THE INDEPENDENT

The Latest

Outdoor Pursuit trips: what they take and why they matter

Outdoor Pursuit trips: what they take and why they matter

By Charlotte Williams Indy Staff Writer

Author: Bodine, James/Friday, December 6, 2019/Categories: Home, Campus, Culture

Rate this article:
No rating

Outdoor Pursuits is credited as Fort Lewis College’s outdoor organization that provides educational training, outdoor resources and frequent trips for students. 

Students at FLC are offered the ability to embark on a plethora of adventures, varying from hiking to ice-climbing to mountain biking to backpacking— experiences that would financially cost more through the average commercial company in Durango. 

For FLC students, OP provides the same accommodations for a portion of the normal cost it would require, while still providing for the same resources and learning opportunities through adventures that normal commercial companies do, Brett Davis, the assistant director of Outdoor Pursuits said. 

For instance, OP is expected to host 21 trips throughout this semester, according to their Fall 2019 Program Guide, which is advertised on their website, on flyers posted around campus and in the OP office located in the Student Life Center. 

The OP fee for membership is included in every student’s yearly activity fee, meaning that OP membership is free and available to all students, Davis said. This is a relatively recent change in FLC policy, which began in 2018 as an effort to see an increase in student activity and membership in OP. 

As a result of the change, OP has received a 27 percent jump in student memberships, Davis said. 

Although membership to OP is included in every student’s activity fees, certain trips OP offers do require an additional cost, Davis said. 

OP determines its cost for a trip by figuring out the fixed minimum cost to run a trip including food, transportation and fuel, among other costs, said Davis. 

The trip cost does not charge for labor, nor does OP make any revenue from it, Davis said. 

In an effort to make the trip more affordable to students, OP reduced the total number of the fixed minimum costs by 20 percent.

 

Student Leading Students 

OP also has a student program called Student Outdoor Leadership, which teaches FLC students the skills it takes to help lead these trips, and gives them the opportunity to practice these abilities, Davis said. Depending on how dangerous the outdoor activity is, some trips are run only by SOL leaders. 

Matt Cecil, a senior and SOL leader, explained that SOL is a section of OP focused solely on students leading these outdoor trips, which was implemented in 2011. 

 The most rewarding thing as a SOL leader has been having the opportunity to give back to other students and introduce them to the outdoors, Cecil said.

“It's really cool to share these things with people,” Cecil said. “You want to be sure you're providing the best experience you can for people who've paid to come to these places.”

Depending on the length of the trip, sometimes OP and SOL leaders begin planning trips months in advance, which includes detailing the routes of the trip and planning meals, Cecil said. 

About two months in advance, OP starts planning detailed route information, Cecil said.  

The prep side is not always noticeable, but there's a lot that goes into it. 

Factors that determine whether a trip can be run by student leaders are analyzed from a risk management standpoint, Josh Kling, the coordinator of OP said.  This includes the technicality of the activity and objective hazards.


Student Involvement  
Not all students take advantage of OP’s resources. Davis said he believes it may be because of a common misconception that students have to possess previous experience in the outdoors in order to sign up. 

“It's open for everybody,” Davis said. “In fact, we want the student who's never done anything to come through our doors. We want to encourage them to do that and we want to share our passions so hopefully it becomes their passion.”

Ben Inverson, a freshman, discovered a newfound love for kayaking when he attended the beginner whitewater kayaking weekend early in the Fall 2019 semester. 

“It definitely helped find my new passion for kayaking,” Inverson said. “I found my first rapid and I was hooked on it from the adrenaline and because of how amazing and fun the sport is.”

Inverson credits his enjoyment and newly learned skills to his experiences with OP. 

“They taught me everything, so now I can go out on my own,” Inverson said.

OP trips provide new experiences and instruction to students, as well as the ability for students to connect with new people and establish new friendships. 

Eddie Espienoza, an OP trip participant, described how the OP trips have helped students including him connect with other people and nature.

“The scenery and the environments are gorgeous and beautiful,” Espienoza said. “It's also really conducive to everybody opening their minds and absorbing it all. You're all doing that together.”

Outdoor Pursuits creates opportunities for students to explore the Four Corners and beyond from an outdoor setting, but also to explore themselves, Davis said.

 “An old colleague of mine always said, our job is to put people in positions where they're safe, both physically and emotionally,” Davis said. “Then our job is to let the deserts, mountains, rivers and oceans to speak for themselves, because everybody's going to hear it differently.”

Print

Number of views (6424)/Comments (0)

Please login or register to post comments.

All News

The Powwow Returns

By Tiara Yazzie and Cameron Maroney Indy Staff Writers

PHOTO ESSAY: Two years after a pandemic hiatus, Hozhoni Days is back.

With suitcases in hand and braids in place, people of all ages stood in line at the Whalen Gymnasium on April 1, eager to take in the excitement of The Hozhoni Days PowWow at Fort Lewis College after two years of its absence due to the pandemic. ‘Honoring those who never made it home’ was the theme for the 56th annual powwow at FLC,   in regard to the boarding schools where...

From half-pipe dream to paradise

By Julian Zastrocky Indy Staff Reporter

How two students pushed for a portable park and gave a growing community a place to skate.

A skatepark on campus. That was an idea that FLC Students Lleyton Hull and Joey Borer had when they came to Fort Lewis College in the fall of 2021. “It's a cool college,” Hull said. “But why is there not a skatepark when there are so many skaters?” So, Hull and Borer began to work towards building an on-campus skate park. Step one was to organize themselves as...

Four stars for my four day quarantine

By Mia McCormick Indy Staff Writer

After testing positive for COVID-19, one reporter tells-all about her stay in FLC's COVID hotel

Isolation room 336 smelled like cleaning products and fresh linens the first time I  entered it. When I hurried out the door on my fourth and final day in the COVID hotel, the air that followed me was thick with the odor of soggy, untouched food and unhinged boredom.  I got my positive COVID-19 test results on Jan. 28. A few hours after I got the dreaded email from the health...

Thinking outside of the 9 to 5

By Julian Zastrocky Indy Staff Writer

From coffee-making to plant-care to art, here's how some students on campus pay the bills. 

What better way to make a little extra money than a side hustle. Some students at Fort Lewis College sometimes need a little extra money, so they use their interests and skills to make the extra cash they need. But other times that little extra cash can turn into more.  Devyn Valandra is a sophomore at FLC, majoring in entrepreneurship. When he was a senior in high school, he took a...

'A String of Prayers'

By Dorothy Elder Editor-in-chief

Behind a four-day, 232 mile prayer run that stretched all around the Four Corners region to raise awareness and pray for missing and murdered Indigenous women.

For around an hour on a cold, brisk Friday in February, the First Assembly of God’s church parking lot in rural Dove Creek saw the most action it’d probably seen in years, as cars swiftly pulled in, sandwiches were exchanged and runners eagerly drank water.  It was a small pitstop, just off U.S. Highway 491, in a rather large endeavor: a four-day, 232 mile prayer run that...

First1213141517192021Last