At SeaWorld Adventure Camps, connect wtih amazing animals and friends, learn about conservation at home and abroad, and create memories that last a lifetime.
Spend a week working side-by-side with animal care experts as you help to feed, interact with, and care for the animals that make your favorite park amazing.
Peak Performance Swim Camp is owned and operated by former Olympic Coach Nick Baker.
The Film & Acting Camps of New York Film Academy offer hands-on High School Film making Workshops in which students write, direct, act, shoot and edit their own short films.
Peak Performance Swim Camp is owned and operated by former Olympic Coach Nick Baker.
Since 1991, Kids
Elementary and Middle School Art Camp program Featuring:
This year Orange County school children get an extra long summer vacation. The Blanchard Park YMCA is very excited about this and have worked hard to make this year
Fashion, ARts, Drama Camp
Painted Oaks Academy is set in a beautiful part of east Orlando. Many horses to choose from for riding. A safe, clean, and supervised environment.
Students, ages 10-15, who enroll in Wet 'n Wild's One Week Camp will recieve instruction in water safety, leadership skills, teamwork, water fitness, public relations, first aid and basic lifesaving skills.
Day Camp, Ride and care for your Own Horse.
To provide the kids with the best soccer training possible. To enrich the lives of the soccer players. Classrooms are available for rain days.
Whether you are looking to improve your ballet skills and techniques, deepen your knowledge about ballet, take intensive music lessons, or start your ballet training, Intensive Summer Art Workshop by Russian Academy of Ballet is the ultimate choice in Orlando for a serious ballet education.
Audition on the first day, perform on the last. Dont miss this great opportunity to learn a show in one or two weeks sessions. Great professional instruction from qualified teachers and arts professionals. Dont miss Summer Drama Camp 2012 exciting season!
Clay Camp- 9am-1pm $100 ($75 for members)June 11-15, 18-22, July 16-20, 23-27, July 30-Aug 3 slap, coil, push, spin clay into new awesome shapes! Explore pottery wheel, handbuilding and sculpture during this incredible week of awesomeness!!! Past campers will be delighted with new projects and favorites from last year.
Offerings include dance, gymnastics, cheerleading, flag football, martial arts, laser tag, rockets, engineering, lego robotics, creative writing, greek mythology, photography, cooking, quilting, ancient art, 20th century art, painting, drawing, American Girls, babysitter training, bible studies, Manners and much more!
Orlando's Most Exciting Fun Filled Summer Camp is Now Enrolling
YOUR CHILD'S EXPERIENCE:
Lake Lucerne c. 1905 Pre-European historyBefore European settlers arrived in 1836, Orlando was sparsely populated by the Creek and other Native American tribes. There are very few archaeological sites in the area today, except for the ruins of Fort Gatlin along the shores of modern-day Lake Gatlin south of downtown Orlando. NamesakesPrior to being known by its current name, Orlando was known as Jernigan. This originates from the first permanent settler, Aaron Jernigan, a cattleman who acquired land along Lake Holden by the terms of the Armed Occupation Act of 1842. City officials and local legend say the name Orlando originated from a soldier named Orlando Reeves who died in 1835 during a supposed attack by Native Americans in the area during the Second Seminole War. Reeves was acting as a sentinel for a company of soldiers that had set up camp for the night on the banks of Sandy Beach Lake . There are conflicting legends, however, as an in-depth reviews of military records in the 1970s and 1980s turned up no record of Orlando Reeves ever existing. The legend grew throughout the early 1900s, particularly with local historian Kena Fries' retelling in various writings and on local radio station WDBO in 1929. A memorial beside Lake Eola – originally placed by students of Orlando's Cherokee Junior School in 1939 – designates the spot where the city's supposed namesake fell.