Welcome to Camp Che-Na-Wah for Girls. We are a full season camp, and we’ve been family run and operated with love and care for nine decades. We believe that camp at its best is when your child has magical moments that emerge from the backdrop that we supply.
We provide the unspoiled setting, expert instruction, and careful supervision, the safety and structure for campers. We challenge, teach, and cheer them on. Through our wonderful culture, children grow as they bond on the fields, in the lake and in the bunks. These are the values on which the camps were founded and they exist to this day.
Where times have changed, Camp Camp Che-Na-Wah – and what kids get out of camp – remains constant: children play all day, learn new skills, challenge themselves, make lots of new friends, and most importantly, HAVE FUN!
Health
Our campers’ health, safety and security are paramount.
Health Clinic
Each camp has its own health clinic, staffed 24 hours a day by registered nurses and a doctor. Each clinic contains private examination rooms and private overnight rooms. We are a short distance from a major hospital in Glens Falls, New York and EMT support is stationed locally.
If a child is injured, put on medication, has a fever or is admitted to the health clinic, we contact parents immediately.
Safety/Security
We hold ourselves to the highest standards in maintaining camp safety and security.
We are:
We hold a:
New York State Department of Health Permit
Food
We serve delicious and well-balanced meals and snacks, including lots of fresh fruit and vegetables, and we make sure that there are plenty of choices that kids like.
We accommodate children with special diets – peanut-sensitive, gluten-free, and lactose intolerant, for example. Our food staff and counselors are adept at accommodating dietary needs.
If a child has a peanut allergy, the campers in his or her bunk are alerted ahead of time and asked not to bring food with peanuts into the bunk.
Every camper enjoys a full schedule of activities from morning until evening activities each night.
Activities are generally assigned according to age group; group scheduling allows campers to develop social skills, and to have fun with their best friends. We recognize that everyone has strengths. By participating in activities with their peers, campers shed their inhibitions, form strong bonds with each other, and gain confidence and ability in activities that they might not have ever tried before.
Counselors who are specialists in their fields always supervise all activities at camp. Because our instruction, professional approach to teaching and our spirit (!) campers can expect to become better swimmers, ball players, sailors, actors and musicians.
Team Sports
We offer an all-around sports program to encourage healthy competition. Instruction is built into every activity. This enables campers to develop self-confidence and learn leadership skills. Our facilities – sports fields and an indoor gym at Baco which the girls use, too – are filled with activity all day long.
Girls play softball, basketball, lacrosse, soccer and volleyball, and some homegrown sports such as lightning-ball
Inter-Camp Games & Tournaments
We encourage healthy competition at camp and arrange for those campers who choose to, to participate in inter-camp swim meets, tennis matches and athletic tournaments. Campers that are in the 5th grade and above are given the opportunity to participate in inter-camp activities.
Individual Sports & Activities
Tennis
For many campers, tennis is the focal point of camp. The program is run by a tennis pro who has been working at camp for many summers. We offer tennis instruction daily to campers, where they focus on skill building, drills and practice play. There are six tennis courts at Che-Na-Wah. In addition to intra-camp games and tournaments, campers enjoy participating in inter-camp tennis tournaments and USTA hosted tennis tournaments. Private lessons can be arranged for campers with our pros for an additional fee.
Pioneering, High Ropes & Climbing Tower
Our pioneering program takes full advantage of our beautiful mountain surroundings. Specially trained counselors guide campers on age-appropriate hiking trails throughout the Adirondacks. Campers learn how to hike safely and smartly while enjoying the wilderness. In addition, campers learn camping skills on overnights.
The climbing tower at Camp-Che-Na-Wah is used by campers from both camps and is supervised by certified counselors. Scrambling up the tower and rappelling down are skills that test a camper’s strength, agility and courage, as well as their Spiderman genes.
Older campers enjoy our high ropes and zip line course. Situated at Camp Baco and supervised by certified counselors, campers enjoy acting like tight rope artists while taking in the magnificent view of the mountains from the top of the tightrope. Not surprisingly, high ropes are among one of our favorite activities at camp.
Archery
We think that some of the best things about camp are the most unexpected and old-fashioned; and campers of all ages enjoy trying to hit bull’s-eyes at the archery ranges at both camps. Archery helps them feel strong and focused, plus, it’s pretty fun.
Gymnastics
Camp Che-Na-Wah girls enjoy a casual gymnastics program in our open-air pavilion, where they can tumble, bounce and balance on our equipment, under the watchful eye of counselors.
Waterfront
Our beautiful lake is the heart of camp. Camp Che-Na-Wah has a fully equipped waterfront on Lake Balfour, where campers cool off and have fun every day.
