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    Alberta Pioneer Camp for Boys
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    Alberta Pioneer Camp for Boys

    Alberta, Canada
    New sessions TBC
    Gender

    All boys

    Stay

    Overnight camp

    Ages

    9 - 17 yrs

    Staff to Camper

    About our camp

    1942 marks the beginning of the history of Pioneer Camp which was eventually founded in 1951. They form a network with 9 InterVarsity camps in Canada (named Circle Square and Pioneer Camp). A number of programs are designed to meet a whole range of needs and interests: Day Camp, Junior Camp, Girls Camp, Boys camp and Teens & Leadership Program. Boys Camp is designed for children who are 9-17 years old and are interested in an overnight camp experience. Two programs are created to meet the age needs and requirements of campers: Junior Boys Camp (ages 9-11) and Senior Boys Camp (ages 12-17). The junior camp is a one-week session, while the senior camp lasts for 12 days. All of the boys have a chance to meet role models and get inspired by their presence and knowledge. It is under the guidance of watchful staff that campers learn how to grow into an independent personality and a better man.

    Our programs

    The list of activities offered at Alberta Pioneer Camp for Boys includes riflery, horseback riding, manly crafts, mystery block, man tracker, water regatta, and outdoor trips. The spiritual theme of the week is discussed during campfire gatherings and Bible talks to help boys realize that “becoming a man should be a balance of increased responsibilities and also fun”.

    Session overview

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    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:

    This camp hasn't added any sessions yet

    Where our camp is located

    Sundre, Alberta, Canada

    Pioneer Camp LodgeSundre, Alberta, Canada

    Field Guide

    Summer camp in Alberta

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

    Field notes:
    Read the Alberta guide

    Weather in Alberta

    An Alberta summer swings hard between warm afternoons and cold nights, so evenings at camp often want a jacket even after a hot day. The prairies and parkland get sudden thunderstorms, sometimes with hail, and the mountain front makes its own quick, changeable weather. The water stays cold, the days run long and bright this far north, and the bugs near the lakes are part of the deal; some summers also carry wildfire smoke. The figures here are air temperatures for the season, warm days and cool nights both worth packing for.

    Typical camp season June to August. Daytime highs 67 to 74°F (20 to 24°C), overnight lows 46 to 50°F (8 to 10°C).

    Getting there in Alberta

    Most families fly into Calgary International Airport (YYC), the busiest hub in the province and the closest gateway to the mountain camp country; the north of the province is better reached through Edmonton International Airport (YEG). From Calgary the road west toward the Bow Valley and Kananaskis is the Trans-Canada Highway, an easy run by local standards until the last stretch drops onto secondary and sometimes gravel roads into camp.

    The parkland lake camps sit off the main corridor between Calgary and Edmonton, a highway drive and then smaller roads out into summer-village country. The city day camps invert all of this, since the venues are wherever families already live and the only travel is the daily commute. For the wilderness camps, plan for the pavement to end before you reach the gate. Any pickup, shuttle or drop-off arrangement is something to confirm directly with the camp rather than to assume.

    The Parent Side Quest in Alberta

    For the overnight camps, the parent's summer is a drive out and then a quiet stretch of not-quite-knowing. Alberta has no real camp town where parents gather to wait; the towns near the mountains belong to tourists and the lakes to cottage country, so there is nowhere in particular to linger and feel part of it. How much you hear while your child is away, and when, depends entirely on the camp, so it is worth settling that before you hand them over. For the day camps the waiting hardly exists, because they come home each evening to tell you about it.

    That whole experience, the handing-over, the waiting, and the odd quiet of the house while they are gone, is its own thing, and it is the same wherever camp happens. The Parent Side Quest is the part of the Field Guide about exactly that experience, not about Alberta in particular but about what moving through it asks of a parent.

    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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