Hopetown
Hopetown is a little gray lake house in Kentucky where kids come for a week with their age group to escape the pressure and technology that surrounds life as a child or teenager today. Whether they’re boating, biking, cooking, fishing, or worshipping…they get to discover a sense of play and what it means to share their story, give to others, and uncover a little more of who they are each called to be.
2025 Dates
June 3-9 11th-12th Graders (Retreat #1) $1,200
June 14-18 Middle School All Girls (Retreat #2) $850
June 17-20 Middle School All Boys’ (Retreat #3) $700
June 24-30 9th-10th Graders (Retreat #4) $1,200
July 7-11 2nd-4th Graders (Retreat #5) $850
July 15-20 5th-6th Graders (Retreat #6) $1,050
July 24-30 7th-8th Graders (Retreat #7) $1,200
registration
Online registration opens at 8:30am January 15, 2025 for returning campers or current clients and February 1 for new campers. As Hopetown has a unique format and feel, please talk to your counselor to see if your child is ready for Hopetown.
volunteer
We need help from our Hopetown parents! Sign up for opportunities soon.
support
The cost of running of Hopetown is more than what we bring in from camp fees alone. In order to keep fees practical for families, we must raise $160,000 each summer. This allows us to do a number of important things such as...
Support 3 full-time licensed counselors at Hopetown (and supplement income they would bring in counseling at the office)
Offer camp scholarships to our families most in need
Support our leadership training program for high school clients who are specially selected to help with younger camps & learn from our staff
Keep up with the daily needs that arise in a small staff-run camp like a boat breaking down or a last minute rainy day activity
campminder
You must complete all forms on our camp website prior to camp in order for your child to attend. Once you've registered, find your required medical forms, packing list, directions to Hopetown & all up-to-date information on CampMinder.
If you forget your password, there is a "retrieve/set password" button on the bottom righthand corner of that site.
first day
Drop your child off between 2:00-3:00pm at Hopetown in Kentucky for the first morning of camp. No need to arrive early as the staff will be in a meeting until 2:00pm. Please wait at the church to meet a Hopetown staff member, who will give you instructions from there.
We will not have buses taking kids to Hopetown. Parents are responsible for getting their children to Hopetown and we can not help arrange transportation.
last day
We are THRILLED that we are able to host parents at Hopetown again. Please plan to be at Hopetown at 10am, when we will have coffee and breakfast waiting on you. Again, please wait at the church for further directions.
Your child will be excited to give you a tour of the grounds. And then our closing program will begin promptly at 10:30am and should be concluded by or before 12:30pm.
Meet the Summer Staff 2024
Hopetown is a beloved place of history + legacy for our families and staff. Beside each staff member's name, you will see the number of years that person has been a part of Hopetown.
senior staff
Melissa Trevathan, MRE, Founder of Hopetown, 28 summers
Sissy Goff, LPC, Director of Hopetown, 28 summers
Aaron Weber, Director of Boys, 11 summers
Kathleen Weber, 22 summers
Hayley Fuller, Belmont University - Doctorate of Occupational Therapy Program, 15 summers
Carlee Miller, Texas A&M, 3 summers
Jadyn Fenton, Samford University, 10 summers
Mallory Jones, Samford University, 5 summers
interns
Caroline Allen, Rhodes University, 4 summers
Jake Barker, Auburn University, 9 summers
Patrick Gladden, University of Arkansas, 2 summers
Meredy Jackson, Texas Christian University, 10 summers
Courtney Jones, Samford University, 5 summers
Kimmi Knox, University of Alabama at Birmingham, 7 summers
Payne Marshall, Columbia State, 4 summers
Courtney Roach, University of Georgia, 3 summers
Mary Roper, University of Virginia, 1st summer
a note about social media
We will be taking photos of our week and posting them each day on social media @daystarcounselingministries. We are not a large enough camp, however, to have a staff member solely devoted to photos. As a result, we are not necessarily able to get one photo of each child each day. Also, in this age of anxiety, we have had parents in the past become very worried and reach out if their child was not smiling or happened to be standing apart from other children. We would remind you, if your child is in such a photo, to talk to your own worry monster. It is most likely that your child was caught with a sad face thinking about how much they miss you. Or just hadn't happened to join the group yet. Part of why we keep Hopetown small is that we are committed to connecting with each camper and doing our best to ensure that they find their way to a community of kindness and encouragement. Pictures, sadly, don't show the overview of that process.
When the vans pull up to Hopetown, kids are met with a big rocking-chair-lined porch with backdrop of the glistening Kentucky lake. The charming white, red & blue home, the happy greeting of shaggy sheepdog and the cozy cottages tucked into the hillside may be why so many campers call Hopetown their own "little slice of heaven."
Hopetown Retreats are Daystar's version of a summer camp. Led by Daystar counselors and staff along with college aged interns, campers share and process while they are learn to waterski or paint a craft or look up at the stars. Their hearts are softened through relationship. Their faith is molded and shaped during our worship times and teachings by Melissa Trevathan, Daystar’s founder, executive director and chief Bible teacher. Their strengthening comes as each child, regardless of age, sees that he or she has the ability to make a profound difference in the lives of others.
We travel weekly with kids up to Daystar's Hopetown, located 2 hours N.W. of Nashville on Kentucky Lake. We have seven summer retreats, each five to seven days long, and grouped around grade level. What makes Hopetown different is that there are never more than 40 campers per session (with a ratio of about three campers per leader) which allows us to create an intimate haven for kids to stretch and grow. Counselors often say it is like six months of counseling packed into one week.