Camp · Specialty · Ages 9–19
Directory · United States · Idaho · Moyie Springs
▌ Specialty · Ages 9–19

National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch

National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch

Free summer camp for blind and visually impaired children and teens at Broken Arrow Ranch in Idaho.

▌ Editor's read The Christian Record Services for the Blind website (christianrecord.org) loads successfully and details the National Camps for Blind Children program, including the Broken Arrow Ranch location. The program offers free, week-long overnight camps for blind and visually impaired individuals, with separate sessions for children, teens, and adults. Activities include horseback riding, swimming, crafts, and nature exploration. The organization is a non-profit, faith-based ministry. While the website mentions a focus on safety and trained staff, it does not explicitly state that staff undergo background checks. The camp is not listed in the ACA directory. Christian Record Services for the Blind has a 4.9-star rating from 10 Google reviews, with reviewers praising the positive impact and supportive environment for blind individuals. Their Instagram handle is @christianrecord and Facebook handle is ChristianRecordServices.
Nonprofit operator501(c)(3) tax-exempt

Who thrives here Ages 9–19

National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch serves high-school campers, which means the program is competing against summer jobs, college visits, internships, and residential overnight options. The case for a day camp at this age is usually a CIT (counselor-in-training) track, deep specialization in specialty, or a portfolio item parents and kids both value. Programs that don't articulate one of those three usually lose this age band by 9th grade.

Facts & Credentials

Program type
Overnight camp
ACA accredited
Not verified
Established
Not listed
Operator
Nonprofit organization
Staff-to-camper ratio
Not listed

How we verify these →

Details

  • Category: Specialty
  • Ages: 9–19
  • Hours: 24-hour residential
  • Address: 1001 Broken Arrow Rd, Moyie Springs, ID 83845
  • Phone: 402-488-0981
  • Email: [email protected]
  • Cost notes: CRS will sponsor one camp per camper per summer camp season. USD.

Logistics

  • Lunch provided: Yes
  • Transportation: No
  • Financial aid: No
  • Setting: mixed

Frequently asked about National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch

What ages does National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch accept?
National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch is open to children ages 9–19. Camps publish their own age cutoffs, and some run mixed-age groups internally; check the registration page for that summer's grouping if your child sits at a boundary.
How much does National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch cost?
National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch doesn't publish a flat per-week rate — pricing varies by session. CRS will sponsor one camp per camper per summer camp season. USD. Contact the camp directly for the current schedule of fees.
What are National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch's hours?
National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch runs 24-hour residential. If those hours don't quite cover your work day, check whether extended care or early drop-off is offered separately.
Who runs National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch?
National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch is operated by a nonprofit organization. The operator type matters for tuition policy (refunds, financial aid eligibility) and for what kind of staff training pipeline the camp uses.
Does National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch provide lunch?
Yes — National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch includes lunch in the program. Confirm whether it's a hot lunch, cold lunch, or a snack-plus-bring-your-own setup, and ask about allergy accommodations if relevant.

Planning guides

Editorial checklists to use before you compare National Camps for Blind Children - Broken Arrow Ranch with other camps.