Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Leyland Brothers World was an Australian theme park at North Arm Cove on the Mid North Coast of New South Wales that opened in 1990 and closed in 1992. Sold to new owners later that same year, as of 2025 the park continues to operate as the Great Aussie Bush Camp.
Traditionally sporting camps were always “remote”, which made them desirable destinations for fishing, hunting, and other types of outdoor recreation. [8] Remote camps are typically rustic wilderness log cabins without such modern utilities as indoor plumbing, electricity or telephone lines; but many have been updated or adjusted to make for a more comfortable stay.
Sold: Camp Roosevelt: Winnebago_Council: Northwood, Iowa: Sold: Camp Wakonda: Southwest Iowa Council: Northwest of Griswold, IA: Sold: 260 acres; now serves as the Creighton University Retreat Center. Operated from 1948 to 1978. Camp Wapello: Formerly Bo-Qui Council: Drakesville, IA: Sold: Now privately owned; sits on Lake Wapello. Howard H ...
For premium support please call: 800-290-4726 more ways to reach us
Camp 4 is a tent-only campground in Yosemite National Park in the United States. [2] It became notable after World War II as "a birthplace of rock climbing’s modern age." [3] It is located at an elevation of 4000 ft (1200 m) on the north side of the Yosemite Valley, close to base of granite cliffs near Yosemite Falls.
Camp Wakenah was founded on Gardner Lake near Salem, Connecticut by the Pequot Council. The camp was sold in the 1930s to buy the second Camp Wakenah at a dif.ferent location on Gardner Lake which consisted of 34 acres (14 ha). The camp was last used as a summer camp in 1972, and was sold by the Connecticut Rivers Council in 2004. [10]
Pine Glenn Cove is a private vacation retreat, also known by various other names, including Hatch's Camp, Forest Hills, and St. Anne's Retreat. The property is located in Logan Canyon , Utah . Pine Glenn Cove is the largest private retreat in Cache National Forest and Logan Canyon, and the only one with a swimming pool .
The camp was founded in 1919 by the Central Jewish Institute, an independent Jewish community center in Manhattan, [3] as a two-week vacation home for needy Talmud Torah students. After its second summer, it was expanded into an educational residential camp under the leadership of the Institute's director, Dr. Albert P. Schoolman , a disciple ...