This regional retreat is self-supporting and organized by volunteers. Each year Scholarships of a few hundred dollars have been available thanks to the generosity of other retreatants. We are starting this year with no extra scholarship money carried over from last year and so hope to raise a few hundred dollars extra so anyone in need can attend.
Per Person Expense:
LODGING COST: this is given directly to Camp Skyline $100 Stay in room $10 Campsite or Commuter
PRINTING COST: this is for handouts and postings. $5 print costs
DANA SET ASIDE: we set this aside so as a community we can offer dana to our Teacher $20 planned dana offering
TOTAL: the full cost per person $125 per person to stay in a room $35 per person to camp or commute
We have limited gender neutral bathrooms and have set aside two rooms with a shared private bath so we can accommodate non-binary people or those who use they/them pronouns.
Send Questions to: erickorsedal@gmail.com
DETAILS:
Registration will open Monday 6/16/25
Cost is as follows:
Bunk Bed, shared room, 2 nights
• $125 per person
Camping, 2 nights:
• $35 per person
Commuting / No overnights, 2 days:
• $35 per person
We are not able to provide single rooms.
Scholarships and opportunities to donate to scholarship fund are available.
First, enter information below You will receive a confirmation email within a couple days
To pay registration fee:
Mobile device: Scan one of the below QR codes
Computer: Log into your account and pay
@MCaplon from Venmo (9898) or
mcaplon@hotmail.com from PayPal
For Paypal - Select sending to a friend - we are a not a business.
Pay on site with a check - click button under additional info section at lower left.
To Register, follow these two steps:






LAND AKNOWLEGEMENT
Camp Skyline occupies the ancestral, traditional and contemporary lands of the Anishinaabeg – Three Fires Confederacy of Ojibwe, Odawa and Potawatomi peoples. This particular land was ceded in the 1807 Treaty of Detroit. The retreatants recognize Michigan’s 12 federally recognized Native Nations, historic Indigenous communities in Michigan, Indigenous individuals and communities who live here now, and those who were forcibly removed from their homelands. In offering this land acknowledgement, we affirm Indigenous sovereignty, history and experiences. We are aware that we meet here free to practice our spiritual traditions, a freedom that was long denied the Anishinaabeg.