Swim Instructions
Every camper receives swim instruction through the Red Cross “Learn to Swim Program.” Our Red Cross-certified instructors teach campers swimming, diving and lifesaving techniques to develop confidence and a life-long love of the water. Older campers can participate in Red Cross certified water safety courses specially designed for lake swimming.
Boating, Canoeing, Sailing
Campers love our boats and they learn boating skills on canoes, kayaks, and funyaks and sunfish sailboats. Bobbing along on the lake, learning boating safety skills and how to handle a lightweight sailboat are all skills campers can carry with them for a lifetime.
Waterskiing
Waterskiing is one of the most popular activities at camp and each camp has its team of Water Ski Instructors and its own “Ski Nautique” boat. Leveled according to each camper’s ability, our instructors get campers up on skis and confidently circling the lake in no time! We also offer knee boarding and wakeboarding, which the children say is almost more fun that waterskiing.
Free Swim
What would camp be without free swim in Lake Balfour? Every day, campers can enjoy a free swim period where they bob with friends on floats and noodles, leap off the diving board or practice what they learned in swim instruction that day!
Arts & Crafts and the Performing Arts
Creativity is a hallmark of camp and campers are given ample opportunities to immerse themselves in performance activities and in Arts & Crafts. We have indoor and outdoor theaters at both camps – they’re entertainment hot spots – great for shows and concerts; our arts and crafts pavilions are among the favorite spots at camp for campers of all ages.
Arts and Crafts
Che-Na-Wah girls enjoy such activities as drawing and sculpting, beading and tie dying in our arts and crafts buildings. We have pottery wheels and a kiln for campers to try their hands at making pots. Campers adore Arts & Crafts, not only because the activities are just plain fun, but because of the buildings themselves: Che-Na-Wah’s Arts and Crafts pavilion has a creation station on a balcony overlooking the lake.
Dance
Camp Che-Na-Wah has a recreational dance program where campers learn the latest hip-hop moves and dance routines, which they perform for their camp friends during special dance shows. Dance instruction is taught in a fun and relaxed manner on an outdoor deck overlooking the lake.
Musical Theater
Campers of every age participate in our musical theater programs, which are run by musical theater and dramatic professionals with Broadway production credits. For children who choose to perform in plays, there is a junior show, an intermediate show, a co-ed senior show and, for our oldest campers, “The Big Show,” also a co-ed production where boys and girls rehearse and perform together. There are opportunities for campers who wish to work back stage in lighting and set design, making costumes, and being a part of the “stage crew”.
Musical Performance: Rock Band
Campers who play an instrument can bring theirs to camp and participate in the rock bands we form. Our music program, taught by counselors who are musicians, help kids learn to play in rock ensembles, culminating with a performance in front of their camp friends. It seems as if everywhere you go at camps Baco and Che-Na-Wah, you hear music.
Special Events & Trips
Summers wouldn’t be complete without special excursions off camps’ grounds. In our camp-owned buses and vans, we take campers hiking, to performing arts events in nearby Saratoga Springs and to local museums. A favorite excursion is to local amusement park, too.
Senior Mini-Camp Program
“Mini-Camp” is an elective program that includes options such as: intensive workshops in basketball, arts, soccer, tennis, swimming, day hikes, overnight hikes, local sightseeing trips at no extra cost.
The “Mini-Camp” program also includes the option of a co-ed trip at an additional fee.
Campers in our senior age division can choose to travel out of camp on one, two and three-day trips to Boston, Vermont or Montreal to sight see and have fun being tourists. These trips are co-ed and chaperoned by senior staff; boys and girls take separate luxury buses and stay safe on separate floors of the hotels. These trips require an additional fee.
Co-Ed Group Activities
Baco boys and Che-Na-Wah girls enjoy numerous age appropriate activities together throughout the summer to share in camp spirit. These include our Fourth of July celebration and talent show, the Baco/Che-Na-Wah charity bazaar and our end-of-summer dance with a DJ.
A Typical Day
That’s a tough question, because there is no typical day. A new schedule is written every day to suit the needs of the campers.
Most days, campers have a full schedule of activities, punctuated by leisure time after lunch, and a free period where campers individually chose an activity from a list of electives that are available that day.
Since schedules are written daily, campers have an opportunity to make suggestions for their next day’s schedule. If, for instance, an age group is in the midst of a fun basketball game, they may ask to play again the following day.
To give you an idea, here’s how the day “typically” flows!
Wake up call!
Our day begins with morning visits to each bunk from camp group leaders. Campers and staff can see their schedule for the day on the way down to the dining room. No two days are alike – this is when everyone gets psyched for the day that lies ahead. Before breakfast, campers line up to raise the flag. Bunks are chosen at random to raise the flag – if it’s a camper’s birthday, that girl is given the honor that day.
