Camp Shady Brook – Institute for Educational Advancement Connecting bright minds; nurturing intellectual and personal growth Thu, 16 May 2024 20:15:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 /wp-content/uploads/2021/12/ieafavicon-e1711393443795-150x150.png Camp Shady Brook – Institute for Educational Advancement 32 32 Yunasa and Yunasa West 2021 /blog-yunasa-and-yunasa-west-2021/ /blog-yunasa-and-yunasa-west-2021/#respond Thu, 12 Aug 2021 00:19:37 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-yunasa-and-yunasa-west-2021/ By Qiao Li

After two years of not being together in person, Yunasa and Yunasa West 2021 marked a smooth and graceful transition back to our traditional week-long sleepaway summer camps.

The pandemic has taught us many valuable lessons, and throughout camp, I witnessed many of these great qualities. Campers and staff demonstrated incredible kindness, understanding, and support to one another. We have learned to treasure the beauty in everyday small moments, to pay attention to nature, appreciate what we have and who we love, and to extend a helping hand to those in need. Despite the lack of social interaction during shelter-at-home, it took no time for campers to reconnect and find common interests. They were courteous, respectful, considerate, and kind.

Leading up to camp, 优蜜视频 took many steps to prepare for a safe and fun week for all participants. Partnering with our host camps 鈥 YMCA Camp Shady Brook in Colorado and YMCA Camp Copneconic in Michigan 鈥 we thoroughly studied the federal, state, and local health guidelines to make modifications for our residential summer camps. We made thoughtful changes to comply to the 鈥渃ohorting鈥 guidelines while creating safe opportunities for all campers and staff to connect throughout the week. Additionally, our host camps held themselves to the highest cleaning standard by implementing strict cleaning procedures daily and weekly to ensure that all campers can safely enjoy all camp activities.

Throughout the planning process, 优蜜视频 kept close and frequent communications with all parents. We made sure that there are no questions left unanswered, and that all families know 鈥渨hat to expect鈥 during this special year.

Though we had a lot of modifications this year, both camps offered a much-needed reunion after all that we have endured. We are able to ran both camps safely and successfully due to a combination of teamwork, leadership, improvisation, and good faith. I especially want to thank all of our parents for their trust in 优蜜视频, persistent partnership and understanding throughout this camp season.

I wish everyone a refreshing and joyful start to fall, and look forward to another great camp season in 2022!

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Why I Love Yunasa /blog-why-i-love-yunasa/ /blog-why-i-love-yunasa/#respond Wed, 13 Feb 2019 01:56:26 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-why-i-love-yunasa/ By Emily Vesper, Yunasa West Camper

Whenever I try to tell my friends back in California about the week I鈥檝e spent in Colorado every summer for the past three years, words fall just short. I describe to them the intense friendship, the emotional growth, the tight-knit community and the sheer happiness that make up my experience at . Then I say: however good this sounds, imagine it 10,000 times time better.

Yunasa is a truly special place. I have never felt more free to be myself than on the grounds of Camp Shady Brook. Almost everywhere else in my life, there are parts of me I feel the need to hide, fearing that I鈥檒l come across as weird or condescending or attention-seeking or annoying. I worry that if I let out these suppressed parts of me, it鈥檚 all people will be able to see. My personality, my complex emotions and my varied interests will be reduced, made less than the sum of their parts. At Yunasa, I feel no such fear. I am so easily and fully myself, speaking up when I might have remained silent at home. The result of this is a wonderful kind of understanding between my fellow campers and I. It is culture of complete acceptance, and love, and I鈥檝e never experienced anything else like it.

I wasn鈥檛 expecting any of this the first time I came to Yunasa. In fact, as my mother and I wove between the wide, graceful river and the tall pines that line the road to camp, I remember anticipating the exact opposite. There were a lot of qualities and ideas associated with the word 鈥済ifted鈥 that I didn鈥檛 connect with at all, and so I worried that, even here, I wouldn鈥檛 fit in. I鈥檇 be stuck a thousand miles from everything I knew, unable to make friends, bored out of my mind without cell phone service and only a single book to read. After an excruciating, anxious hour, we arrived at Camp Shady Brook. I stared at the ground as we checked in and hauled my luggage up to the cabin. Before I could process any of it, my mom was hugging me goodbye as I begged through tears to go with her.

But once I wiped away those tears and entered the dance hall, where campers talked and played games while the last few arrivals trickled in, it took all of ten minutes for me to find a friend. My fears of a miserable week were gradually replaced with a thrilling excitement – I still had no idea what was coming, but based off the enthusiasm of the returning campers, it was something amazing. That first friend, Hannah, introduced me to her friends from the previous year, and we started talking, laughing, sharing stories and silly jokes. I realized I was opening myself up in a way I didn鈥檛 know was possible. As the blazing Colorado sun fell below the horizon to reveal the most beautiful view of the stars I鈥檝e ever seen, I knew that I had stumbled upon something extraordinary.

After talking to many of the friends I鈥檝e made at Yunasa, I realize that this is not a unique way to begin one鈥檚 first day. We鈥檝e all struggled with feeling alienated and disconnected from our peers at one point or another, but on top of that most of us have also felt different from the stereotypical gifted kid, so we expect that same lonely disconnect to follow us to camp. Instead, we find a community that is incredibly diverse and welcoming, where everyone can feel valued and included. There is no singular gifted experience. At Yunasa, we connect over what we have in common – you鈥檒l hear a lot of finger snaps and whispered agreements during group dialogues, when one person鈥檚 experience resonates with many – but it is understood that there is great variety in our experiences as well. People here are a lot like me, but not exactly like me. That would be boring. I think the relationships formed at Yunasa are so strong and deep in part because the experiences we do share allow us to receive the unique, unfamiliar qualities in each other with total acceptance and understanding.

And the relationships I鈥檝e formed are so meaningful! It鈥檚 strange to reflect upon the bonds I鈥檝e formed with other campers and think that I鈥檝e only spent three weeks total in their presence. I mean it when I say that my friends from camp are some of my best friends in the world. They make me laugh so uncontrollably hard that my jaw and stomach end up sore. They encourage me to step out of my comfort zone, to push myself just a little further, and once I take that terrifying first step off the edge of the cliff I鈥檓 rappelling down or stand up to perform my original song in front of everyone, they cheer me on so enthusiastically. They listen to me and care about me, simply checking in on how I鈥檓 feeling that day but also supporting me with whatever bigger problems are on my mind. And I do the same for them. These friendships are so intense, so equal, so beautifully intimate. I think back to a moment from last summer when I sat on the cabin steps with my friend Vince, again under those glorious stars. We talked for hours. At Yunasa, everything I鈥檝e bottled up in the past year seems to find a way out, and so I told him things I thought I鈥檇 never feel comfortable telling anyone. It was exactly what I needed. I felt relieved and released and loved and full of love for others all at once. I am lucky to have amazing friends back home, but none of them understand me or really hear me the way my Yunasa friends do.

Emotional growth and healing occurs at Yunasa, in Heart of the Matter sessions and workshops led by our incredible fellows and long, late-night conversations. But there鈥檚 also no shortage of lighthearted fun. That aforementioned side-splitting laughter follows me everywhere, shaking me out of my early-morning daze in the dining hall, bouncing off the surface of the lake as our canoe spirals the exact opposite direction I want it to, escaping from behind my hand as Carissa and I try to stifle our giggling and not wake the entire cabin. I get the chance to rappel down a rock face, zipline, do yoga; I write slam poems and learn basic martial arts. We play Egyptian Rat-Slap and we take it very, very seriously (probably the proudest moment of my entire life was the one time I beat my friend and defending champion Mya). During our unstructured afternoons, Gwen plays her ukulele and we harmonize along to a song we both love. These are my simplest, most favorite joys.

I always end up crying on the last night of camp. It鈥檚 so bittersweet. For one wonderful week I can exist exactly as I am and be understood. Though I miss my family and my California friends, going back to them is hard: I鈥檓 leaving one home for another.

Still, I am not returning to the exact same situation I left. Each Yunasa changes me. I leave with new ideas and techniques for dealing with the difficult parts of my life. I leave having made new friends and having deepened the friendships I made in the summers before. I leave more certain of who I am. I could reminisce for hours about every amazing thing that makes Yunasa what it is, from the mundane to the truly profound (and I have, over FaceTime, to my Yunasa friends). I feel like the the luckiest person in the universe to have spent even a single day there, tucked away in the mountains in a perfect world.

