Brandon, Alison, Brian, and Kendall

Marbles Camp! Week 3

Posted by on Jul 24, 2015 in Brian, Family | 1 comment

Marbles Camp! Week 3

Monday, July 20

A Day in the Life of a Happy Camper

  • Play and learn in the museum exhibits
  • Explore games, construction sets and imaginative play in the discovery room
  • Experience the fun and sometimes messy side of art and science in the creative exploration room
  • Dive into our weekly topic in the themed activity room
  • Younger campers get to know each other by sharing books, songs, and snack time, while older campers bond over games and free play

 

Tuesday, July 21

AM: Passport to Flavor

In the kitchen today campers took a trip to Colombia. They made avocado soup with garlic bread.

PM: Crazy for Cardboard

Campers used their imagination today to create with cardboard. They made doll houses, puppets and catapults.

 

Wednesday, July 22

AM: Passport to Flavor

Campers were inspired by Greece today in the kitchen.  They whipped up a feta salad with lettuce, tomato, lemon juice, olive oil and feta with tzadziki.

PM: Crazy for Cardboard

Cardboard architects built cardboard cities, made a collaborative cardboard mural, and cardboard stamps.

 

Thursday, July 23

AM: Passport to Flavor

Cooking was set back because of rain today.  Instead, campers created and flew paper airplanes, built with foam blocks, and used nuts, bolts and screws to make a fort.

PM: Crazy for Cardboard

Campers continued their cardboard creations this week with a cardboard arcade.  They made up their own board games, created cardboard skeeball and cardboard Foosball!

 

Friday, July 24

AM: Passport to Flavor

The week in the kitchen ended with a Polish theme.  Campers made a delicious Polish Apple Cake.

PM: Crazy for Cardboard

Today, campers ended their cardboard week by creating a cardboard room, a cardboard city, and finished their collaborative cardboard mural. 

 

One Comment

Join the conversation and post a comment.

  1. Grandma Cheryl

    It is good to know how to entertain ourselves with our own creations. A lesson that lasts a lifetime.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *