Highlights from Summer 2024

Heart Camp

 Echo Hill Outdoor School (EHOS) seeks to empower the individual as one of our core missions. Leaving home to attend a summer camp can prompt mixed emotions from children and their parents alike even under the best of circumstances, but those of us who are involved in the world of summer camps know how important having some time away from home is for children to learn how to make their own choices, experience independence, and grow as people. Since 2008, a group of medical staff from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia (CHOP) in partnership with Echo Hill Outdoor School have sought to empower a group of spirited individuals who light up our campus for a once-a-summer event: “Heart Camp.”

The Heart Campers whoop with laughter while catching fish alongside nurse practitioners, while kayaking with their cardiologists, and while eating leisurely meals with mixed tables of EHOS staff, CHOP staff, and their friends. The children who attend Heart Camp have all either had heart or lung transplants, or have pulmonary hypertension. A traditional summer camp would not be equipped to adequately meet the medical needs of these children. The presence, attention, and deep care of the medical staff from Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia makes their stay possible, as well as their willingness to develop thoughtful programming with the Echo Hill Outdoor School staff.

This year, the Heart Campers arrived to see brightly colored decorations festooning their dorms, and an Olympics theme decking out Harris Hall. They threw themselves into a dance full of delightful costumes, a Heart Camp Olympics in the rain, and a carnival complete with a dunk tank, where they joyfully plunged staff members. Their week is rounded out by cooking lessons, decorating candles and pillowcases, visits to the goats and garden, and lots of games. On the last day, families were invited to watch a slideshow of photos of all the activities their children participated in, and to experience a little camp magic as staff members handed out Heart Camp awards as souvenirs, speaking to the honor, courage, and warmth of each of the attendees. The mood in the room was triumphant as campers embraced each other and hooted and hollered each others’ names. Several of the campers were aging out this year, making it an emotional week, but everyone brought the positivity for each other as their cheers soared into the rafters.

Endless thanks go out to the Heart Campers themselves, their families, the CHOP staff, and the generosity of donors and community members that contribute to Heart Camp’s success!

 

Cathedral Scholars

On a warm Thursday afternoon in July, a group of thirty high schoolers from Washington D.C. loaded their bags into the dorm where they’d be staying the night, and immersed themselves in two days of Eastern Shore living. These motivated young adults are part of the National Cathedral’s “Cathedral Scholars” program, which was created to assist students from underserved D.C. public schools. In the morning, scholars participate in a rigorous academic program designed to prepare them for college, and in the afternoons, they learn and practice a variety of skills at paid internships. The Cathedral Scholars have been coming to Echo Hill since 2003, where they apply their leadership skills and determination to group problem-solving on low course elements, and climbing the walls and nets of the pathfinder. While chatting over meals, many of the scholars revealed diverse and ambitious goals—starting their own businesses, getting into their dream school, and writing a book were mentioned. The scholars valued sharing and reflection after each activity, and one returnee mused that his time enjoying the view of the forested adventure course was as important as the climb itself. Many of them expressed that they appreciated their time away from the city, and were excited to learn more about plant life and ecosystems after a relaxed moment of sampling apples from EHOS’s orchard during their evening night hikes. The blend of physical challenge, reflection, and good conversation invigorated staff and scholars alike.

Survivor Summit

In summer of 2019, Dr. Matt King brought eight young adult cancer survivors, aged 18-24, to Echo Hill Outdoor School’s (EHOS) campus to begin what would quickly become a cherished partnership. Dr. King and his brothers founded Survivor Summit, an organization that raises funds for cancer survivors and runs programming to support cancer survivors seeking challenging adventures and bonding with those with similar experiences. With the EHOS group, Dr. King and the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia’s Cancer Center wish to provide support to young adults, who often do not have much specialized support navigating their unique struggles as cancer survivors during that transitional time. This summer at EHOS, the participants, along with Dr. King, his brother Mike, and two members of the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia psychosocial department staff, got to explore many facets of Kent County. They went for an overnight camping trip and paddle on the Chester River, where they swam, fished, and (for many) slept in tents for the first time, braving a heat wave. They went out on historic workboats to experience the Chesapeake, immersed themselves in a swamp walk, and learned belaying skills on the Adventure Course. The Survivor Summit group is strengthened by the many returnees, who encourage the new folks to keep going out of their comfort zones, and to apply the lessons they learned at Echo Hill back to their lives at home. One participant shared in an evening discussion that she spent years in the gym to build up the upper body strength she needed to climb to the top EHOS’s Alpine Tower, after her first attempt in 2019. Cheers broke out across the course when she disappeared from view, having scaled the tower successfully five years later! Echo Hill Outdoor School looks forward to many more adventures with Survivor Summit.