优蜜视频 is currently taking applications for it’s 2019 summer camps.

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Things We鈥檙e Excited About in 2019 /blog-things-were-excited-about-in-2019/ /blog-things-were-excited-about-in-2019/#respond Wed, 23 Jan 2019 01:48:13 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-things-were-excited-about-in-2019/ by Hillary Jade, Program Manager

It鈥檚 hard to believe, but we鈥檙e already well into the new year: 2019. Despite heavy rains 鈥 much-needed and welcomed throughout Los Angeles County 鈥 in 优蜜视频鈥檚 home city of Pasadena, CA, the future looks bright! With the rainfall comes the opportunity to recalibrate, reflect, and reenergize for an exciting year ahead. We have some incredible new initiatives and programs on the horizon and are looking forward to continuing to serve and support our amazing students, families, educators, and community partners.

We hope you鈥檙e as excited about this list as we are!

  1. Celebrating Heart, Fostering Hope: On February 9, 优蜜视频 will formally celebrate its 20th anniversary with a gala fundraiser at the Annandale Golf Club in Pasadena. We鈥檙e so excited to share this incredible occasion with those that have helped shape 优蜜视频 for two decades. If you鈥檙e unable to join in person, please consider donating, sponsoring, or providing us with a silent auction item. All money raised will go towards continuing to help serve the nation鈥檚 brightest and most deserving students, who drive our mission on a daily basis. For more information, please click .
  2. 18 years of Yunasa! Since 2002, and across 22 sessions, has been providing gifted youth with award-winning programming, embracing them for who they are and helping them understand and work with the unique joys and challenges they face. This summer, Camp Shady Brook in Colorado and Camp Copneconic in Michigan will host campers, counselors, Fellows, and 优蜜视频 staff for a unique, week-long experience like no other. Interested in applying? There鈥檚 still time!
  3. Academy Additions: We鈥檙e introducing two new NAGC-award-winning Shelagh Gallagher curricula to our Academy offerings: Black Death and It鈥檚 Electrifying! 鈥 and that鈥檚 just in the spring session! Stay tuned for more additions in the summer and beyond, including a course for our youngest students, ages 6-9: The Penguin Predicament: A Problem about Animal Habitat and Survival.
  4. Ready, set, make! On June 22, 优蜜视频 will host its first-ever Maker Faire. Details about this one-of-a-kind event with makers, tinkerers, and creative minds coming soon!
  5. Community: Now entering its second year of providing an academic and social home for the gifted community, 优蜜视频鈥檚 Learning Center at 540 S. Marengo is excited to welcome 鈥 and welcome back 鈥 families, educators, Externs, Bradley scholars, and community partners through programming, free events, open houses, workshops, trainings, and tours. Check out our page to see what鈥檚 on the horizon!
  6. Our third content guide: In June, 优蜜视频 will release its third content guide, which will focus on high schools throughout the United States that serve gifted students. We look forward to being able to provide our families with a well-researched, informative guide for their rising high schoolers. To view our two content guides released in 2018, please visit our .
  7. Calling all volunteers! 优蜜视频 is launching its first-ever program! Volunteers are an integral part of 优蜜视频. We rely on our volunteers to help support a variety of services for our community. Whether you鈥檙e working with students, engaging with guests at events, or performing administrative tasks, our volunteers help our programs thrive! Join 优蜜视频鈥檚 mission to ensure that each gifted child鈥檚 specific needs are met so that they can reach their full potential.
  8. Brilliant scientists, brilliant students: (Learning Among Brilliant Scientists) is in its second program year! Since its initial launch in March 2018, LABS has continued to build momentum with a great line-up of STEM professionals from Caltech, Cal State Los Angeles, and USC. They鈥檝e shared their innovative work and research on such topics as astrophysics, molecular biology, computer science, ecology and evolution, biology and mathematics! The new year kicks off with an exciting LABS on Cancer Cells in the Blood! There are still spots available for the February 16 LABS Series:
  9. Streaming live, coast to coast! meetings have gone digital! 优蜜视频 is now livestreaming our meetings on Facebook and YouTube. We鈥檙e excited to be able to expand our outreach to non-local families and share gifted professionals鈥 amazing insight with our community. The next meeting, on January 31, will focus on social emotional imagination in gifted education.
  10. EXPLORE-ing a new location: is launching a program in Northern California! The program continues to garner great interest from applicants in NorCal, so this summer we鈥檙e hoping to make the leap up north to host students at 1 or 2 mentor sites. We鈥檒l be able to expand our reach and serve more talented high schoolers!
  11. Hot off the presses: 优蜜视频 now has a 3D printer! Thanks to a generous grant from the Ahmanson Foundation, which is providing us with funds to transform our Learning Center, our programs are now equipped to provide students with 3D printing technology, design, and coding. Check out our first test print from Caroline D. Bradley Scholarship Coordinator, Mallory Aldrich:
  12. Speaking of hearts: Academy is hosting it鈥檚 first-ever Valentine鈥檚 Day card-making event the week of February 4. Stop by during business hours to make cards for family, friends, teachers, and other special people in your life. Free of charge! Details located .
  13. Beakers and Bunsen burners and bacteria, oh my! Within a few weeks, construction will be complete on 优蜜视频 Learning Center鈥檚 new wet lab! With three working stations, sinks, and a flat screen monitor, Academy and LABS programs will be able to provide an authentic science lab experience for students and educators. We look forward to seeing this amazing space transform into a space of hands-on inquiry that has been years in the making.
  14. Student-led workshops: 2018 was a fantastic year for student-led workshops and there are already two planned for February: the third workshop in CDB Scholar Luke Gialanella鈥檚 Votes and Voices series 鈥 A Presidential History of the U.S. Two-Party System 鈥 and The Wonderful World of Poems with Cassidy Kao. We鈥檙e so grateful that our students love sharing their knowledge and experiences with each other!
  15. Family and fun: When not working with and serving our incredible students, 优蜜视频 staff enjoys cultivating their hobbies and pursuing their interests. Marketing and Communications Coordinator Nicole LaChance is looking forward to joining her family for some rock and roll excitement this summer: 鈥淚 am going to see Aerosmith in June at their residency in Las Vegas with my family. Aerosmith is a special band for us and I have probably seen them at least 8 times already. It will be awesome to spend time with my family and see a great show we are all super excited about. Maybe I鈥檒l even get lucky at the casino!鈥

