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‘Kids Need Camp Now More Than Ever,’ WNC Camp Directors Struggle With COVID-19 Decisions

Courtesy of Camp Watia
Camp Watia is the youngest YMCA camp in the country. The team decided to close for the summer on May 15.

Summer camps are a big part of the culture of Western North Carolina. There are over 70 camps of all types for kids of all ages at the western end of the state. Many are still deciding if they will close due to COVID-19. 

Singing songs around a campfire, canoeing, team building - these are all activities that are associated with summer camp. They are also activities that require close contact - something that isn’t possible in a social distancing world of COVID-19.  

“Capture the flag is a big activity for us that we do every Sunday.”

That’s executive director Ryan Hove from YMCA Camp Watia near Bryson City. 

 “That's the first big all camp activity and it seemed really unlikely that we were going to be able to facilitate things like that,” says Hove. 

Despite other YMCA camps across the country remaining open, Hove and his team made the choice to close for the summer on May 15. 

Camp Watia is the youngest YMCA camp in the country, opening in 2016. Many other camps in the region have been family-run for generations. Their experience extends to viruses, says Sandra Garcia Boyer, executive director of the North Carolina Youth Camp Association. 

“Camps have a long, long history of planning and managing against communicable diseases. Certainly Polio, H1N1 and most recently SARS,” says Garcia Boyer. “Camps are uniquely ready for this type of situation.” 

Garcia Boyer says about 20 camps in the association have already been cancelled while others haven’t made a decision. Camp Pinnacle in Henderson County and others have announced that they will open at reduced capacity later in the summer.

She stresses that camps are a major industry in Western North Carolina -  over $360 million dollars are associated with just the camps in her organization, as well as 10,000 full time jobs according to a 2010 NC State study. 

Garcia Boyer also worries about individual camps. If they can’t open this summer, that means about 22 months without revenue. 

“I’m Adam Boyd, director of Camp Merri-Mac for girls and Camp Timberlake for boys.” 

Girls-only Camp Merri-Mac opened in 1945 near Black Mountain and then expanded with a boy’s camp in 2018. So far both camps have cancelled June sessions, but Boyd hopes they will be able to open later in the summer. He’s waiting to hear when North Carolina will move into phase 3 to make a decision. 

“If we don’t hear something by June 1 then the camps that are still hoping to operate in July will find it very difficult to do that,” says Boyd. 

North Carolina moved to Phase 2 on May 22, and that is expected to last at least five weeks.

 

 

Lilly Knoepp is Senior Regional Reporter for Blue Ridge Public Radio. She has served as BPR’s first fulltime reporter covering Western North Carolina since 2018. She is from Franklin, NC. She returns to WNC after serving as the assistant editor of Women@Forbes and digital producer of the Forbes podcast network. She holds a master’s degree in international journalism from the City University of New York and earned a double major from UNC-Chapel Hill in religious studies and political science.
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