youth

Overcoming Myself- Youth Wilderness Expedition

Macy | Youth Wilderness Expedition- Program Participant

You had to be there to experience it. That is what I keep telling people about my time with the Selway Bitterroot Frank Church Foundation and their Youth Wilderness Expedition. This expedition taught me a lot more than just the Wilderness. Being a typical teenager I would stay on my phone for hours and try to get out of chores so when I got back to school my summer felt boring and unfulfilled 

 In December of 2023, I decided I was going to go to a summer camp. At first, I was going to go to a different summer camp until my mother, who is a teacher, told me about a Foundation that was taking teenagers out into the backcountry and teaching them about the Wilderness for free! I was hooked. That was what I was going to do this summer. I applied, anxiously waited, and got accepted!

In the car!

For months I prepared. I bought a pack, scavenged family gear, looked at maps, did trial hikes, literally everything physical I did was in preparation for this trip. I was going to do this trek and it was going to be easy. Even though I did all that training and all that preparation, I forgot to prepare myself mentally, so when the day came to meet the rest of my crew I felt wildly unprepared even though I had spent months thinking about this trip. Before I even knew what was happening my pack and I were loaded into a van (author’s note: yes, Ian, I know it's not a van) with 5 other teens and on a windy road to our home for the next 4 days.

Every time I've been asked what my favorite part of the trip was or what my highlight of the expedition was, I say the van ride up. It was my first sense of being alone even though I really wasn't. I had no contact with people I knew well, instead I had contact with 7 strangers who quickly became my friends. This sense of loneliness was just a taste test of the challenges I’d have to overcome.

The hike down to the lake was rather easy for me at least. Don't get me wrong, it took some time but the effects weren't so bad. Before my mom dropped me off she told me “you can do anything for an hour.” The entire hike down, I didn't say that once. The way up I said it every 2 seconds. The hike up kicked my butt. Whatever training I did could not compare to that. However, we had the best cheerleader known to man: Ian Harris the Youth Program Director, cheering us on the entire 1.6 miles up. 

After one day I got sick of myself. Being a teen girl and being alone with your thoughts is a really hard thing to manage. I have always been really confident, but after being humbled by the trail and the idea of work the next day, I really had to fight to keep my confidence and motivation up. I also had to fight with the bugs that were eating us alive.

 After two days in the Wilderness, I struggled with homesickness. I couldn't go a second without thinking of my family and my house. Every time I chopped back a bush, I dreamed of my air conditioner. Every time I pulled a saw, I thought of how much I missed my parents. Everytime I hit a wedge, I thought of how good my bed would feel. 

Drawing of Macy by Hickory Glass, age 14.

After three days, I started to pay more attention to not only my surroundings, but also myself. I came to realize my body's needs. I learned when I was dehydrated, when I was overworking myself, and when I needed food. Ian Harris and our other trail leader Emma Sattleman, or better known to the crew as “Batman”, were always letting us take breaks to regulate ourselves and actually encouraging us to not work too hard. I noticed the quietness of the woods, the howl of the wind, the sound of the creek flowing. I even began to notice the bugs less. I realized I was actually looking for wildlife. I actively looked for snakes, frogs, and fish. 

By day four, I didn't want to leave the quiet woods. I didn't want to leave the trails we worked so hard on. I didn't want to leave the campsite where I bonded with my crew. I didn't want to leave the lake we swam in until we shivered uncontrollably. I didn't want to leave the deer that invaded our campsite at night. I did not want to leave Walton Lake and the memories we made.

Overall the SBFC Youth Wilderness Expedition taught me how to act and care for the wilderness, how to use hand held tools, and how to accept troubles and let them pass through me. This trip was so much fun and I will miss it for eternity and will definitely be doing it next year!


Macy (age 13) is from Lewiston, Idaho. She participated in SBFC’s 2024 Youth Wilderness Expedition to Walton Lakes.

Rediscovering Old Roots, Planting New Ones

Marlena Nelson

Wilderness Ranger Fellow

Youth Expedition: S Fork Big Creek

Bitterroot National Forest | Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness

6/18-6/23/2024

After a steep final ascent and dam crossing, we are rewarded by a stunning panorama around Big Creek Lake, and a still muddy trail

When Ian Harris, our youth program director, reached out to me about helping him lead SBFC’s first ever Youth Expedition, the first thought that crossed my mind was: Only six days? Heck yeah, I’m down! The more and more I thought about it, my true excitement lay in the prospect of creating a life-changing experience for our participants.

I got my true start in the outdoors as a guide in college, working and playing in the rivers, springs and mountains (some may call them hills) of the southeast. The most satisfying part of the job, beyond all the time in nature, was watching my participants fall in love with and become confident outside.

Rob demonstrates a popular free-time activity for our group - fishing in Big Creek Lake!

During our six-day expedition, I got to know four spunky and stoked youths from Montana and Idaho. Veva and Allegra amused me with their fast friendship, youthful jargon, and interest in identifying plants. Rob demonstrated a commitment to fishing (in this case commitment looked like waking up two hours before wake-up time to start casting) that astounded me. Liam inspired me with his tenacity and grit, and an impressive knowledge of movies, music, and vintage cars. Despite the challenges of mis-fitting packs, a cold and wet first night, over-enthusiastic mosquitos, and plenty of flooded trails, our crew was ready to learn and play each and every day.

Here are some of our stats:

Saskatoon, one of the many native plants Veva, Allegra, and I sought to identify around the lake.

  • Number of Fish Caught = 10

  • Plants Identified

    • Saskatoon (Briefly mistaken for Mallow Ninebark)

    • Trillium

    • Alpine Forget-Me-Not

    • Lupine

    • Larkspur

  • Creek Crossings = 5 (each multiple times)

  • Memories made = too many to count!

To be able to plant seeds of love of and stewardship for wilderness is a great honor. At the very same time, every moment of teaching brought me back to when I was a beginner, too. Watching our crew of four experience the euphoria of cutting their first tree, or struggle with their first attempts at bowline knot, or tackle camp chores felt like watching my first steps down the path that brought me here.

I am so excited for Rob, Veva, Liam, Allegra, and all of our youth participants to come to take their experiences to shape their futures and that of our wild, beautiful lands. Perhaps one day, they will find themselves in my boots.

Starting a cut with Allegra, one of our youth participants

Before and after of a fun tree problem: A great opportunity to practice limb-ing and cutting!

The SBFC Youth Wilderness Expedition Program is funded in part by:

The 2024 National Forest System (NFS) Trail Stewardship Partners Funding, Bass Pro Shops and Cabela’s Outdoor Fund Grant, the Lamb Foundation, Ravalli Electric Co-Op, Missoula Electric Cooperative, Blackfoot Communications, and private donors.


MARLENA NELSON

Saxony, Germany

University of Florida- Food & Resource Economics

Marlena grew up connecting with the outdoors of New England, Germany, and Florida. Working as an outdoor guide during her bachelor's degree opened her eyes to the power of nature to shape individuals and communities. Three months of conservation work in Utah and Arizona inspired her to seek further opportunities to practice stewardship of wild landscapes. She is passionate about creating a world in which people and the planet can thrive.