contact us

Camp Office: 1 (705) 762-5333
Fax: 1 (705) 762-8083
Email: office@beaconbiblecamp.com


Camp Location and Mailing Address:
4488 Southwood Road
Torrance, ON POC 1MO

 

Visit our contact page for maps, staff contact information and more!

 

4488 Southwood Road
Torrance, ON, P0C 1M0
Canada

(705) 762-5333

Beacon Bible Camp is a non-profit organization that exists to provide an adventurous Christian camping experience where people, particularly youth, can be encouraged to respond to the gospel of the Lord Jesus and to grow in their Christian life.

Blog

Monk's Musings: God is Powerful and Loving

Beacon Bible Camp

“The Lord is the everlasting God, the Creator of the ends of the earth. He will not grow tired or weary, and His understanding no one can fathom. He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.”

IsaIAH 40:28-29

Recently I’ve been reflecting a bit on how great and powerful God is. He is everlasting, never-ending, has no beginning and no limitations! He created the colossal quasars, the miniscule quarks and everything in between. His knowledge and understanding are unfathomable. And then, the prophet Isaiah reminds us, this almighty God is the very one who promises to strengthen weak little you and me! In fact, repeatedly God reveals Himself as our Heavenly Father, the one who not only created us but who loves us unconditionally and delights in relationship with us. The one who invites us to call Him “Abba Father”, which may be best translated as “Daddy”. Do we delight in being with Him and opening our hearts to His love? Do we willingly acknowledge our weakness and rejoice in His strength? Or do we try to get on with life as best as we can in our own understanding and power? As we live out today, with all its ups and downs, may we surrender to His pursuing love, and trust our lives to His provident strength.

This is also true for us at Beacon Bible Camp. We seek to encourage all who come to open their eyes to the majesty of His creation, but also to open their hearts to the wonder of His love. And so we encourage you, in whatever chapter of life you find yourself, to make Beacon a part of your plans for this year. Perhaps God is calling you to come, with someone else, as a camper. Or perhaps God is calling you to take the step of faith of serving at Beacon, not in your own weak strength, but trusting that His almighty power will enable you to be a blessing to others. Even more importantly, we challenge you to be an active serving member in your own local church and neighbourhood community. Trust fully in God’s love and His power. Fix your eyes on Jesus, not on yourself. If we trust Him, He will come through for us!

May we all learn to trust God’s love and His power.

Andrew ‘Monk’ & Marianne ‘Tia’ Nunn

Monk's Musings: God’s Good Promises Never Fail

Beacon Bible Camp

““You know with all your heart and soul that not one of all the good promises the Lord your God gave you has failed. Every promise has been fulfilled; not one has failed.”

Joshua 23:14

About 3400 years ago, God used Moses to take Israel out of slavery in Egypt, lead them for 40 years through the Sinai desert, and bring them to the Promised Land. Afterwards, Joshua led the 12 tribes in the conquest battles that allowed them to take over this land that “flowed with milk and honey”. Towards the end of his life, Joshua called together the elders, leaders, judges and officials and challenged them to remain faithful to the LORD their God, to love Him with all their hearts, and to keep separate from the idolatry and immorality of the pagan nations. Then he reminded them how God had kept His promises to them, yes, every promise had been fulfilled!

As we look back in our own lives, we too can confirm that all God’s good promises towards us have been fulfilled. And at Beacon Bible Camp we also gratefully acknowledge that He has kept his many promises, brought us through the winter camps, and is preparing us for the upcoming Spring and Summer season. The fact that He has been faithful in the past gives us confidence to trust Him for the unknown future. I don’t know what challenges you may be facing, but I know the Lord wants you to trust Him and follow His will for your life, so that we too, may experience the “milk and honey” with which He wants to bless us. That does not mean there won’t be trials and difficulties, even deep sorrows to face. But it does mean that the Lord wants to work all things out for the good of those who love Him. And it also means that we can be strengthened in the knowledge that He keeps his promises.

So I encourage you during this spring, as buds appear and nature is renewed all around us, to fix your eyes on Jesus and to trust in His good promises. Take steps of faith and renewed service for God, trusting He will come through for you, and that His purposes for good in your life will prove true. And here at Beacon, as we gear up for a new season of camps, and as we begin work on the new Maintenance Shed, pray for us so that we too will trust the Lord and count on His promises to bless his work, so that His Name might be exalted, and He would get the all the glory, and we would rejoice to see Him bless many campers and staff this year.

