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I’ll be announcing some changes to our programs over the next few days, the first of which is the Wilderness Canoe Expedition Semester. I’ve been talking with alumni and thinking about how it is different from the the canoe instruction and experience during the Wilderness Bushcraft Semester. The main question I’ve been asking is if it isn’t significantly different, why does it exist as a separate program?
I’ve identified several problems with the WCES as we’ve ran it the past few years:
In 2014 I’m planning on raising the bar significantly, and there will be a few changes:
We’ll also be adding more tripping to the wilderness bushcraft semester. The expedition will be differentiated by a much more aggressive schedule and the expectation that participants have spent time on the water practicing to lock in their skills and increase their canoe-specific fitness levels.
By increasing the standards, this program will be much more advanced with regard to skill development. That being said, there will be fewer people qualified to attend. Like most of the programs we’ve developed over the years, it’s an experiment and time will tell how successful it will be.
But I’d rather have it be more difficult and demand more experience of participants than to make it easier and demand less. There are plenty of easy programs, and very few that demand skill, strength and commitment.
Post from: The Jack Mountain Bushcraft Blog
Wilderness Canoe Expedition Semester 2014 Update