The actual camp will be built on one to two hundred acres of land that will have a stream running through it. The camp will be operational from the last two weeks in May until the first two weeks in September. It will be designed to handle fifty campers per week and will consist of twenty seasonal staff members, a full time director, an assistance director, and a grounds and animal caretaker. Grandma’s Camp® will be ADA compliant.

There will be a main lodge that will have a lobby and a receiving office, a state of the art cafeteria, an industrial laundry room and quarters for the director and assistant director. The original ten foot, four hundred and forty pound totem pole will be stationed at its entrance. There will be a recreation hall with a stage. The medical station will be a cabin with a treatment room and living quarters for the medical staff. There will be ten family cabins for the campers, one guest cabin for visitors, one cabin for the grounds keeper and one cabin for the animal caretaker. There will be a ten-stall barn and fenced in corrals that will house eighteen different kinds of animals (in pairs). There will be a hidden campsite that will have platform tents, ground tents and tree houses. There will be two fire rings, one that will be used daily and will have a twenty-eight foot totem pole at its site, and one that will be used only for the "Family Survival" day at camp. Eventually there will be a family lodge that will be available to persons for one night who are driving long distances to either drop off or pick up campers.

The heartbeat of Grandma’s Camp® is its totem pole. Each figure on the totem pole represents a learning block for each of the five days at camp. In addition to the main themes for each day, some activities will take place every day. Each morning campers will spend the first ten minutes in quiet time sitting outside their cabins in the midst of nature. Before breakfast campers will meet at the flag for its raising and our Pledge of Allegiance. Each day will end at that fire ring where songs will be sung and stories will be told. Everyday campers will have a "creek adventure", interact with the animals, participate in arts and crafts and spend quiet time with those persons who brought them to camp.

There will be gator carts dubbed, "Granny Carts", to drive persons who are unable to make the distance to the next event area. There will be a sliding fee scale and scholarships for those persons who could not otherwise afford to attend. In the "off-season", Grandma’s Camp® will be available to other non-profit organizations that wish to utilize the facility.