With all our best wishes to you all,

Andrew “Monk” & Marianne “Tia” Nunn

Into the Woods with Curio: Canadian Geese Family Strategy

Doug Smith

“My help comes from the LORD, the Maker of heaven and earth…Indeed, he who watches over Israel will neither slumber nor sleep…The sun will not harm you by day, nor the moon by night… The LORD will watch over your coming and going both now and forevermore.” 

Psalm 121:2,4,6,8

The geese are back! You have probably seen and heard the V-shaped flocks flying over, their unmusical honks telling us that spring is on the way. It’s an advantage for the geese to come back early, as it gives them the best choices for nesting locations. Soon they’ll be raising another brood of goslings. Once they have young it is best to beware, as Canada geese are territorial, and aggressively protective of their young.

Canada geese didn’t always nest here, or anywhere south of the arctic. That’s right – Canada geese used to nest in the arctic, and some races of Canadas still do, along with the five other goose species in North America, including snow geese, white-fronted geese, Ross’ geese, brant and emperor geese. The only times Canada geese used to be seen in Muskoka and in southern Ontario were during their spring and fall migrations. When Europeans arrived the Canada geese were eventually not seen much at all. Overhunting and habitat destruction greatly reduced their populations, as it did many other ‘game-bird’ species. That changed with the Migratory Bird Treaty Act of 1918, which provided much needed protection. Following the implementation of this act a profusion of new wildlife refuges were created, helped along by a number of captive breeding programs. The Canada goose population slowly recovered. The geese didn’t migrate as far south in the winter, and soon some of them stopped migrating altogether.

Fast forward to the present. We now have an over-population of Canada geese in Muskoka and in many other locations in eastern North America. Regulating hunting certainly helped, but their population boom is also because we have created ‘goose heaven’. Canada geese are grazers, feeding on grasses all day long, something like cows. The lawns of golf courses and municipal parks provide lots of food, water is right there, and the open spaces and docks provide loafing areas. With few natural predators in these urban and suburban areas, and no hunting allowed there, the geese are quite safe.

It’s no wonder there are so many geese. However, there is something else besides regulated hunting and ideal habitat that has made Canada geese so successful. It is also because of how well they take care of their families.  

If you have ever watched a family of geese, from a safe distance, you will have noticed that one of their number is always ‘on guard’. The family or flock always has at least one adult watching for danger while the others feed. The adults take turns, but they rarely let their guard down. This, I think, is one of the main reasons that Canada geese prosper. They take excellent care of their families.

We want to do that, too. However, even with grandparents and aunts and uncles, families can’t always be on guard. We certainly need to be, with all of the dangers nowadays for our children, and ourselves.  Thankfully God is always ‘on guard’, watching over us better than any parent can. He has provided the ultimate deliverance from evil and sin through His Son. Asking the Lord Jesus to be our Saviour brings us into His family, making us one of God's children. God the Father pardons us and becomes our loving heavenly Father, who protects and provides for us now, while we are here, and forever.

Duncan’s Reflections: Winter Days and Summer Nights

Guest User

Praise the Lord from the earth … lightning and hail, snow and clouds, stormy winds that do his bidding, you mountains and all hills, fruit trees and all cedars (Ps. 148:7-9).

Fifty years ago my wife and I first came to Beacon, bringing groups of High School students as well as our daughters. Back then we were given the camp names of Duncan & Hines, perhaps because Duncan Hines was someone’s favourite cake mix!

Since then, we’ve come in every season and every kind of weather. We always saw the hand of God in the exquisite beauty of the rocks and trees, bare or covered in snow, the sunny days when time stood still, and the powerful storms that made the trees sing.

I’ll never forget our X-country ski hikes in those early years. Together with a group of 8 students, we’d blaze a trail through deep snow. Up the rocky hills, along the train tracks, down the hill, and onto the 3rd lake. (Beacon had no snowmobiles in those days.) The first skier would make the initial cut in the deep snow, with the 2nd and 3rd skiers also working hard. We’d take turns. When we took a break, there was a profound stillness, as deep snow is so effective in absorbing sound.

