Camp Orange: The Mystery of Spaghetti Creek

Camp Orange: The Mystery of Spaghetti Creek is the name of the third season of the children's reality series Camp Orange. It was aired on Nickelodeon Australia in May 2007. After the previous season, Total Perception lost the rights to Camp Orange and Fox Broadcasting Company Australia bought the series and changed the rules almost entirely.

Dark Evil Bunnies (Purple)

  • Ryan
  • Harry Black

Bee's Knees (Watermelon red)

  • Eva Gillespie
  • Nina Clarke

Booty Kickers (Light Blue)

  • Daniela
  • Maddi Kowal

Mix Ups (Light green)

  • Kit Bradley
  • Zack Inglis

Read more about Camp Orange: The Mystery Of Spaghetti Creek:  Week 1, Ranks/Winners, Prizes

Famous quotes containing the words camp, mystery and/or creek:

    Among the interesting thing in camp are the boys. You recollect the boy in Captain McIlrath’s company; we have another like unto him in Captain Woodward’s. He ran away from Norwalk to Camp Dennison; went into the Fifth, then into the Guthries, and as we passed their camp, he was pleased with us, and now is “a boy of the Twenty-third.” He drills, plays officer, soldier, or errand boy, and is a curiosity in camp.
    Rutherford Birchard Hayes (1822–1893)

    Yet there is a mystery here and it is not one that I understand: without the sting of otherness, of—even—the vicious, without the terrible energies of the underside of health, sanity, sense, then nothing works or can work. I tell you that goodness-what we in our ordinary daylight selves call goodness: the ordinary, the decent—these are nothing without the hidden powers that pour forth continually from their shadow sides. Their hidden aspects contained and tempered.
    Doris Lessing (b. 1919)

    It might be seen by what tenure men held the earth. The smallest stream is mediterranean sea, a smaller ocean creek within the land, where men may steer by their farm bounds and cottage lights. For my own part, but for the geographers, I should hardly have known how large a portion of our globe is water, my life has chiefly passed within so deep a cove. Yet I have sometimes ventured as far as to the mouth of my Snug Harbor.
    Henry David Thoreau (1817–1862)