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    Onondaga Camp
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    Onondaga Camp

    Ontario, Canada
    New sessions TBC
    Gender

    Coed

    Stay

    Overnight camp

    Ages

    6 - 16 yrs

    Staff to Camper

    About our camp

    Onondaga Camp, equipped with modern facilities and offering the comfort of home, is situated on the shores of Middle Bob Lake, not far from Ontario. Originally founded in 1918 as an all-boys camp, Onondaga now welcomes girls and boys from 6-16 years old and provides a unique environment for them to play, have fun and grow. The health care personnel, consisting of one doctor and three nurses, serves not only the medical need of campers, but makes sure that overall healthy lifestyle is maintained, such as applying sunblock creams or washing hands regularly. For majority of the activities available, campers can earn bronze, silver, and gold certifications, and even reach accomplishments on the provincial level. Campers are not allowed to bring phones, but there are scheduled phone calls for campers to update their parents on how they are doing. The office phone is always available during working hours, and parents can request information about their kids at any time.

    Our programs

    Some of the most popular activities at Onondaga Camp are flying fox zip line, the climbing wall, wakeboarding, kayaking, and trampoline. The list goes on with basketball, golf, ball hockey, crossbow, driving range, 70 ft swing, aerial ropes course, skateboarding and many more activities. Experienced staff members follow all of the required regulations and procedures to guarantee the safety of campers. They are also well-trained and skillful enough to eliminate unhealthy competition and foster teamwork, camaraderie and mutual support.

    Activities

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

    ArcheryArchery
    BasketballBasketball
    CampfiresCampfires
    CanoeingCanoeing
    DanceDance
    Drama theatreDrama theatre

    Session overview

    Camp season
    N/A
    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

    Minden, Ontario, Canada

    1120 Rackety Trail, RR 3Minden, Ontario, Canada

    Field Guide

    Summer camp in Ontario

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

    Field notes:
    Read the Ontario guide

    Weather in Ontario

    Summer days in the south run warm and humid, while the north stays a good deal cooler, and a Shield lake can hand back a cold morning even at the height of the season. The water matters more than the air: these are deep, cold lakes, bracing to swim early and only comfortable at the peak, and the deepest never fully warm. Storms build on hot afternoons, and the early-season bugs are real before they ease off. The figures below are air temperatures only.

    Typical camp season June to August. Daytime highs 76 to 81°F (24 to 27°C), overnight lows 57 to 62°F (14 to 17°C).

    Getting there in Ontario

    The main gateway is Toronto Pearson International Airport (YYZ), which serves the southern camp regions and the metropolitan day-camp market; for eastern Ontario, Ottawa Macdonald-Cartier International Airport (YOW) is the practical entry. Most families, though, reach camp by car rather than by air.

    From the Toronto area the flow toward the cottage-country camps runs up the northbound provincial highway and then off onto secondary roads and camp lanes; for the deep tripping bases the route continues north on the Trans-Canada Highway before narrowing to gravel and, at the last, a crossing by water, since some bases sit on islands. Backcountry trips leave the road altogether, and contact closes where the water route begins. The city day camps invert all of it, sitting where families already live and reached by an ordinary commute or a camp bus. Any transport arrangement is a thing to confirm with the camp itself.

    The Parent Side Quest in Ontario

    This province asks very different things of a parent depending on the camp. Send a child to a resident or tripping camp and the distance is real: a cold northern lake, a community running to its own clock, and for the longest canoe trips a stretch of days when the usual line of contact simply goes quiet and reopens only when the group returns. The camp regions are old cottage country, so there is somewhere to be while you wait, but what you find there is the ordinary tourism of the lakes rather than anything arranged for camp families.

    The city day camps sit at the other end, with no waiting-town and no silence, just the child home each evening and the plain daily loop of drop-off and pickup. And where summer is carried within a community on the land, the shape changes again, with family close by and a child handed to people already known rather than sent away. The parent's own passage through all of this, the letting-go and the waiting and the version of your child who comes back, is its own thing worth understanding. The Parent Side Quest is the part of the Field Guide about 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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