Camps are places of adventure, growth and community. They are also complex environments where dozens of moving parts come together each day. Waterfront activities, outdoor excursions, communal dining and rustic facilities create opportunities for enrichment — but also carry risks if emergencies arise.
Too oſten, preparedness is treated as a checklist item: a binder on a shelf, a few drills at the start of the season and the hope that nothing serious will happen. True readiness requires a more intentional approach — one that moves from theory into practice and from paperwork into culture.