Readiness isn’t about age or how many sleepovers they’ve had. It’s about curiosity—a willingness to try new things, meet new people, and spend time away from the familiar. Some kids are ready at six. Others need a few more years. Both are okay.
What matters most is that you feel confident in where they’re going. That means understanding the environment, knowing who’s caring for them, and trusting that homesickness—when it happens—is met with patience and experience.
Day camps, sports clinics, and summer programs all have value. But overnight camp creates something different—an immersive experience where kids live, learn, and grow alongside peers and mentors around the clock.
Time away from screens and schedules
Being part of a cabin community
They learn to manage their own time, care for their belongings, and make decisions on their own. These daily moments of responsibility build habits that last well beyond summer.
We were a little nervous the first time we sent our oldest to Camp Fern with a friend—but he came home more confident and independent, and we could see how much the experience meant to him. That made it so much easier to send our middle son the next year and watch him have his own special Fern experience. Now we’re so excited to send our youngest this summer and complete the trifecta!
There’s a reason so many Camp Fern Legacy families come back year after year—and generation after generation.
With around 150 campers and a staff-to-camper ratio built for real relationships, Camp Fern Legacy isn’t a place where kids get lost in the crowd. Counselors know names. Directors know families. And campers feel they belong to something that lasts longer than a single summer.Our single-gender environment helps kids feel comfortable, try new things, and build confidence.
Without social pressures, campers form deeper friendships, take healthy risks, and fully embrace the summer experience.Our motto—”God first, others second, I am third”—isn’t just words on a wall. It’s how we live together for two or four weeks every summer. It shapes how campers treat each other and the kind of community we build.