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Camp without s'mores or swimming? Summer camps may look different this year due to wildfires

Camp without s'mores or swimming? Summer camps may look different this year due to wildfires

CBC
Saturday, July 01, 2023 12:36:11 AM UTC

Sleeping bags? Check. Flashlights? Check. N95s and air purifiers? Check.

Summer camp packing lists may look a little different this year as wildfire smoke and poor air quality means camps across affected sections of Canada and the U.S. are having to adjust everything from moving activities indoors and rerouting canoe trips to cancelling campfires and outdoor swimming.

There were 499 wildfires burning in Canada as of Thursday, and 230 of them were out of control, according to the most recent data from the Canadian Interagency Forest Fire Centre. 

On Friday, the air quality-monitoring website IQAir said that as of 11 a.m., Toronto and Montreal ranked second and third for the worst air quality among major world cities, with New York City coming in first. Real-time data from the United Nations Environment Programme shows that the level of pollutants in the air in Montreal, Ottawa and Toronto is at least 10 times higher than recommended.

"It's definitely something on our radar. There's no question," said Shauna Joyce, president of the Canadian Camping Association and the executive director of a summer camp in the Laurentians of Quebec.

"We're communicating and reassuring that we do have measures in place and we can continue to deliver an engaging program. You know, it's not going to favour outdoor activities as we had hoped, but that we can still continue to provide the service that we wanted to this summer."

Many of the procedures camps are following, such as moving activities inside or reducing the intensity of activities, are similar to those they already follow for heat waves and thunderstorms, Joyce said. The main difference is that they are paying special attention to children and staff with respiratory difficulties.

Joyce also runs a day camp in Montreal, where she says it's been more challenging than her overnight camp due to strict measures about outdoor activities, such as swimming.

"Obviously the kids want to be outdoors and playing and appreciating nature, so I think we're navigating that challenge with kids where I think they might not completely understand why we need to be inside or why we can't go swimming," she said.

"Those pieces are challenging but we're adapting, as we all have for the past three years and continue to. It's manageable right now."

Smoke from the Canadian wildfires is affecting camp plans south of the border, too.

Many camps in the Midwest and the east have been moving activities indoors, seeking advice from medical professionals and hoping the air quality improves soon so campers can get back to hiking, playing tetherball and waging games of capture the flag.

"There's certainly a concern, considering that we take children from the cities," Mark Zides, chairman of the Pennsylvania Camp Association, said Thursday. "Coming up to the mountains for the summer is what summer camp is all about."

Maggie Groce, one of the directors of the summer camp program at Tanglewood Nature Center in Elmira, N.Y., said kids were staying inside as the air quality level hit 183 — in the dangerous red zone.

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