What 优蜜视频 programs or events are you most looking forward to in 2019

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Stopping by Woods on a [Sunny] Evening /blog-stopping-by-woods-on-a-sunny-evening/ /blog-stopping-by-woods-on-a-sunny-evening/#respond Tue, 19 Jun 2018 23:49:23 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-stopping-by-woods-on-a-sunny-evening/ by Hillary Jade, Program Manager

Robert Frost鈥檚 1923 Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening has spoken to me more times than I could even begin to count 鈥 on both personal and professional levels. Whenever deadlines loom, I reflect on Frost鈥檚 yearning for the peaceful, serene power of nature 鈥 how it unassumingly wields a force larger than life, almost as if to say that nothing else matters, even though we know, resignedly, that is not the case. The quiet, yet almost jarring, juxtaposition of freshly-fallen snow and jingling horse bells so perfectly evokes December鈥檚 ability to make the world stand still for a moment, take in the smell of a wood-burning stove, and embrace the silent, though recognizable, sound of nature peacefully existing.

In the last stanza, Frost laments:

The woods are lovely, dark and deep,
But I have promises to keep,
And miles to go before I sleep,
And miles to go before I sleep.

yunasa west 2018

Though the woods I traversed the other night were light, (June, here, replacing December鈥檚 winter solstice with its summer counterpart), my mind kept circling back to Frost鈥檚 pining. Oh, were we to have the endless freedom to escape into the woods until we鈥檇 exhausted its mysteries; oh, the satisfying snap of twigs and crunch of leaves underfoot.

Oh, to be a camper!

