Camp Fire Alaska | Light the Fire Within

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Camp K Work Day – Come Volunteer!

Volunteer to help us get Camp K ready for campers this summer, with an option to spend the night for a camp preview.

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Camp Fire Alaska’s Gear Drive

Donate new and gently used clothes for our campers!

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The Anchorage Wolverines Visit Spring Break Camp

Camp Fire kids teamed up with the Anchorage Wolverines for floor hockey fun and a visit to a game with their biggest rivals.

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Absolutely Incredible Kid Day – 2026 Recap

We celebrated Kid Day 2026 with site celebrations, special edition swag, a gallery of self-portraits at a local cafe, and so much more!

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Honoring the Legacy of Bettye Davis

  Bettye Davis was many things to Alaska. She was a social worker, a school board member, and a state legislator—the first African American woman elected to both the Alaska State House and the Alaska State Senate—and a lifelong champion… Read More >

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Sending Love to the Pioneer Home

  Camp Fire’s afterschool youth were so excited to create Valentine’s Day messages for the Anchorage Pioneer Home. We hope their creativity brings a smile to the residents…and to you! Scroll down for a look at some of the lovely… Read More >

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Operation Purple Camp 2025

Where Military Kids Just Get to Be Kids Every summer, the shores of Kenai Lake come alive with the sounds of laughter, splashing paddles, and the kind of cheering that can only happen when you’ve just conquered an obstacle course…… Read More >

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The Camp Fire Alaska main office operates on the ancestral land of the Dena’ina people. Camp Fire Alaska runs programing on the lands of the Athabascan, Yup’ik, Chup’ik, Sougpiaq, and Inupiaq peoples. We value and thank them for their current and historic commitment to and protection of this land. We pledge to assist, in partnership, in the environmental stewardship of these lands. We strive to learn more about the history of the Native peoples of Alaska and the historic trauma they have suffered. We commit to being an active ally through activities, actions, and organizational decisions and practices. We understand that this is a dynamic process through which our Land Acknowledgement practices, and statement will evolve as we receive feedback from tribal partners and acquire a deeper understanding of and from the Native peoples of Alaska..  (v2)