As a kid, when I went to 4-H camp, I
could not wait to get away from home. When my own kids go to church
camp, we can monitor them by Webcam and send daily e-mails. The first
year my daughter was at camp, we didn't send any e-mails, figuring she
would want to be free of us for a few days. Boy was I wrong. Every
other kid got armloads of e-mails and she got zip. After the scolding I
got from her, I didn't make the same mistake the next year (I made new
ones).
USA Today reports:
Over
the past few years, a growing number of camps have tapped to the
expertise of Internet start-up businesses for e-mail services, online
videos and photos to help parents stay in touch with their children.
Companies like Bunk1.com, Thriva LLC (which operates eCamp and CampRegister), Dial M For Mercury and Camp Channel,
say such tools are helping camps market themselves to parents at a time
when anxiety about children's safety is high in the post-Sept. 11 era.
"Camps are looking more and more at technology as a means to assuage parents' fear," said Paul Fisher, president and CEO of Dial M For Mercury,
which installs cameras to stream video to camps' Web sites. This summer,
it's offering camp clients an Internet-based automated telephone
messaging service.
So
far, such services appear to be making parents more comfortable writing
checks for summer camp. Deb Bialescki, senior researcher at
Martinsville, Ind.-based American Camp Association, reports a general
rise in camp enrollment after the $20 billion industry suffered two
consecutive summers of enrollment declines following the terrorist
attacks in 2001. The trade association, which comprises 7,000 camp
professionals, estimates an average increase in enrollment of 1 percent to 3 percent
for the year over the same period of 2005.
This summer, Peg Smith, CEO of American Camp Association,
believes camps will eventually be supplying podcasts, downloadable
audio files similar to radio programs. "That's the next natural
evolution," she said.
Some
camps operate their own Web sites, but many have turned to Internet
companies with expertise in video formatting and other areas for better
sound and visual quality. Ari Ackerman, founder and CEO of Bunk1.com,
said some clients do their own videos, but send the company clips for
formatting on the Web.
Meanwhile,
companies like Bunk1.com and ecamp.net offer systems to help parents
send e-mail to the camps' Web site[s] for their children.
Although
the technology allows parents to communicate with their children, it
also might make some parents a little obsessive, poring over photos as
they worry about their children, or trying to constantly stay in touch
with their kids. Until the arrival of the Internet and cell phones,
children tended to call home from camp only about once a week.
Dr. Christopher Thurber, a clinical psychologist at Phillips Exeter Academy in Exeter, N.H.,
and consultant to camp operators, said some camps now allow children to
bring laptop computers and cell phones with them. That's a bad idea, he
said.
The Denver Post offers tons of advice on how to select a summer camp for kids.
Poison Ivy More Poisonous
A study being published this week
in the "Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences" says global
warming will create more poison ivy and the plants will be even
more -- well -- poisonous. Eighty percent of people whose skin comes in contact with the plant's sap have allergic reactions to
the plant.
Summertime Myths and Facts
Speaking of poison ivy, The (Delaware) News Journal
includes a nice test, including questions about whether or not you can
get poison-ivy rash without touching the plant, whether or not perfume
attracts bees and wasps, whether or not sunburns fade into tans and
swimming after thunder with no visible lightning. Do you face a greater
risk of drowning if you swim less than a half-hour after eating a meal?
You'll find the answer in The News Journal's piece. Useful summer stuff.
Toxic Legacy
I was just reading the newest edition of the "Investigative Reporters and Editors Journal" and ran across this remarkable multimedia project from The (Hackensack, N.J.) Record.
The project uncovers an environmental disaster of epic proportions. It
is the sort of project that is worthy of newsroom brown-bag lunch
discussions about how to use multimedia to tell complex stories.
It is
great teaching material for educators. The work was awarded IRE's
highest award this year, the IRE Medal.
Be sure to look at the
"videos" section of the site. It is exactly what I tell my classes that
I
think works best online -- raw interviews and video that allow the user
to "experience" the story without the reporter getting in the way. I
also
like it when news sites post the documents on which the story turns. It
allows the public to make judgments about the evidence.
Pimp My Grill
Wait
until you see the awesome new grills that await the outdoor chef this
summer. An architect told me recently that people not only want patios
and decks, they want "outdoor kitchens." The New York Times says:
The high-end grill market, which generally refers to any grill that costs more than $1,000, started quietly in 1990 when Dynamic Cooking Systems, a company based in California,
introduced the DCS Professional Grill. The 48-inch-wide $5,000
appliance, which included H-shaped cast-iron commercial-quality
burners, a heavy-duty side-burner and more B.T.U.'s per square inch
than any other grill then on the market, was adopted by a few
deep-pocketed souls on the grilling vanguard.
But those in the
grill industry say the market did not begin to take off until the last
half-decade, when homeowners in the West and the South began building
increasingly elaborate outdoor areas with brick kitchen islands and
ornate all-weather furniture.
The Arizona Republic reports:
Nationally,
more than 14 million grills were sold last year, according to the
Hearth, Patio & Barbecue Association, which is based in Arlington, Va. Even more people will set up outdoor cooking areas this year: 15 million grills are expected to be sold in 2005.
Adding
an outdoor kitchen can be a major investment, starting at around $5,000
and easily going higher with fancy grills and pizza ovens. Whether you
are adding a complete kitchen or simply upgrading your grill, here are
six things to consider.
Island: Outdoor islands can be anything from simple, tile-topped stucco bases to granite-tile U-shaped islands with seating.
Like
the indoor version, the outdoor island is where the action is. It's
where everyone hangs out, waiting, grilling, conversing, smelling the
sizzling hamburgers.
Grill: The
grill is the most important part of an outdoor kitchen. Choose one with
ample surface area so you can cook meat and veggies at the same time.
Other appliances: You
wouldn't think about having an indoor kitchen without a refrigerator.
The same is true with an outdoor kitchen. Other appliance choices
include ovens, side burners, wok burners, pizza ovens and burners that
sear meat and lock in the juices.
Dining: No
kitchen is complete without a nearby table and chairs. Make comfort a
priority. Get an umbrella for the table so you don't get baked by the
sun.
Lighting: Go for
fun, funky or mood-setting. Hang string lights from the patio rafters
for atmosphere or use candles to create a cozy look. Make sure you have
enough light to ensure your food is adequately cooked.
Gadgets: Kitchens
of any kind need gadgets. For outdoor kitchens, think music systems,
bartending centers and fancy sets of grilling tools. Also available:
digital thermometers that let you check the meat's temperature without
having to open the grill lid and wood chips that add old-fashioned
charcoal-like barbecue flavor to gas-grilled food.
Petite Departments Closing
The New York Times
discovered that it's getting tough to be a small woman. The Times reports: "Three of the
country's most influential fashion emporiums -- Neiman Marcus, Saks
Fifth Avenue and Bloomingdale's -- have quietly eliminated or
drastically scaled back their petite departments in the past several
months, infuriating many longtime customers."
We are always looking for your great ideas. Send Al a few sentences and hot links.
Editor's Note: Al's Morning Meeting is a compendium of ideas,
edited story excerpts and other materials from a variety of Web sites,
as well as original concepts and analysis. When the information comes
directly from another source, it will be attributed and a link will be
provided whenever possible. The column is fact-checked, but depends
upon the accuracy and integrity of the original sources cited. Errors
and inaccuracies found will be corrected.
This is craziness. The whole point of summer camp is...