“For example, we have a designated camp for kids with spina bifida, childhood cancer, brittle bone disease, cerebral palsy, acquired brain injuries and other medical conditions,” says Anna Hutchins, the camp’s director of grants & outcomes measurement. Camps are also offered for military families and children in foster care or who have an incarcerated parent.
“Each disability has its own set of accessibility challenges. Our camps are exclusively inclusive. Everything is adaptive. If someone wants to ride a horse, we have adaptive saddles available with varying levels of support,” says Hutchins. “We will figure out how to do it. There is no ‘no’ at camp; it is always a ‘yes.’”
To help make these opportunities available, the camp relies on grants and volunteers as well as corporate and private support. In 2021, a $24,200 Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation Quality of Life grant helped support program costs, onsite housing and adaptive equipment for 15 different paralysis-related camps. The funding helped minimize camp costs for 1,032 participants living with paralysis and paralysis-related conditions (as well as 2,064 families and caregivers).
Starting in 1993 in Rutledge, Georgia, with 1,000 kids, the camp has expanded to more than 10,000 participants across two (and soon to be three) locations in the metro Atlanta area. Camps are offered every week during the summer and most weekends throughout the year. Most campers are from Georgia, but a few camps attract families from around the country. This is Camp Twin Lakes third and largest grant received from the Reeve Foundation.
“The Reeve Foundation support is so important to the health and wellbeing of so many families,” says Hutchins. “Having this support for campers living with paralysis and secondary conditions also frees up resources that can be put toward camps for other groups. There is a direct and indirect impact.”
For many kids, Camp Twin Lakes offers their first opportunity to experience activities like horseback riding, ziplining, high ropes or climbing a rock wall by using an adaptive harness and pully system. A secure transfer system and stabilized boats enable canoeing and kayaking, and a mounted bow holder enables participation in archery.
“At home, many kids may be the only person they know with their disability, but at camp, they interact with 50, 70 or 150 kids who face the same diagnosis or life challenge,” says Hutchins. “At camp, they build community and sense of belonging and improve their wellness through physical activity, exposure to nature and free play.”
“We can help kids figure out how to do anything, from brushing their teeth to improving their social skills,” says Hutchins. “We help them set goals and then move toward achieving them.”