Whether they were here a few days ago or many years ago, Farm & Wilderness campers remain connected to this place because of the community.
It’s a community that calls you in — but it doesn’t exist on your first day of camp. It’s not fully grown after a week. Building community takes time. The three-week session length for most of our overnight programs is part of the design of Farm & Wilderness (F&W) camps, and we believe that families planning their summers should choose it intentionally, not as a compromise.
We also believe that intentional choice shouldn't be limited by what a family can afford. Through our Affordable for All program, F&W strives to ensure camp tuition is never the reason a child misses out on this experience. Affordable for All is one of the most important ways we live out our values.
With each day together, we see campers grow more confident, find their voice, and learn to communicate. After three weeks, they’re fully at a place where real community is happening.
That’s not only something we’ve seen summer after summer; it’s also well supported by research.
The Wallace Foundation’s rigorous longitudinal study of summer programs (Every Summer Counts, conducted by the RAND Corporation) provides clear evidence of the relationship between time and outcomes. The study tracked outcomes in academic achievement and social-emotional skills. Its findings show that the students who benefited most were those who attended a summer program for 20 or more days. Our three-week sessions are right at that sweet spot.
Three weeks also gives each cohort time to learn to work together. Tuckman’s model of group development describes the cycle we’ve observed across ages. Camp groups move through the stages of forming, storming, norming, and performing, and a spirit of cooperation emerges. Campers gain confidence in themselves and their peers as they learn to voice their opinions and resolve disagreements. Having rebuilt their group structure with trust and shared norms, they are stronger together.
When we published our 2024 Impact Report, Decoding the Magic of Camp, we learned a lot about the impact of being part of a community. When a camper has settled in — found their footing, learned the rhythms of the day, started to know the people around them — something shifts. Community-mindedness isn’t the backdrop to our program. It is our program. Shared chores, communal meals, benches and barns built together, and norms negotiated collectively. In the words of a camper, “I am proud of myself for working hard and being cooperative with chores in my community service because it feels really good to help others.” Three weeks matters in the aggregate, and it also matters for each individual child.
A camper experiencing homesickness in a short program can simply wait out the discomfort. A camper who knows they have three weeks ahead of them reaches a different reckoning. Their resistance to joining in and having fun crumbles. The length of the session itself becomes a developmental tool that makes it easier for them to adapt. Our camp surveys have shown that navigating homesickness and learning to stay away from family are genuine sources of pride and personal growth. One 2023 Timberlake parent put it this way: "Having faced his fears and stuck with camp for three weeks, he sees he can do hard things and simultaneously hold sad and happy feelings."
Campers aren’t just exposed to the skills they need to build a fire, milk a goat, navigate with a compass, or perform on stage. They master these skills. Our programs provide the time, space, and support for the sustained effort from which campers gain self-efficacy. F&W camps are designed with a planned progression of skills during each three-week session and extending across multiple summers. Celebrating those achievements, whether in big group gatherings or daily appreciation rituals, is essential to community-building at F&W. Campers learn to value communal efforts and recognize their unique contributions within their cabin, lodge, trip group, or camp.
For many kids, F&W camps are the first time they are without the social constructs and technology they rely on at home and school. Not just for a couple of hours or days, but for three weeks. Our focus on person-to-person interaction is a deliberate strategy to build community-mindedness. As Jonathan Haidt describes in The Anxious Generation, “attunement (person to person interaction) forms the foundation for later emotional regulation … face to face, physical interactions and rituals are a deep ancient and underappreciated part of human evolution. Adults enjoy them, and children need them for healthy development” (Haidt, 2024).
For some campers, three weeks isn't enough. Decades ago, spending an entire summer at F&W was the norm. Today, with so many competing obligations, it's less common, but it still happens, and when it does, the transformation is something else entirely. The depth of community that forms over a full summer is hard to describe and impossible to forget. If your child is craving a completely unplugged summer — a real one — we encourage you to try it.
For families looking for a different kind of introduction to F&W, we've also launched something new: The Clearing, a two-week off-grid program for ages 11–14. While we deeply believe in the value of three week sessions, we recognize that for some families, committing the time and money necessary for a three week experience is out of reach. In order to offer access to the Farm & Wilderness experience to those families, we've designed a two week program that goes deep on skill-building, community connection, and relief from technology, even down to mirrors and flashlights.
Located on more than 5,000 acres of undeveloped Vermont woodland, The Clearing trades clocks and screens for fire-making, hide tanning, backcountry cooking, ceremony, and community. Campers live in canvas lodges, tend fires, cook their own meals, and culminate the session with Earth Walk — an overnight in the woods that draws on everything they've learned. Two weeks isn't three, but The Clearing is designed for depth. By the time campers leave, they know what they're capable of.
Long-term, for campers and the overall F&W community, accountability to shared norms creates deep trust, and F&W friendships are unlike those formed anyplace else as campers carry their friendships out into the world.
Campers also carry F&W values home in other ways. Families and school teachers consistently report campers becoming more responsible, accountable, and eager to help. That community-mindedness is more important than ever when faced with strong headwinds like political polarization and social media.
F&W has long believed that the benefits multiply when campers return, and research confirms this. In the Wallace Foundation study, students who attended two consecutive summers showed greater gains in both math and language arts than those who attended just one. F&W's programs are designed for a sustained relationship built summer by summer, with a developmental progression from Barn Day Camp for children as young as 4 all the way through Tamarack Farm for teenagers up to age 17. Each returning summer builds on the last.
Fostering intentional and cooperative community is among our most meaningful work. Honoring our Quaker roots, F&W is committed to mutual obligations and relationships, sharing, and inclusivity.
The research backs up what we've seen firsthand: three weeks is the point at which real growth and real community become possible.