Resources

Here you can find Impact Reports, some writings “From Chief’s Desk”, as well as articles that point to the powerful experience of summer camp, and learn more about CCBSF’s past and present leadership.  If you have questions or suggestions for additional resources, please contact us.

"The wilderness can be a magnificent playground and a great university. If education is a series of continuing experiences that build the knowledge, the skills, the habits, the appreciations, the attitudes, the values, and ultimately and hopefully the wisdom that enrich living, then we need to go far beyond the classroom."

- Frank "Chief" Bell, Sr.
Our financials
Impact Reports

Thanks to the generosity of our donors, over 200 children have spent a summer at Mondamin or Green Cove since the C+CBSF's founding. In sharing this Impact Report, we invite you to learn a bit more about how your financial support becomes the unique and powerful experience of summer camp.

Current Report

"The wilderness can be a magnificent playground and a great university. If education is a series of continuing experiences that build the knowledge, the skills, the habits, the appreciations, the attitudes, the values, and ultimately and hopefully the wisdom that enrich living, then we need to go far beyond the classroom."

- Frank "Chief" Bell, Sr.
$ 100000
Funds Granted Total
80
Scholarships Total
1000
Gifts Total
$1. 0 M
Gifts Total
field notes

“If you hang around western North Carolina’s outdoor industry long enough, eventually, you’ll hear a story [about] a child or young adult [who] discovers the outdoors through summer camp, either as a camper or counselor, and their world pivots 180 degrees.”

- Jess Daddio, "The Summer Camp Effect", Blue Ridge Outdoors Magazine
1976

From Chief’s Desk: July 12, 1976

I just talked, too briefly, to a fifteen-year-old girl who was unhappy. She was not invited to a gathering for sixteen and seventeeen-year-olds. It occurred to me to say, “There are times when I am unhappy too, but I usually realize that condition is my fault – not that of other people or circumstances.” People and environment can certainly affect happiness – they should not be allowed to determine it.

A wise old dog saw an ambitious puppy chasing his tail. “Why?” asked the old one. “Because I have studied the mysteries of life; and have found that happiness is in my tail, and when I catch it, I shall have happiness.” “I, too, have looked into the mysteries,” replied the older dog, “and I too, have found that happiness is in my tail. But when I chase it, it constantly eludes me. When I go, it follows me everywhere I go.”

2018

Examining the Role of Summer Camps in Developing Academic and Workplace Readiness

Citation: Wilson, C., & Sibthorp, J. (2018). Examining the Role of Summer Camps in Developing Academic and Workplace Readiness. Journal of Youth Development, 13(1-2), 83-104.

“This research identified key learning outcomes former campers believed were learned at camp that may be applicable to academic and workplace readiness. Consistent with the outcome based literature, summer camps seem well-suited to teach relationship skills, teamwork, how to live with peers, self-confidence, organization, responsibility, independence, perseverance, career orientation, and emotion regulation. The mechanisms at camp that help support campers’ learning of these outcomes include experiential learning, camp as separate in time and space, camp schedules, counselors, communal living, safe and supportive environments, and diversity of people.”

2018

Jess Daddio: The Summer Camp Effect Blue Ridge Outdoors

This article focuses on the powerful impact of summer camps.  Beginning with some background about camps and their impact on Western NC, the second half of the article focuses on the life changing nature of summer camp on individuals. Stories of Mondamin and Green Cove alums are used to to highlight this. It also speaks to the relationships families have with summer camp.  It is well worth the read and you will hear from and see the faces of some folks you may recognize. Most of the photos are courtesy of Mondamin Camper/Staff Alum + Parent, Rob Giresch.

2014

Bunks Are Good For Brains: An Interview with Tina Payne Bryson, Ph.D., and the American Camp Association

Tina Payne Bryson, Ph.D., is a parent, parenting educator, researcher, and psychotherapist. She has written many bestselling books, is an internationally sought-after speaker, and focuses on neurodevelopment.  In this interview, she shares a neurodevelopmental perspective on the power of summer camp. 

Board Members Past and Present

Martha Key Altvater

Elizabeth English Anderson

Frank Bell

Caroline Long Blackwell

Aza Downs Bowlin

Lee Knight Caffery

David Cawdrey

Tina Davis Clark

Frances Clayton

Claire Shelmire Crews

Britta Wiesner D’Anna

Svend Deal

Rick Deluga

Anne Chenoweth Deutsch

John Dockendorf

Gary Eblen

 

Simon Everett*

William “Bill” Felder

Margi Gaffney

Kiel Garella

Rob Giersch

Campe Goodman

Rob Goodman

Gordon Grant

Charlotte Higgason Gregorie

Suzie Miller Howick

Kim Jordan

Frances Holcomb*

Stephanie Hull

Marilyn Jody

David Kaminski

Zack Lemann

Dori Luke

Nancy Wilson McKnight

Margaret Munford

Drew Norman

Kathryn Overstreet

Carter Ramsay

Scott Reed

Culver Stapleton Scales

Day Shelmire

Katherine Skinner

Pharr Smith

Jennings Snider

Virginia Spiegner

Shelton Steele

Sabrina Gatlin Tandon

Barbara Little Weaver

Anne Wynne

*deceased