Growing up in Ohio doesnt always lend itself to the thought of adventure. I admit that idea of mountains and snow capped peaks escaped me until I was about 5 or 6 years old. In elementary school we read a book called
The Boxcar Children http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Boxcar_Children I remember these adventures fondly and realized at that moment that there was an entire world out there to explore and I was going to do it!
I began do devour every book I could in search of adventure and wonder.
My Side of the Mountain, and the book
Hatchet were only a few of the many books I found in my school library. I took my first solo camping trip behind my families farm at age twelve. With a $20 dollar Walmart frame back pack and a motley assortment of old smelly military surplus gear I made my dream a reality. I was terrified! The autumn woods were cold, dark and forboding. The only light in the wilderness was my cheap kerosene lantern which I had hauled on the outside of my pack the epic distance of 3/4 of a mile through the corn field to my campsite along the creek.
All through the night I was kept awake, mostly by fear, of the terrible things outside my thin nylon tent. Occasionallly I could hear the whitetail deer move through the creek and at one time heard one of them take a fall down one of the cutbanks and splash into the creek. Thats when I relit my lantern! I had never spent a more terrifying or restless night in the woods. I was hooked. This WAS adventure!
Summer camp was the next step. I began to wonder who could teach me more about living in the woods, traveling to the remote places in the world and climbing in the mountains. I went to several different camps as a child. Camp Hidden Hollow a 2 week summer camp in Indiana and finally at age 14 a wilderness survival skills camp called Green Mountain Wilderness Survival School based in the green mountains of Vermont. This was the biggest adventure I had ever had. The longest I had ever been away from home, 17 days, and the most remote stretch of country I had ever been in......real mountains. It changed my life. I discovered that adventure is an important part of growing, exploring and just being Human!
Over the years I have had many adventures in great and wonderful places and have come to the conclusion that I can help others experience the same things I did as a young man. this is what caused me to develop
Under Western Skies Adventures. The adventure camps for boys were designed to inspire a sense of wonder, strength of character and beleiving that you can do whatever you put your mind to. We focus on community, stewardship and investment in the wild places of the world, fun and trying things you might have never done before. Life is adventure and UWS Adventures hopefully will become a tool for discovering yourself, making friends, learning new skills and passing these things on in the form of lifelong experiences that can be shared with friends family and the community!