Maryland National Guard

Since 2012, Echo Hill Outdoor School (EHOS) has welcomed children of members of the Maryland National Guard for a recreational summer camp program. The Youth Camp (ages 6 – 12yrs.) arrived in early summer, bursting with excitement to explore our campus. Later in the summer, the Teen Camp (ages 13 – 17yrs.) arrived, looking forward to more challenging programming as well as a return to their favorite yearly activities. The campers enjoyed swimming during outings to Betterton Beach, supporting each other as a team during high and low adventure opportunities, and bonding while tie-dying shirts and savoring s’mores around a campfire. The staff encouraged creativity during evening activities like karaoke and a talent show. Campers return summer after summer, bringing along younger siblings and creating cherished memories. Particularly motivated members of the Teen Camp often volunteer as helpers for the Youth Camp, showing their commitment to their communities. Several alumni of the teen camp have gone on to become interns and Staff Naturalists at Echo Hill Outdoor School.

Some of our other 2024 Summer Programs:

Washington College First Year Students Orientation

  • Johns Hopkins University Mentors/School of Engineering

  • Gunston School First Year Students

  • Tatnall School Peer Mentors

  • Nature Forward Bay Quest and Advanced Bay Quest

  • Green Acres Day Camp

Kent County Middle School Students Get Acquainted with Their Classmates, Nature at Echo Hill Outdoor School

Kent County Middle School Students Get Acquainted with Their Classmates, Nature at Echo Hill Outdoor School

Over five weeks in October, 125 6th graders from Kent County Middle School (KCMS) are meeting their classmates and teachers for the first time, in person, during programs at Echo Hill Outdoor School (EHOS).

The first few weeks of their middle school experience have all been online, due to the coronavirus pandemic. Blended from elementary schools all over the county, the students are surrounded by new faces, with new teachers, in a new school. It’s a challenging experience for most new middle schoolers made even harder by the isolation of digital learning.

First Survivor Summit Held at Echo Hill Outdoor School

CHESTERTOWN, MD—July 25, 2019) For the first time, Echo Hill Outdoor School partnered with Survivor Summit this July to offer intensive weeklong outdoor experiences for cancer survivors. Hosted in collaboration with the Cancer Center at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, the program brought 8 survivors ranging from 18-24 years old into the woods and out on the water, challenging their comfort zones and supporting adventures in the Chesapeake environment.

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Survivor Summit, founded in 2011, was created to help cancer survivors overcome challenges, be inspired and form lifelong relationships through adventures in the outdoors. Past Survivor Summits have invited survivors and their supporters to several trips to Mt. Kilimanjaro, where 100% of participants summited the mountain and raised over $500k toward cancer survivorship along the way. The new Echo Hill Outdoor School program is entirely at sea level but focuses on providing similar ways to break down barriers and help participants experience the wonder of the outdoors.

 

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“The survivors on this trip have already scaled so many mountains in their lives,” says Dr. Matt King, whose family created Survivor Summit and who accompanied the survivors on their week at Echo Hill Outdoor School. “ Echo Hill pushes the survivor’s boundaries and provides challenges that test their resolve while building confidence—they are the motivators, storytellers, and leaders of the adventure for Survivor Summit.”

 

Survivor participant Amir Neyazi, 24, agrees. Watching his friends wading chest-high through the swamp, and scrambling over a thick mud flat as they head for a rinse in the Chesapeake Bay, Neyazi says he likes getting out of his comfort zone. “Once you go into the swamp,” Neyazi says, “Nothing matters. You just go all in.”

 

Neyazi joined seven other survivors, some in active treatment, some in remission, for a week on Echo Hill Outdoor School’s zipline and adventure course, workboat fleet and extensive Bay woodlands and swamps. Joined by Dr. King and two psychosocial staff from the Cancer Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, they were led through on-the-water experiences, forest hikes and swamp walks by Echo Hill Outdoor School’s instructor/naturalists in the pilot program.

 

Betsy McCown, associate director at Echo Hill Outdoor School, was thrilled at the week’s success. “We’ve had a tradition here at Echo Hill of working with children and adults who might not have a chance to experience the outdoors because of physical challenges, like the Echo Hill Outdoor School Heart Camp. It was our honor to partner with Survivor Summit and continue that tradition. It’s been an incredible week for all of us and I think the participants feel the same way.”

 

Echo Hill Outdoor School was established in 1972 in Kent County, Maryland. Today, more than 6,700 students and teachers from public and private schools annually visit EHOS School in our residential outdoor education programs, adventure programs, camps and day programs from March through mid-December. For more information, go to ehos.org or call 410-348-5880.