New to camp last summer was a partnership with the Newcomb Institute of Tulane University. Sally Kenney of the Newcomb Institute helped launch the program where students studied Women and Social Development in Kenya prior to traveling. Once they arrived, days were filled with meeting the Friends of Ngong Road staff, children, and families, seeing the animals, learning more about Kenya, and of course, camp! The Tulane students each prepared lessons that they taught to students at camp and participated in the daily activities of camp. Read more about the partnership in the Newcomb newsletter.
Volunteers at Camp 2017
Have you ever considered traveling to Kenya? Do you enjoy working with kids? Were you ever a camper? Volunteers at camp are needed.
Each year, volunteers from both the U.S. and Kenya join us at camp to enrich campers’ experiences. Volunteers participate in daily activities and use their unique skills to teach classes, run new and creative games, and share life experiences with the kids. There is plenty of room for creativity and fun.
This year, Emily Gleason and Turner Cobden are offering a $1,000 partial travel grant for camp. The grant will be awarded to the candidate they believe will best contribute to the holiday camp and to the mission of the charity. Apply by April 7 to be considered. We invite you to learn more about camp and the travel grant online or by contacting Tom Gleason at tom@ngongroad.org.
Camp 2017 runs from August 12 to August 25 in a beautiful, rural part of Kenya near Mt. Kenya. The location provides students with a once-a-year chance to escape the busy, noisy city. It is the student’s favorite part of being in the program, and you could be a part of it!
Senior and Leadership Camp
By Turner Cobden
Friends of Ngong Road Board Member
I’m glad to report that we have had another fantastic year of camp in Kenya, offering the opportunity for both staff and students to enjoy getting away from Nairobi for just a little while. I joined Ngong Road Children’s Foundation staff members Kelvin Thuku, Antony Kamau, and Mary Muriu as co-director for both our senior and leadership camps. The camp was held at the St. Francis Xavier School near Lake Naivasha, famous for its wildlife and scenic beauty.
The students had fun and that is one of our core requirements for the camp to be a success. In addition to just having fun, the children also had a chance to see the surrounding area and, during senior camp, go to Hell’s Gate National Park on a field trip.
As we finish our 10th year of camp, it’s worthwhile to reflect and think about how this portion of the charity has evolved over the years. Our original camp, run by Tom Gleason in 2007, had some very basic goals: food, structure, and enrichment. The camp was held in Nairobi and had all children in the program participate (only 150 back then!) during the daytime. At the end of the day, the children would go home and come back again in the morning. The camp was also significantly shorter, with the entire program finishing in just one week.
The camp became an anchor for these children in some ways. As I continued to come back in subsequent years, I would hear stories about how for the first six months after camp the children would talk about how they enjoyed the previous camp. The next six months were filled with thoughts about how much they looked forward to it. That is a powerful testament to the work that our volunteers, staff, and directors do.
The camp program evolved and expanded over the years, realizing its value to these children’s experiences. Camp organizers began segmenting the camp by age bracket to offer more age-friendly activities.
For instance, the older children in the program could start receiving additional enrichment and life skills, taught by our volunteer staff. We conducted experiments with field trips and then actively relocated the entire camp to different regions to expose the children to various areas.
We have now grown to multiple camps: Little Kids Camp, Grammar Camp, Senior Camp, and our most ambitious, Leadership Camp. For the past few years, Leadership Camp has created an opportunity for our older students to apply and actually be part of the staff for camp. They train using a servant leadership model, focusing on enabling their teams and squads to succeed together. Camp doesn’t harbor any heroes; success thrives on teamwork.
For the second year in a row, Sally Kenney delighted us by joining us at camp. As a sponsor of three children and Executive Director of the Newcomb College Institute at Tulane University, she is uniquely qualified to empower our leadership campers and take them to new heights.
Sally also implemented a partnership of Friends of Ngong Road with Tulane University. This year and we saw our first three students from Tulane earning course credit for joining us at camp! It was a fantastic first and a stellar way to continue growing camp after ten successful years.
Thank you so much to everyone that allowed camp to again be another wonderful time for the kids. From personal experience, I can admit the staff had some fun, too!
Little Kids Camp was Fun for All
By Chris Adams, Volunteer
Little Kids August Camp took place on Monday the 22nd and after a slow start to the day, it turned out great. It was a slow start because when we arrived at the scheduled venue, Destiny Gardens, we found it had been demolished and moved half an hour further down the road. It took ages to find!!
However, after finding the right location we found it had a nice garden, swimming pools, and an amusement park with dodge’em cars and other rides. Merry-go-round anyone?! Our kids didn’t have swimming gear but luckily we could rent them on the spot. It was a great decision to do so…we got great joy out of watching the fun the kids had. After lunch, they hit the amusement park again with gusto. Even when the rain came, it didn’t deter their enjoyment.
After the prize-giving ceremony around 5:30 pm, where each child received a soft toy donated by an Irish family called the Heekins, we all headed home. We arrived back at the NRCF office nearly two hours later due to the traffic and the rain. The caseworkers took the kids home if their parents or guardians were not there to meet them. It was a very long day for everyone but the fun was super. Roll on to next year when the construction at Destiny Gardens is finished …hopefully!
Grammar Camp 2016 – Building a Community
Grammar Camp for kids ages 10 to 14 was the first camp on the calendar this summer. It was held at a boarding school on the outskirts of Naivasha, Kenya. First camping experience was memorable, with memorable riding to campsite indicating great fun and enjoyment. Twenty student- and staff leaders and one hundred and twenty ecstatic campers rode three brightly painted buses with loud whistles, music, blowing horns, and more. The energy was contagious, and it was clear that the culture of camp is based around “fun!”
Daily Chores Start the Fun!
Each day at Grammar Camp began with cleaning the dorms, group songs and chants, and a reminder of our goal for the day: to have fun! The kids’ home lives are filled with cleaning, collecting water, walking to school, learning, studying, and more home chores necessary to make the home or boarding school function.
At camp, while still learning and taking care of environment, the kids are not only laughing, running, and singing but also literally jumping for joy due to the ample space they have to express themselves!
Camp is a unique experience to see the true spirit and beauty of the kids in our program.
Visitors from Tulane Helped Out
This year, two professors and three students from the Newcomb College Institute of Tulane University joined us at camp. They led sessions about gender roles, emotional intelligence, and leadership, and participated in crazy games. They built relationships with our students and were a listening ear for many.
Mini Safari Made Special
Students had the opportunity to go to Lake Naivasha safari hike and boat ride, observing giraffes, zebras, hippos and more. While sitting by the lake some of the boys gave me a Swahili vocabulary quiz, and I witnessed how this group of kids has truly become a family.; The shared difficult experiences and opportunities through the program create an important bond among the kids.
I had heard about camp is important for community building and for the success of the overall program. I have now seen it first-hand, and it is so true! Camp is a valuable time for our community of kids and caseworkers to continue to grow. Thank you to everyone who made Camp 2016 possible through your gifts to camp.