-completed summer camp season is itself reason to have confidence you can have a solid week of summer camp here.  Our Troop will probably return to our own council camp next year (the renouned Goshen Scout Reservation), but I can easily see a return trip to the Summit in our future.  Another option might be for our Troop to attend our council camp and offer an “extra” week of summer camp for a smaller group of our most-motivated Scouts.  

Our 37 Scouts, 19 adult leaders, 70 Scout parents and All Souls Episcopal Church offer a heartfelt thanks to the entire Summit staff and those National Council professionals who support them for making summer camp happen for our Scouts during this very difficult year.  This was the only opportunity this summer for several of our Scouts BSA girls to experience nature beyond their urban homes.  Your operation of summer camp appeared almost effortless, but I know it took much to execute.  

Final Comment.  I am taking off my campaign hat (yes, I wear one as Scoutmaster) and putting on my past council president and past national volunteer hat.  The personalities and physical attributes of the Summit will continue to embed themselves into the heart of Scouting.  While particularly true among the Scouting family living east of the Mississippi, an attachment is growing among US and international Scouts and Scouters who have attended Jamborees at the Summit.

As the financial fury of the reorganization bankruptcy and COVID challenge our ability to provide Scouting to American youth, the Summit might play a central role in continuing and growing Scouting.  An unfortunate but unavoidable fact is that operation of many council camps – as well as many councils themselves – will no longer be viable.  Councils will be combined and some camps will cease operation and be sold.   The Summit can provide a national-class and affordable summer camp experience for the Scouting families who are within reasonable distance – a massive percentage of our membership.  This was not a central purpose for developing the Summit, but it might become an unexpected life ring for Scouting.    

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Scoutmaster Burkhardt Reviews Summer Camp at the Summit   This is a review of summer camp as experienced by Scouts and leaders at the Summit's “James Justice National Scout Camp” in early Augus

Moderator note, let's keep on topic Summit Summer Camp experience - activities, cold showers , costs, gear, medical checks, camp setup, check-in, safety,... Thanks P.S. oh and food. @J

This is just absolutely the opposite of what scouting is supposed to be about. I am terrifically glad that the summer at Summit has so far continued apace without incident, but it was a foolhardy and

This is just absolutely the opposite of what scouting is supposed to be about. I am terrifically glad that the summer at Summit has so far continued apace without incident, but it was a foolhardy and ridiculous risk to import youth from all over into West Virginia and local folks were and are understandably upset. I've got family in the area so I know this is not at all as bucolic a situation as is presented here. 

Furthermore, it's appalling that certain people keep pushing the idea that it is acceptable that local and regional camps will fold and that Summit should become the fall back. That might get us through a few years but it is not a long term solution. Scouting must be local. The scenario you are outlining is a parallel to the elite travel sports teams that many on this forum mock and who have the money to travel to exotic locations like Disney or Europe. There are some favored urban areas where moneyed interests are available to make such things happen for disadvantaged youth, but in the full breadth of America, this is not the fortunate case for most scouts. 

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45 minutes ago, Eagle94-A1 said:

What about the showers, are they still "ambient temperature?"

Yes.  The showers are still cold water in most of the camp, but they have installed hot showers for leaders.  I think it is really only a matter of time when more hot showers will be added.  Interestingly, none of ourScouts complained about it.  Not once.

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9 minutes ago, Cburkhardt said:

Yes.  The showers are still cold water in most of the camp, but they have installed hot showers for leaders.  I think it is really only a matter of time when more hot showers will be added.  Interestingly, none of ourScouts complained about it.  Not once.

#1 complaint for my troop when they did summer camp at a local camp was the "ambient temperature." I know the first NSJ there, they could not keep the solar showers in stock.

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3 hours ago, yknot said:foolhardy and ridiculous risk to import youth from all over into West Virginia and local folks were and are understandably upset. I've got family in the area so I know this is not at all as bucolic a situation as is presented here. 

Thanks for raising the health issue.  While I did not make the review COVID-centric, perhaps I could have mentioned that all scouts and adults in our unit we’re tested within a week of departing and Temperature-monitored daily from that point and throughout the week.  Masks and gloves were worn and social distancing was followed.  We are fortunate that two parent-physicians were able to accompany us as well.  The Summit medical and program staff was effectively instant on compliance.  We acted on medical advice, plain and direct.  The circumstance was far safer than the circumstances these scouts are going back home to.

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3 hours ago, yknot said:

 

Furthermore, it's appalling that certain people keep pushing the idea that it is acceptable that local and regional camps will fold and that Summit should become the fall back. That might get us through a few years but it is not a long term solution. Scouting must be local.

