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Young Life operates using the "5 C's" of contact work, club, campaigners, camp, and committee.In the 2021-2022 year, an average of 294,761 teens attended weekly club and an average of 127,709 attended weekly campaigners, and was led by 46,340 volunteer leaders.
Malibu is a locality in the Canadian province of British Columbia's Sunshine Coast district. This place may also be referred to as Malibu Islet and Malibu Rapids. [1] This was the site of the Malibu Club, formerly a private resort which is today a Young Life camp. [2] Malibu is at the mouth of the Princess Louisa Inlet and Swaywelat Sechelt ...
MV Malibu Princess is a passenger vessel privately owned by Young Life and which operates the Malibu Club in Canada located at Malibu, British Columbia, adjacent to the narrow entrance of Princess Louisa Inlet. The ship is used specifically to transport people and freight to Malibu.
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However, only one resort was built at the entrance of the inlet, the Malibu Club which was named after Hamilton's yacht, the Malibu. In 1950, the resort was closed and abandoned due to a polio outbreak and quarantine. [6] The property was later sold to Young Life in 1953 and has since operated it as a non-denominational Christian summer camp ...
Camp Merrie-Woode is a non-profit residential camp for girls ages 7–17 in the western hills of North Carolina with a history started in 1919. The camp resides beneath Old Bald and alongside Fairfield Lake in Jackson County. In 2005 there were twenty-eight U.S. states and four foreign countries represented with 85% of campers returning the ...
Camp Greystone is a Christian summer camp for girls located near Tuxedo, North Carolina, in the Blue Ridge Mountains in western North Carolina. [1] The camp offers sessions ranging in length from 1 week to 5 weeks for girls ages 5–17. [2] Sessions begin in late May and continue through mid-August.
In the 1940s, the camp was sold, and had a brief career as a lodge, Sekon in the Pines. It was sold again in 1951, and used as a summer camp for young Jewish girls. In 1969, it was purchased by Young Life, a Christian non-denominational ministry based in Colorado Springs, Colorado, who use it for one-week-long educational camping sessions ...