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    Lake Greeley Camp
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    Lake Greeley Camp

    Pennsylvania, United States
    New sessions TBC
    Gender

    Coed

    Stay

    Overnight camp

    Ages

    6 - 15 yrs

    Staff to Camper

    About our camp

    Lake Greeley Camp, located in the Pocono Mountains, Pennsylvania, has been operating for over 50 years now and is open to 6-15-year boys and girls who are placed in three age groups: junior (6-9 years old), intermediate (10-12 years old), and senior (13-15 years old). To ensure the best of experience for kids and teens, Lake Greeley Camp is accredited by the American Camp Association. Before the starting date, each parent will receive a CD via email – a useful handbook to get acquainted with all the policies and procedures. Well before coming to the camp, newcomers have the chance to communicate with veteran campers via voluntary Pen Pal program. As they build and develop relationships, it becomes much easier to be integrated into the camp life. Food is served in a buffet style so that everyone can eat as much as they want, and there are options for vegetarians as well. A sample menu and information on how the camp handles dietary restrictions are available upon request.

    Our programs

    Campers can learn new skills and hone existing ones through over sixty activities offered in the camp’s daily program. The whole day is divided into six activity periods to help campers achieve personal goals. The list covers adventure, aquatics, athletics, performing and creative arts, etc. Campers enjoy field sports, swimming, tennis, zip line, rock wall, trapeze, woodworking, pottery, gymnastics, horseback riding, theatre, radio, singing, archery and riflery, and much more. Lee Mar also organizes evening activities (such as Greeley Idol, California Beach Party, Las Vegas Night, Scavenger Hunt, Halloween Social, CSI - Crime Scene Investigation) and special events (such as Camp Carnival and Olympics).

    Activities

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

    ArcheryArchery
    CampfiresCampfires
    Drama theatreDrama theatre
    DrawingDrawing
    Free playFree play
    GymnasticsGymnastics

    Session overview

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    Program profile
    0 sessions · N/A
    Rates & Stays
    Planning Estimate
    Day session
    Per-day tuition
    N/A
    Overnight session
    Per-night tuition
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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

    Pennsylvania, United States

    222 Greeley Lake RdPennsylvania, United States

    Field Guide

    Summer camp in Pennsylvania

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

    Field notes:
    Read the Pennsylvania guide

    Weather in Pennsylvania

    Pennsylvania summer is warm and humid, with the heaviest air pooling in the southeastern lowlands and a real cooling as the land climbs toward the northern plateau and the western highlands, where the nights in particular ease off. Afternoon thunderstorms come through often enough to shape a camp schedule. The lakes swim cool and the mountain lakes stay bracing, so time in the water is genuine but rarely warm, and wooded ground brings the ordinary summer company of ticks and mosquitoes. The figures beside this note are air temperatures only, drawn from a single southeastern station that tends to run warmer than the upland camp country to the north and west.

    Typical camp season June to August. Daytime highs 83 to 88°F (28 to 31°C), overnight lows 64 to 70°F (18 to 21°C).

    Getting there in Pennsylvania

    The state has hubs at either end. Philadelphia International (PHL) anchors the east and is the natural gateway to the northern overnight belt; Pittsburgh International (PIT) anchors the west and the highland camps around it. The northern mountains also sit within driving reach of the New York metropolitan airports, which is part of why the belt draws so many families from outside the state.

    From either hub the pattern holds: highway for most of the way, then a drop onto narrow roads that climb and wind for the last stretch to a camp gate, and the final miles are slow ones. For most families this is a drive rather than a flight. The day camps invert all of it, sitting in the cities and suburbs where families already are, so reaching them is a local commute rather than a journey. Any pickup or transfer arrangement is a thing to settle directly with the individual camp rather than to assume.

    The Parent Side Quest in Pennsylvania

    A parent's own experience of a Pennsylvania summer splits along the same line the camps do. Send a child to the mountains and it is a narrow contact loop, a visiting day, a long quiet drive home, and a house that holds its breath for a while. Because the northern camp country is also vacation country, a visiting weekend has lodging and lakes to fill it, though that hospitality is built for tourists first and is best understood that way rather than as anything the camp provides. Keep a child at a day camp and there is no distance to manage at all, only the daily rhythm of drop-off and a normal evening at home.

    Plenty of families carry both at once, one child up the mountain and one down the block, and the two experiences sit side by side in a single summer. The particular weight of that, the waiting and the letting go and the plain logistics, is its own thing worth understanding on its own terms. The Parent Side Quest is the part of the Field Guide about exactly that experience, wherever a family happens to be living it.

    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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