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    Adirondack Camp
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    Adirondack Camp

    New York, United States-Est. 1904
    Camp is in session
    Gender

    Coed

    Stay

    Overnight camp

    Ages

    7 - 16 yrs

    Staff to Camper

    About our camp

    An overnight camp for girls and boys, aged 7-17, Adirondack is designed to welcome 190 campers each summer. As the campers’ favorite saying goes, “we are plentiful enough to have choices, few enough to know each other by first name.” Located by the famous Lake George, the camp took its name from the mountains it is surrounded by and has a history that spans more than 100 years. The philosophy and mission has remained unchanged ever since: to help boys and girls be “less busy, less formally structured, less overtly competitive, more committed to meaningful moments and attentive to the wonder that surrounds them.” Campers live in rustic, open-air cabins, each having a bathhouse (well-equipped and private). Sleeping under the sky is part of the camp life at Adirondack, but when it rains, canvas covering and bug nets are utilized to provide the necessary protection. Chef Carlo takes care of the healthy and yummy food to keep campers happy and energized, and the registered nurse in the infirmary is readily available for any medical emergency, check-up or assistance with medication.

    Our programs

    Under the watchful eyes of the staff members, campers can participate in a wide array of activities: water sports, land sports, arts and wilderness adventure. Kids and teens have an opportunity for choices – so that they can challenge themselves and advance in their beloved activities. Special evening program is also offered, filled with ceremonies, performances, movie watching and dances. To ensure the safety of all campers, Adirondack coaches and counselors are certified with Wilderness First Aid, American Red Cross first aid and CPR. The camp operation also complies with strict guidelines of the New York State Department of Health.

    Activities

    30+ activities to choose from - here are some highlights:

    ArcheryArchery
    BasketballBasketball
    CanoeingCanoeing
    CookingCooking
    DrawingDrawing
    FencingFencing

    Session overview

    Camp season
    25 Jun - 21 Jul 2026
    Program profile
    4 sessions · Overnight
    Rates & Stays
    Planning Estimate
    Day session
    Per-day tuition
    N/A
    Overnight session
    Per-night tuition
    from $481 USD

    Program-specific tuition options

    This camp may offer session-specific tuition structures, including variations by length of stay, enrollment timing, or payment schedule. Families should confirm details directly with the provider.

    Per-night (overnight) and per-day (day) figures are calculated from each session's standard tuition and shown as a planning reference only. We show the lowest per-night or per-day rate across this camp's sessions, so the total for a given session, and your actual tuition, may be higher depending on length of stay, age group, or enrollment timing.

    This estimate helps families understand the overall scale of commitment across stay options. Final tuition, inclusions, discounts, and payment structures vary by session and are confirmed directly with the camp.

    Upcoming sessions:

    Where our camp is located

    New York, United States

    302 Warrick RdNew York, United States

    Field Guide

    Summer camp in New York

    A field guide to what a camp summer looks like in New York: the forms it takes, how the landscape and climate shape it, and what it asks of a family.

    Field notes:
    Read the New York guide

    Weather in New York

    New York does not have a single summer. The coast and the city run warm and humid, with a sea breeze near the water and thunderstorms on the hot afternoons, while the Adirondacks and Catskills give milder days and nights that turn cool, and mountain lakes that stay cold enough to keep a swim short and bracing. Early in the season the high country near still water means black flies and mosquitoes. The figures below are air temperatures for a representative downstate season; the interior and the elevations run cooler, especially after dark.

    Typical camp season June to August. Daytime highs 78 to 84°F (26 to 29°C), overnight lows 62 to 69°F (17 to 21°C).

    Getting there in New York

    Downstate, the coast and the city are served by John F. Kennedy International (JFK) and LaGuardia (LGA), with Newark Liberty (EWR) across the line also in reach of the metro. For the mountain resident camps, Albany International (ALB) is the practical gateway, Syracuse (SYR) opens the Finger Lakes and the central interior, and a small commercial field, Adirondack Regional (SLK), sits inside the Park itself with limited service.

    From the coast and the city, most day camps are close to where families already live, so getting there is barely a journey at all. Reaching the mountains is the real drive: from Albany the Northway runs north into the Adirondacks and the Thruway runs west toward the lakes, and from the metro the Catskills mean leaving the interstate for progressively smaller roads before a final approach on narrow lake lanes. There is no fly-in-only country here, the camp belts are road-served, just at distance. Anything to do with pickups, shuttles, or timing is best confirmed directly with the camp.

    The Parent Side Quest in New York

    Whether camp in New York asks much of a parent depends entirely on which kind it is. Along the coast and in the city there is almost nothing to manage: a child leaves in the morning and is home by evening, the daily loop is the whole of the contact, and the waiting town is just the block you already live on. In the mountain camps it is the older shape, a stretch of weeks apart, a visiting day to build the summer around, and letters and whatever calls a given camp allows standing in for the everyday.

    The camp towns up north do come alive around visiting weekends, with rooms and tables filling as families arrive, though that runs together with ordinary mountain tourism more than it forms a separate world for camp parents. Either way, the parent's side of camp, the waiting, the letters, the drive home with an emptier back seat, is its own experience and not a footnote to the child's. The Parent Side Quest is the part of the Field Guide devoted to exactly that.

    Disclaimer & Safety

    General information:

    This content is for informational purposes only and reflects market observations and publicly available sources. Kampspire is an independent platform and does not provide medical, legal, psychological, safety, travel, or professional advisory services.

    Safety & oversight:

    Camp programs operate within local health, safety, and child-care frameworks that vary by region. Because these standards are set and enforced locally, families should consult the camp directly and relevant local authorities for the most current information on safety practices and supervision.

    Our role:

    Kampspire does not verify, monitor, or evaluate compliance with these standards. Program details, pricing, policies, and availability are determined by individual providers and must be confirmed directly with them.

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