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Sugarbush Soaring summer camps for youth

Vermont mountain airport ‘like a park’

Tom Anderson and his wife Jen Stamp instruct, coach, mentor, and bond with young people who are building self-esteem and learning about aviation career options during one of three summer Sugarbush Youth Soaring Camps.

  • A Sugarbush Youth Soaring Camp member experiences a thermal during a sleep away summer sailplane camp for youth at the Warren-Sugarbush Airport in Vermont. Photo courtesy of Sugarbush Soaring.
  • A sailplane is launched during a Sugarbush Youth Soaring Camp at the Warren-Sugarbush Airport in Vermont. Photo courtesy of Sugarbush Soaring.
  • Summer campers at the Sugarbush Youth Soaring Camp participate in outdoor activities near the Warren-Sugarbush Airport in Vermont. Photo courtesy of Sugarbush Soaring.
  • Camper Lindsey Gordon attends Sugarbush Youth Soaring Camp at the Warren-Sugarbush Airport in Vermont. Photo courtesy of Sugarbush Soaring.
  • Summer campers at the Sugarbush Youth Soaring Camp participate in outdoor activities near the Warren-Sugarbush Airport in Vermont. Photo courtesy of Sugarbush Soaring.
  • Sugarbush Soaring pilots soar over the hillsides near the Warren-Sugarbush Airport in Vermont. Photo courtesy of Sugarbush Soaring.
  • A sailplane pilot attending a Sugarbush Youth Soaring Camp at the Warren-Sugarbush Airport in Vermont experiences a mountain wave. Photo courtesy of Sugarbush Soaring.
  • A Sugarbush Youth Soaring Camp attendee lands at the Warren-Sugarbush Airport in Vermont. Photo courtesy of Sugarbush Soaring.

“We’re providing an avenue for them to gain confidence in themselves,” he said.

The Vermont camp teaches aviation skills and builds attendees' confidence in an idyllic mountain setting. “It’s a beautiful airport, it’s like a park,” said Anderson.

“I’m passionate about the fundamentals of flying stick and rudder,” added Anderson, the Sugarbush Soaring Association operations director and an airline transport pilot. “The camp is at the right time in these kids’ lives to have them become successful. I think that’s the most valuable thing about the experience they have with us at Warren-Sugarbush Airport.”

Campers explore science, technology, engineering, and math in a hands-on environment as they learn about weather patterns, lift, gravity, thrust, and drag from the cockpit of the soaring facility’s two-person gliders.

The summer sessions challenge the sailplane campers to conquer the dynamics of ridge lift, mountain waves, and thermals during 10 instructional flights and five ground school sessions. They learn firsthand about aerodynamics and maneuvers, airspace and regulations, launch and recovery procedures, and more. Anderson said the $2,450 sleep-away camp for youths ages 13 through 18 is comparable in value to specialized tennis, horseback riding, or water sports experiences.

Spots are filling up for the July 7 to 13, July 21 to 27, and Aug. 4 to 10 sessions. The fee includes all meals beginning with an arrival dinner and ending with a departure breakfast, time in the aircraft, personalized instruction, outdoor activities, and nights gazing at the stars.

The airfield is tucked into the foothills of Sugarbush Resort ski mountain and makes a scenic getaway for teens locked into an otherwise digitally dominated world. “Oh yeah, I’ve threatened to throw a few of the phones into the pond,” he joked, “but I know we’re successful because we don’t have to bug them [about it] and the kids tell me they don’t mind” becoming unglued from their electronics for a week.

A Line Crew Program for local teen youth credits Vermonters with flight instruction for each day they work on the flight line. Anderson said it opens aviation to those who might not otherwise consider it. Potential aviators who need a financial boost may also apply for one of two $2,600 scholarships administered by the Flight Experience for Youth nonprofit by sending an email to the Sugarbush Soaring Association.

Anderson said he was impressed by the passion he saw in youth attending previous summer sessions. He noted that many campers have become evangelists for the soaring camp and have attended multiple times. Others have gone on to attend aviation-specific colleges and entered aviation careers of their own.

“These teens have a lot of fun during the camps. We really do teach them how to fly, with a lot of stick and rudder, but they also go swimming, kayaking, stargazing, make bonfires, and camp out at the airfield.”

The view from a sailplane cockpit unfolds during a Sugarbush Youth Soaring Camp at the Warren-Sugarbush Airport in Vermont. Photo courtesy of Sugarbush Soaring.

David Tulis

David Tulis

Senior Photographer
Senior Photographer David Tulis joined AOPA in 2015 and is a private pilot with single-engine land and sea ratings and a tailwheel endorsement. He is also a certificated remote pilot and co-host of the award-wining AOPA Hangar Talk podcast. David enjoys vintage aircraft ad photography.
Topics: Flight School, Aviation Education Programs, Training and Safety

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