My note simply observes that if and when a council camp closes, the Summit summer camp will be available and offers a good program.  I don’t think closing camps is the way to go unless local folks can’t sustain them.  I agree local is best, and we will go to our council camp next year if they operate.  I wish your council the best over the next few years as the financial stresses impact everyone in the BSA.

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3 hours ago, yknot said:

 The scenario you are outlining is a parallel to the elite travel sports teams that many on this forum mock and who have the money to travel to exotic locations like Disney or Europe. There are some favored urban areas where moneyed interests are available to make such things happen for disadvantaged youth, but in the full breadth of America, this is not the fortunate case for most scouts. 

These are reasonable issues and thoughts.  The Summit summer camp cost was $380 per person.  We rented vans and drove 5.5 hours to get there, which is 1.5 hours farther than our council camp (which we passed on the way).  Our council camp price is $375.  So, it was a very similar price.  Yes, we do receive assistance for several of our scouts.  Our “monied interests” are the members of our modest CO church, who graciously held a coffee fundraiser to help send our Scouts and the parish itself gave us some additional help.  Another parish gave us $1,500.  We used it to greatly subsidize participation of those who needed it.  The Summit summer camp turned out to be a very good summer camp with some enjoyable bells and whistles.  Most of these scouts will never visit the Summit in its role as a jamboree site.  But, there is no reason why they should not experience these facilities when not being used for a jamboree.  Summer camp there turned out not to be exotic, expensive or Disney-like at all.  Just a fine time for our scouts to earn their merit badges and Learn the lessons of Scouting.

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44 minutes ago, Eagle94-A1 said:

#1 complaint for my troop when they did summer camp at a local camp was the "ambient temperature." I know the first NSJ there, they could not keep the solar showers in stock.

I agree with you.  One cold shower on Monday morning definitely sent me running to the leaders’ showers for the balance of the week.  The decision to go with cold showers in such an otherwise well-built facility seems a bit mistaken.  We will discuss the trip at a PLC meeting in 2 weeks - will be interesting to see if they bring it up.

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1 hour ago, Cburkhardt said:

My note simply observes that if and when a council camp closes, the Summit summer camp will be available and offers a good program. 

I hope not.  If there is any justice in the bankruptcy process, the Summit will be the very first thing to go.

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23 minutes ago, David CO said:

I hope not.  If there is any justice in the bankruptcy process, the Summit will be the very first thing to go.

The bankruptcy process will determine what assets are necessary to continue the movement.  If the Summit does not make the judge’s list, I predict it will be purchased out of bankruptcy by the principal donors who built it, who will then lease it back to us for a very modest annual fee.

My posting is a review of a pretty good summer camp program and not a defense of the decision to build the Summit or conduct large events there.  Our Scouts are looking for a good place to camp and learn, My experience this last week tells me it is worth keeping.  

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Dear Friends:  The policy issue of whether the Summit should have been built or whether it should be retained through bankruptcy are fine matters to discuss, but I hope that can be done elsewhere on the site where policy matters are handled.  This is a very detailed review of a summer camp operation that most of us have not experienced and many have been curious about.  My intent is to provide a straight-up review of the summer camp only.  The previous pro/anti Summit discussions on this site have been exhaustive and informative.  Experiencing summer camp there last week was very satisfying for our Scouts.  That is really my main message.

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15 hours ago, Cburkhardt said:

 As the financial fury of the reorganization bankruptcy and COVID challenge our ability to provide Scouting to American youth, the Summit might play a central role in continuing and growing Scouting.  An unfortunate but unavoidable fact is that operation of many council camps – as well as many councils themselves – will no longer be viable.  Councils will be combined and some camps will cease operation and be sold.   The Summit can provide a national-class and affordable summer camp experience for the Scouting families who are within reasonable distance – a massive percentage of our membership.  This was not a central purpose for developing the Summit, but it might become an unexpected life ring for Scouting.    

 

14 minutes ago, Cburkhardt said:

Dear Friends:  The policy issue of whether the Summit should have been built or whether it should be retained through bankruptcy are fine matters to discuss, but I hope that can be done elsewhere on the site where policy matters are handled.  This is a very detailed review of a summer camp operation that most of us have not experienced and many have been curious about.  My intent is to provide a straight-up review of the summer camp only.  The previous pro/anti Summit discussions on this site have been exhaustive and informative.  Experiencing summer camp there last week was very satisfying for our Scouts.  That is really my main message.

It seems to me that you were the one who brought up the issue in the conclusion of your original post.  You can't fault us for responding.

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