Another indelible memory is a summer evening at one of the adult camps. John and I decided to go for a late paddle under the stars. Unknown to us, that was the night God had decided to place in the sky above the lake an enormous, scintillating blue-green band - the Northern Lights. What an awesome, unique display!

Northern Lights only appear every decade or so, when the Sun is in the active part of its cycle. Fortunately, it's reaching its peak activity in the year 2025. So, this summer and the next two might give us some remarkable displays. Often, however, they don't come out until near midnight. (You can see them well from up the ridge on the other side of the railway crossing. So, there’s no need to go out on the lake at night, as we did!)

In Psalm 104, the poet considers all these wonderful aspects of nature – brilliant light, clouds, winds, even deep snow – as God’s clothes and chariot: “Lord my God, you are very great; you are clothed with splendour and majesty. The Lord wraps himself in light as with a garment … He makes the clouds his chariot and rides on the wings of the wind” (Ps. 104:1-2). That’s why we give “eyes to creation” at Beacon, as well as “hearts to God.”


So far, I’ve only reflected on winter and summer at Beacon. Spring and Fall have many other special things to show us. But that’s for another time. Meanwhile, as we reflect on the many things we’ve seen at Beacon, we can just repeat the final verse of the Psalms. “Let everything that has breath praise the Lord. Praise the Lord.” (Ps. 150:6).

Monk's Musings: The Kingdom of God is Near

Beacon Bible Camp

“The time has come”, Jesus said, “The kingdom of God is near. Repent and believe the good news!”

“Come, follow me”, Jesus said, “and I will make you fishers of men.” Mark 1:15,17

After a warm start, winter has well and truly arrived at Beacon! Wherever we live and whatever season we are experiencing, it’s great to enjoy God’s wonderful creation and worship Him as the Almighty Creator. But God is not just a Mighty God, He also became a Merciful Redeemer when Jesus came to give his life on the cross for us. It is good to remember that the main reason Beacon exists is to continue the work Jesus began when he came to announce the Kingdom of God. It is still true today that “repentance and faith” in the “good news of Jesus Christ” is what makes us into children of God; and “fishing others” to come to Jesus is still the hallmark of every one of His disciples.

So we encourage everyone to take to heart the words of Jesus and accept His Kingship in your life. Let Him truly be the Lord of your life and the one who directs your life decisions. “Turning eyes to creation, and calling hearts to God” is our camp’s motto. So yes, let us admire and enjoy God’s handiwork in the forests, lakes and stars; but even more, let us each listen to His voice calling our hearts to love and follow Him. And as we reflect on His calling, we want to especially encourage adults and young adults to invest their lives in serving God and loving people into the Kingdom of God.

Perhaps God is calling you to come up to camp to volunteer, and in this way to help carry out Jesus’ invitation to his disciples to be “fishers of men”. Or perhaps He has another calling for you. One thing is certain, we are all called: let us be active in serving Him!

Whatever we do, may we all follow God’s calling and leading this year.

With all our best wishes for us all,

Andrew “Monk” & Marianne “Tia” Nunn

Into the Woods with Curio: Nature by the numbers

Doug Smith

"This is the day the Lord has made; let’s rejoice and be glad in it." Ps. 118:24

Late winter and into the spring and early summer are the times for wildlife surveys. The types of surveys range from the Great Backyard Bird Count this upcoming weekend, (Feb 16th to 18th) to nocturnal owl surveys, frog surveys and marsh bird surveys in early spring. May is the time for ‘Big Day’ bird counts, and the start of a variety of breeding bird surveys, which go through to the end of June. July sees a butterfly and the dragonfly counts. Different associations organize these surveys and recruit citizen scientists to gather the valuable data they need for their many research projects. 

Beacon has been part of an annual turtle survey for several years now, conducted by a local conservation organization each spring. Every July there is a butterfly count done near Torrance by members of the Muskoka Field Naturalists. This dedicated group often finds upwards of 50 species and many hundreds of individual butterflies. 