For they are afforded such luxuries. For seven days, 42 campers, ages 10-15, did what Frost wanted to do, but ultimately couldn鈥檛, on that evening: simply be. Unencumbered by the tethers of technology, deadlines, homework and competition, they were catapulted into a Colorado wonderland of campfires and kayaking, starry nights and sing-offs, dancing and digging. They bunked with peers and trekked up and down the hills of Camp Shady Brook, alternatingly dusty, wet from paddle boarding or smelling of campfire smoke. They had no connection to the outside world 鈥 and were all the happier for it.

yunasa west 2018

On more than one occasion, a few 鈥渂arbaric yawps鈥 (to quote ) were released in the face of water balloon fights and gaga tournaments, card games and puzzles, the last piece of cheese pizza and the last glass of sparkling cider at the camp social. On Friday, campers sported red, yellow, green and blue bandanas for the mini-Olympics, the ball field a rainbow swirl of friendly competition and team spirit. Most of the time, the four corners of camp echoed with raucous laughter, impromptu guitar solos and thunderous applause.

But there was also a beautiful serenity that blew through camp each day before lunch: psychosynthesis. Campers grounded themselves as they listened to Fellows describe situations meant to engage the heart, mind and all five senses. Through a quiet lilt, as read aloud by Fellows, campers were transported to settings that stretched their imaginations far more than simple geography (beach, mountains, spring) would have one believe.

Like Frost, Yunasa campers also had promises to keep, though theirs revolved around broadening horizons, trying new things, facing challenges, being brave, discovering new truths and, most importantly, embracing themselves for who they are. Many tried the climbing wall or Giant鈥檚 Ladder for the first time; others found their voice during Heart of the Matter and shared previously-unspoken truths about themselves with others. There is no safer space anywhere; Yunasa allows one to share as much or as little as they鈥檇 like to 鈥 all the while being encouraged to share more than they had before. Nowhere else exists a place with more open hearts, minds, spirits, perspectives or intentions.

yunasa west 2018

During the Closing Ceremony, fifth-year campers and a bevy of their compatriots shared what 鈥 and who 鈥 they were most grateful for. Though varied in their responses, one underlying theme stood out: Yunasa West is a place like no other and, even though it only exists for a week, its spirit and the friendships formed sometimes carry more weight than anything else in the campers鈥 lives throughout the rest of the year. There is a spirit here 鈥 a trust that forms through intentional reflection, building the new labyrinth from scratch, trekking up to the fire pit for an amazing view and an even more amazing variety show, tie-dying fresh white t-shirts and dancing to Toto鈥檚 Africa surrounded by glow sticks and string lights.

There is beauty in the intricate, organic support systems that evolve from the moment one steps foot on Yunasa West鈥檚 ochre soil. Homesickness is overcome by a high-five or an invitation to join one in a game of ninja; the challenge course doesn鈥檛 seem quite as daunting when you have five friends cheering, 鈥淵ou got this! Keep going!鈥; it doesn鈥檛 matter that no fish were caught over a span of four days. (Talking about Harry Potter during the futile hour-long fishing excursion was far more interesting than any snagged trout would have been, anyway.)

Oh, to be a Yunasa camper! And to stop by woods 鈥 lovely, [light] and deep 鈥 for a week on end. Deadlines or not, I need to walk through the woods more often. This shall be my promise to keep.

If you鈥檝e been to a Yunasa camp, what is your favorite memory?

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Summer is Here! /blog-summer-is-here/ /blog-summer-is-here/#respond Wed, 15 Jun 2016 05:35:04 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-summer-is-here/ We have officially kicked off our summer programming at 优蜜视频! We are looking forward to meeting new gifted kids and welcoming back familiar faces. Check out a summary of what is happening in each of our programs below.

MarineBiodiversity5

Summer Academy will feature 16 new classes, including Numbers Galore!, Debating on a Global Stage, Genes and Genetics and Algebra: Enrichment & Science Applications. We will also be welcoming four new teachers in Session 1 to help young minds blossom.

Summer Session 1: June 13-July 1

Summer Session 2: July 11-July 29

There is still time to register for Summer Session 2! See the full schedule and application .

Bradley Seminar 2016 533

The CDB team will spend the summer traveling the country conducting interviews with 2016 CDB Finalists. Scholars will be announced in the fall.

ExploreOrientation13

This summer is the inaugural session of EXPLORE! Externs gathered on Saturday for an orientation that included a photo scavenger hunt. The first group of students started their placements yesterday at sites across Los Angeles. We can鈥檛 wait to see what this amazing group accomplishes this summer!

