summer camp

So instead of sending your kids to “just another” summer camp or having to deal with them under your feet all summer, why not give them a memorable experience that they will be talking about for years? Who knows, you may just peak a new interest with your kids.

Lowcountry history comes alive with endless summer offerings. A Charleston Heritage Passport means access to all.

It's here! The Annual HALOS Oyster Roast, fun for a good cause. Admission price includes oyster oysters, chili, hot dogs, beer, wine, and live entertainment. A silent auction and wine-pull add to the fun.

Straws are a non-recyclable plastic and they're filling up our landfills and oceans. Take the pledge to go strawless this summer.

Pokemon or Batman, don't we all just want a little summer fun.

Read on for 20+ excuses to relax, escape from the norm, and travel this summer to see where countless artists of all genres are popping up all over the country.

Here's your chance to win your very own high quality, handmade handbag from local designer and style expert Ayoka Lucas. Get your phones out and your selfie poses ready, the race is on!

Swing into Charleston's newest adventure with Wild Blue Ropes, a ropes and challenge course that will test you in almost every way possible. Reward for passing? The best time of your life!

Day 2, I arrived hungry, and that was the plan: the food stand I started with, what I found in the VIP tent, outta-town ice cream, my interview with SG Chef Rusty & beer pro Gary Valentine, & more!

So it's Nat'l Self Improvement month. Cool. But think about it—what does "self improvement" really mean? Here, 5 everyday (not ordinary) 20-somethings weigh in on how they're trying to do just that

On the heels of summer camp and post-holiday doldrums, I'm going to take my cue from Pooh and welcome summer's season with glorious do-nothing productivity... here's to more doodling, less doing

Can emotional scars make awesome tunes? Do well-adjusted teens signal the end of quality rock? I may have a solution

Amidst the driving rain, this one got right to the heart of our creative spirits. Add in the brilliant poem by local 8th grader Nina Howard, and receiving this post was simply an honor...

I long for school to be more hurricane-like, for the atmospheric conditions of public education to be ripe for downpours of creativity (like this swirling poem from an 8th grader at Moultrie Middle)

A family reunion, summer camp-style—complete with basketball, climbing walls, fishing derbies, and fireworks—serves as a good reminder of how to live year-round