Silvia and I used to participate in a few wildlife surveys on a regular basis. In mid-June, we’d be out on a breeding bird survey that took us down the Southwood road, past camp. Starting a 5 am at the first stop near the 169 and the Southwood Road intersection, we’d listen to the bird calls for 3 minutes, and record the different species, all the while battling the bugs. Then we’d jump back into the car and drive 0.8 km to the next stop, and repeat. There were 50 stops in total, taking us through the Torrance Barrens and down to the Trent-Severn. By the time we finished, we had usually tallied approximately 60 species of birds and several hundred individual birds. 

We also did an owl survey each spring, picking a clear night in early April to drive our 20 km route in south-eastern Muskoka. Stopping every 2 kilometres, we’d play owl calls through the car’s radio and listen for a response, while standing outside for 15 or 20 minutes at each stop in the bone-chilling cold. The results varied, but we never failed to hear at least 1 or 2 barred owls reply to the recorded calls.

These surveys not only provide data for the various conservation organizations, such as Birds Canada but are also an opportunity to see and learn more about which animals live around the local area. Despite minor hardships from weather and bugs, it’s always a rewarding time for the participants. You’ll often encounter wildlife other than what is being surveyed for. At night you might catch the eyeshine of a deer or fox in the car headlights. You’ll hear other night noises – the sleigh bell-like notes of spring peepers, wood frogs quacking, a dog barking in the distance, the plaintive ‘peents’ of woodcock, or the weird, winnowing reverberations made by a snipe.

You never know what to expect when you go out looking for owls, other birds, butterflies, or just going out. God's Creation is always delightfully surprising.

Monk's Musings: I Am With You. Now Go!

Beacon Bible Camp

And God said [to Moses] “I will be with you…” Exodus 3:12 
“Now go, I will help you speak and will teach you what to say.” Exodus 4:12 

Here at Beacon we are now in the middle of the Winter Camp Season. Thick snow covers everything. Perfect for cross-country skiing and for sliding down the tube-run. Also great for gathering round the fireplace to enjoy a hot chocolate drink and a chat with friends. But wherever we are, the same God who called Moses also calls each of us. He has a meaningful plan for our lives. He calls us to follow Him and to serve others, and he also promises “I will be with you…” Moses felt small and insufficient and afraid, perhaps we do too. Moses made excuses and tried to wriggle out of obeying God’s calling, perhaps we have also. But God reminds us, as he did Moses, that He will help us and teach us each day what to do and what to say. The Great I AM said to Moses “Now go…” He also says this to us: No excuses. Just like centuries later Jesus called the twelve disciples: “Come follow me… Now go, I send you out…” May each one of us also obey His calling, and step out in faith to follow where He leads and to live as He wants us to! 

On behalf of all of us at Beacon, may we all follow God’s call, trusting Him to lead us day by day. 

With all our best wishes for this winter season, 

Andrew “Monk” & Marianne “Tia” Nunn

Into the Woods with Curio: Winter Weeds

Doug Smith

“But God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved)…” Ephesians 2:4-5

Now that winter has finally arrived it’s a good time to go for a walk outside. Keep an eye out for birds and other wildlife, of course, but don’t overlook winter weeds. That’s right – weeds! These remnants of summer’s flowers, though seemingly lifeless now, own some fascinating features, and have interesting stories to tell. 

With its tall stalk and large pods bursting with silky seeds, milkweed is a familiar sight to many. The old soccer field is one of the best places to find it at camp. If there are still some seeds left take a few in your fingers to enjoy their softness, then let them go into the wind. This is how the plant disperses them, though not as randomly as it would seem. The pod is designed to open from the top down, with the seeds arranged to release a few at a time with the wind. This prevents the seeds from just dropping to the ground around the parent plant. The fine filaments of the seeds’ parachutes take them across the fields instead.

Another tall plant is mullein, which grows from one to two metres high. It needs an open, sunny location, but isn’t picky about the soil, even growing in gravel. Look for them along the railroad bed at camp. The spiky top of their tall stalks is covered in cup-like seedheads, from which the tiny seeds fall out when the stalk is shaken, looking like black pepper on the snow. Dried mullein stalks were once dipped in hot tallow for use as torches in Europe.