Session 1: Monday, June 13-Friday June 24

Session 2: Monday, June 27- Friday, July 8 (with July 4th off)

Session 3: Monday, July 11-Friday, July 22

2016 优蜜视频 Programs

Yunsasa West starts this Sunday, meaning 优蜜视频 staff members are busy gearing up for an awesome week. This year we will be welcoming 44 campers at YMCA鈥檚 Camp Shady Brook in Colorado. Campers will participate in activities that are designed to engage them intellectually, socially, emotionally, spiritually and physically. We can鈥檛 wait!

Yunasa West: June 19 鈥 June 26, 2016

Yunasa: July 30 鈥 August 6, 2016

Want to keep up with the fun? You can:

  • Follow 优蜜视频 on , and to see real time photos of our programs.
  • to get the latest details on what is happening at 优蜜视频 this summer.
  • Visit the for weekly blog posts and updates on 优蜜视频 events.

We hope to see you and your family this summer!

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Yunasa West 2014 /blog-yunasa-west-2014/ /blog-yunasa-west-2014/#respond Tue, 15 Jul 2014 22:29:03 +0000 https://ieadev.wpengine.com/blog-yunasa-west-2014/ By Jessica Houben

优蜜视频鈥檚 pioneering unite highly able youngsters with experts in the social and emotional development of gifted children. Campers explore and grow the intellectual, spiritual, emotional, social, and physical aspects of their lives.

Yunasa West 2014

In June, 39 campers from across the country came together for Yunasa West at Camp Shady Brook in Deckers, Colorado, for a week of intellectual, social, emotional, spiritual, and physical growth.

The week started off by introducing this year鈥檚 优蜜视频 program theme: The Common Good. As we talked about The Common Good, campers shared what the theme meant to them and how they thought it would be relevant to their camp experience. They described the Common Good as acting unselfishly, doing things for other people rather than yourself, and behaving in a way that promotes the health of the group, even if one鈥檚 own best interest is at stake. We proceeded to establish our rules as a group to prepare for the week as part of a community. Each camper exemplified The Common Good in their actions towards others at camp, respecting one another and making efforts to ascertain that everyone felt accepted.

One exciting highlight at Yunasa West this year involved a workshop on energy healing, which dealt with ways to heal the body using pressure points. The campers engaged in a group discussion with our guests, Dr. Sheila Abichandani and Dr. Arin Balbinder, and then partnered up to put what they learned into action.

Yunasa West 2014Yunasa West 2014Each year, 优蜜视频 Senior Fellows and Yunasa Fellows lead a variety of workshops on topics of high interest to campers, and this year was no exception.

Senior Fellow Stephanie Tolan taught eight participants Reiki, the ability to help or speed healing by putting one鈥檚 hands on the person who is sick or in pain. Campers met in two workshops at the beginning of the week to learn this ancient tool to help others, and the participants actually received certification for their training!

Dan Tichenor, Yunasa Fellow, led a workshop in Mindful Walking through the Labyrinth, which was built by Yunasa West campers in 2013 and resurrected this year. Nature Art was another popular workshop with Dan where campers made cairns, or stacks of rocks, as a protection and landmark for the labyrinth.

Campers experimented with sending and receiving messages nonverbally to other campers and nature using their energy in a popular 鈥淩eaching鈥 workshop led by Senior Fellow Dr. Patricia Gatto-Walden.

Yunasa West 2014Yunasa West 2014

Senior Fellow Michael Piechowski led an Intensities workshop where campers discussed intensities and overexcitabilities and how they manifest themselves in the life of a gifted person. Campers broke into psychosynthesis groups to talk about their own personal experiences; after the workshop, many campers said they felt more understood, accepted, and authentic.

Yunasa West 2014

And of course, campers took part in traditional summer camp activities such as trail rides, ropes courses, and campfires!

Yunasa West 2014Yunasa West 2014

Overall, the week was a fun, successful exploration of campers鈥 unique personalities and a time of growth for our amazing community.

Click on the button below for more photos from camp!

Do you know of a gifted youngster who would be interested in Yunasa or Yunasa West next year? Sign up for our email list to get details on Yunasa 2015 camps as they become available!

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