Meals
Before every meal, the camp gathers in front of the dining hall for announcements. Dinnertime is when we honor campers’ daily achievements such as passing a deep water test, getting a bulls eye in archery, or passing a level in ski. Honored campers lower the flag. At meals, each bunk sits with their bunkmates and bunk counselors.
Clean up
After breakfast, campers and counselors return to their bunks for the best part of the day: “clean up!” (Just kidding, but chores are an important part of the learning that goes on at camp).
Activity Periods
There are three activity periods in the morning, and three in the afternoon. All campers receive swim instruction daily. During the other periods, campers are assigned with their age groups to a balance of water sports, land sports, and the arts. Of course, campers might be involved in rehearsals for shows, and participate in tournaments, which would be worked into their schedule for the day.
There is at least one free swim period every day. Campers who choose not to swim can participate in tennis, Arts & Crafts or other activities.
In addition to our regularly- scheduled activities, we occasionally have a day full of surprises, such as “Happy Birthday Camp Che-Na-Wah” – campers participate in activities with other campers who share their birthday month and everyone eats birthday cake. Another special day is “Spirit Day” – our oldest campers plan a day of fun and spirit. Each bunk has to dress up in costumes, and learn a new camp song to sing at dinner.
We have many other creative activities and traditions that keep the summer exciting and memorable.
Evening Activity
In addition to their daily schedule, there is always an evening activity. Some of our special evening activities are talent shows, scavenger hunts, tag games and campfires.
Snack
Snacks are served in the afternoon, and after evening activity.
Lights out
Campers return to their bunks after evening snack. They take showers, write letters, and play quiet games, listen to a story until lights out, which begins at 9:00 p.m. for our youngest campers, and increases every 15 minutes for each older grade group. There is a counselor on duty in each bunk at all times.
Camp Che-Ne-Wah is a full season, all-girls camp that has been family run and operated with love and care for nine decades. Our brother camp is Camp Baco. We believe that camp at its best is when your child has magical moments that emerge from the backdrop that we supply.
We provide the unspoiled setting, expert instruction, and careful supervision, the safety and structure for campers. We challenge, teach, and cheer them on. Through our wonderful culture, children grow as they bond on the fields, in the lake and in the bunks. These are the values on which the camps were founded and they exist to this day.
Where times have changed, Camp Che-Ne-Wah – and what kids get out of camp – remains constant: children play all day, learn new skills, challenge themselves, make lots of new friends, and most importantly, HAVE FUN!
Meet Our Directors
Barbara & Allison Wortman, Directors
Mother/daughter team Barbara and Allison Wortman believe that camp is truly special. Their aim is to foster growth in children in an environment that is encouraging, fun and free-spirited; one that is unlike any other community that children are likely to encounter. The Wortman family approaches this goal both seriously and with serious delight. Watching each child blossom in camp’s youth-oriented community makes them feel privileged.
Barbara arrived at camp in 1974 with Bob Wortman, who she’d met in college. With her background teaching music and as a special ed teacher, she was a natural fit at camp.
Allison is the third generation of the Wortman family to plant her feet at camp to help share and spread the positive values that are so deeply rooted here. A Che-Na-Wah girl from the cradle, Allison grew up at camp, and has worked in numerous staff positions from counselor to her current role. Allison holds a Master of Science in Camp Administration and Leadership from Touro University.
Their favorite part about running camp is knowing that the Camp Che-Na-Wah experience provides so much pleasure to so many people. They see camp as a place for campers to grow athletically, educationally, emotionally and spiritually, gaining leadership qualities and confidence along the way.
Our Staff
Jane Sindel, Associate Director
Even after 37 years, Jane still gets butterflies in her stomach when she hears the buses full of campers pulling into camp each June, in anticipation of another spectacular summer.
Jane’s role as Associate Director at Che-Na-Wah is to train, guide and support the staff to enable them to embrace and teach skills, values and the camp traditions that Jane herself learned when she was a camper at Che-Na-Wah. She helps the staff be the best that they can be.
Jane also gets to know every camper. When Jane is not at camp, she is a first grade teacher at a public elementary school in New York. During the summer, she often tutors campers who need some extra help with their reading.
Amy Weinstock, Program Director
As Program Director at Camp Che-Na-Wah, Amy has the daily challenge of writing a new schedule every day to make sure every campers get the most out of every activity at camp. In addition, Amy helps with staff development and is the face of camp for campers at daily line-up before meals.
A camper for seven years, Amy hasn’t missed a camp summer for 19 years. She still thrills to the beautiful setting here. She particularly loves the sun shining on the lake with the mountain ranges in the distance, and says it’s the perfect backdrop to a breathtaking summer scene.
When Amy is not at her second home (camp!), she is a first and second grade teacher.