The delicate, umbrella-like tops of Queen Anne’s lace wave on their long stems in the winter wind. Resembling a bird’s nest, the expired flowerheads contain the plant’s many seeds. Each of the small seeds has several rows of spines, which attach to animals as they brush against the plants when they pass by it. Yet another clever dispersal method employed by weeds! Bite one of these seeds and you’ll experience a cooked carrot taste, which explains its other name, wild carrot. The seeds can also be used to make tea. Look for Queen Anne’s lace in any open spot along the camp road.

 If you venture down into the Inner trails, you may find a stand of tall plants with clusters of dry flowers. This is Joe Pye weed, named after an individual native American who introduced the healing properties of this plant to early settlers in New England. He was just sharing what his fellow natives had known for generations, that this ‘weed’ can help cure a variety of ailments, from fevers, colds and chills to a sore womb after childbirth. 

There are more winter weeds to be found as you walk along the roadsides or through the open fields at camp, or near your home. Each exhibits amazing traits, and are wonderful examples of God’s awesome Creation.

Monk's Musings: Trust and Obey Him

Beacon Office

Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways submit to him, and He will make your paths straight.
(Proverbs 3:5-6)

Today we usher in the New Year 2024. The past year, with its mixture of victories and failures has past. We should thank Him for the victories, and confess and accept his forgiveness for the failures. But now God has brought us into a New Year. We don’t know what this year will bring. Its joys and sorrows only God knows. But another year of life implies an invitation to trust the Lord and submit to His guidance. Likely there will be changes in our lives, some we look forward to, others may be unexpected. This will be a year that will bring big changes for Beacon: Today we are very glad to welcome our new full-time co-workers at camp, and look forward to serving the Beacon family together.

The verses above are a great encouragement to all of us, that we shouldn’t trust our own strength or wisdom, but actively trust the Lord and seek to obey Him. This is true for all of us at Beacon, but also for each of you, who read these lines! As this New Year begins, let us ALL recommit to: (a) read God’s Word daily, (b) be faithful in prayer, and (c) regularly attend a local church, where we can receive spiritual food and where we can use our gifts to serve others. This is the practical ABC that proves we are trusting and submitting to the Lord Jesus, and we encourage you all, and especially our volunteer staff and cabin leaders, to grow in these three simple but essential disciplines!

May the Lord truly guide us all this year and make each of our paths straight.

With all our best wishes for this New Year 2024,

Andrew “Monk” & Marianne “Tia” Nunn

Into the Woods with Curio: Owl at Twilight

Doug Smith

“And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God and saying: Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men!” (Luke 2:13-14)

It was dusk when we drove up to our driveway entrance. As we turned in, I noticed an owl was perched in the tree on the opposite side of the road, perfectly silhouetted against the last glow of sunset. We stopped for a better look, but as I lifted up my binoculars the owl shifted its stance, then flew silently over the road and into the ravine.

Have you ever seen an owl? If so, do you recall how it happened? Did you go looking for it, or did you just come across it, unexpectedly?

You never know when you will see an owl. One of the reasons for this is that most owls are nocturnal, so are active only during the nighttime. The few owl species that are diurnal, that is they are active in the daytime, are the northern species: the snowy owl, the hawk owl and the great gray. During the summer months these owls experience almost 24 hours of daylight where they breed in the far north. This means they are used to being active in the daytime when they come south to spend the winters in our area. But these beautiful birds are rarely seen in Muskoka.

The barred owl, the most common owl species in Muskoka, and the owl most likely to be seen at camp, is nocturnal, as are the two other owl species that could make an appearance at Beacon - the great horned owl and the saw-whet owl. But you just never know when you might see one of these while at camp.

Even if you go looking for an owl, making sure to visit their preferred habitat when they are most likely to be there - the right place at the right time - there is still no guarantee you’ll find one. It’s not like going to the lakeshore and finding gulls, (or Canada geese) or to the shopping plaza where you’ll see pigeons or sparrows. You can try an owl prowl, which involves calling an owl using a recorded owl call, or your own voice. This often works, especially during the early spring, when owls are starting to nest. Because owl prowls are usually done at night the owls are more often heard than seen. Count it a special day when you do see an owl!

God gives us glimpses of His wisdom and majesty through His Creation. As we celebrate Christ’s birth at this time of year, we can also share this Good News with others, giving them a glimpse of who God is and why He sent the Lord Jesus into this world.