| Category | Typical 1999 Definition | Example (North America) | Example (Europe) | |----------|------------------------|------------------------|------------------| | | “Any body of water with a current > 0.5 m/s or depth > 1 m.” | River stretch near a camp in the Adirondacks. | Alpine stream in the Swiss Alps. | | Topography | “Slopes steeper than 30° within 30 m of the camp perimeter.” | Rocky hillside at a New Mexico summer camp. | Cliff edge on a French “camp de vacances”. | | Infrastructure | “Abandoned buildings, mines, or utility installations.” | Old quarry in West Virginia. | Disused railway tunnel in the Czech Republic. | | Wildlife | “Areas designated as breeding grounds or migration corridors.” | Bald‑eagle nesting cliffs (U.S.). | Wolf pack territory (Scandinavia). | | Cultural/Archaeological | “Sites listed on national heritage registers.” | Native‑American burial mound. | Roman ruins in Italy. |
| Resource | What It Offers | Link (example) | |----------|----------------|----------------| | | Central repository of camp‑specific hazard reports. | https://ncsc.gov/campsafety | | GeoPortal – Restricted Zones | Downloadable shapefiles for water, wildlife, cultural sites. | https://geoportal.gov/restricted_zones | | Camp‑Safe Mobile App | GPS geofencing, real‑time alerts, incident log. (iOS/Android) | Search “Camp‑Safe Pro” in app store | | International Association of Camp Professionals (IACP) | Best‑practice manuals, annual safety webinars. | https://iacp.org/resources | | Insurance‑Compliance Checklist 2024 | Sample form that insurers accept for “Zone‑Compliance”. | https://insurecamp.com/checklist2024.pdf | fick appell im teeny camp zones interdites 1999avi updated