Greetings
from somewhere in between! The month-long instructor course I took at
the National Outdoor Leadership School has concluded, and I'm about to
move on to the next piece of this summer. Before I tell you about what's
next, though, I'd like to give a little report on the NOLS course.
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| The end of May in Wyoming. And I was expecting flowers and sunshine! |
NOLS
is an outdoor school whose primary focus is leadership skills (as the
name implies). Our instructors stressed this point, since NOLS sometimes
has a reputation as a hard-skills school. Hard skills don't take long
to learn, they explained. The ability to successfully lead a group in
the backcountry, or even in other settings, is a much finer skill– much
more difficult. The purpose of most NOLS courses is to develop that
ability (mastering it takes a lifetime), and the purpose of this
particular course is to train instructors for NOLS.
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| The classroom in camp. Class time was concise, with more emphasis placed on practice. |
After
meeting my fellow instructor candidates in Lander, Wyoming, at NOLS's
international headquarters, we had a day and a half of orientation to
get acquainted with the school's mission, history, and how courses
generally start. The group
consisted of twelve students from all over the US as well as a few from
Australia and Kenya. Our three instructors had hundreds of weeks of
experience in the field between them, and were highly recommended by
others we met in town. Soon enough, we were thrown into the field to
begin the meat of the training.
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| Camp at 10,000 feet. |
We
arrived at the trailhead late in the afternoon amid a wet snowstorm. It
was late spring in the Wind River Mountains, and it had been a very dry
winter according to the locals, but for those of us from different
climates it seemed plenty snowy. The Aussies, who hadn't seen falling
snow more than once or twice in the past, were as excitable as young
kids in the new conditions. "Now I know how people feel when they visit
Australia and see a kangaroo for the first time," one of them said. The
novelty wasn't all fun, though– these kind of conditions could easily
happen on a student course, and, as instructors, we would need to
facilitate a group of students (some of whom may have never hiked or
camped in snow) to adapt to the environment.
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| Fly fishing! We didn't catch much, but I'm hoping to get more practice at some point. |
By
the third day we had climbed to 10,000 feet in elevation, and we didn't
get below 9,000 feet for the next thirty days, aside from a day-hike to
a trailhead to meet a resupply team. This was a very different
experience from my usual backpacking excursions– packs were heavier
(mine ranged between 35 and 65 pounds depending on group gear and food,
although in future courses I can lighten that considerably), daily miles
were shorter (for various reasons, including that we were off trail for
all but one or two days), time between resupplies was longer (9, 11,
and 12 days, which is a lot of food), and the food we cooked was a lot
more elaborate (yeast breads, lasagnas, fudge, brownies, cakes, and so
on). There were classes on fly fishing, geology, snow travel, group
development and dynamics, weather patterns, and much more.
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| Second day of being stuck on Hoth (12,000 feet elevation, high winds, snow... glorious). |
The
first snowstorm cleared by the third day, but there was no shortage of
adversity for our group. For the first week, several of the group
suffered from a cold that was making the rounds. About halfway through
the course, just after we had crossed the Continental Divide, one of the
students suffered a severe ankle sprain while coming down a long
boulder field. The next three nights tested everyone's resolve and
skills, as a blizzard rolled in and pinned us at a completely exposed
12,000 foot campsite. White-out conditions and 40-50 mile per hour winds
made life very difficult (there's a long story in there, but you can
use your imagination). Later in the course, melting snow made for
exciting river fords and thick clouds of mosquitoes. Amazingly, until
the 32nd day we saw only one person not affiliated with our group. That
means our small group of fifteen was an almost completely insular
community.
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| Spring finally begins at lower elevations. Off trail navigation is so much easier out west! |
I
can't do a fully detailed trip report for the month in the wilderness,
so some pictures and the overview will have to do. If you'd like to know
more about the school, I'd highly encourage a visit to their website–
and if you're a student thinking of taking a course I'd be happy to talk
more. The course I took while in college was the single best
life-changing experience I've had (yes, much more important than the
Appalachian Trail hike), and this instructor course was nothing but
positive.
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| River crossing during spring melt was all about wet feet. |
While
every instructor candidate on our course was approved to work for NOLS
(the course is described as a 30 day job interview), not all of us were
placed on courses for this summer. I returned to New England a few days
after the course ended, with the possibility of working some NOLS
courses later in the summer and/or next summer. Not to worry, though. I
have some exciting plans for the rest of the season, and I'll let you
know about those soon. I'm sure you can guess what they are.
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| Arriving early means more time for naps. |
Hey congrats, sounds like it was a fantastic experience, cant wait to here some of these stories specifically the 12,000ft white out conditions! Sounds epic.
ReplyDeleteHey I bet there is a chance that guy wouldn't have rolled is ankle had he been carrying a lighter pack...just saying haha!
Yeah, entirely possible. NOLS has actually done a lot of statistical research on injuries in backpacking courses, and the last I heard there isn't actually a lower injury rate on lightweight courses (NOLS runs a handful of UL backpacking courses), but I can't remember what other data they found-- like if the injuries were from similar causes or different. Either way, I'm happier with the light packs :)
ReplyDeleteWe'll have to hang out and do some hikes sometime. Plenty of stories to tell!
I wonder if the severity of injuries was the same? hmm oh well.
ReplyDeleteFor sure, if I do not see ya before the LT have a great time, I wish I was joining you! stupid job and bills, who knows maybe I will get fired and have funmployment.
Yea I will stick with the lighter pack as well.
Cheers
You know, NOLS keeps detailed info on all injuries and accidents in the field so that they can calculate some serious statistics about them. I'll ask about that sometime. I bet it would be interesting to hear about the differences in injuries and such.
ReplyDeleteI'll be talking to you soon, buddy! Back from the trail, looking for jobs... funmployment indeed. haha.
Nice briefing, thanks for the report. I too am interested in taking the NOLS instructor course but am not sure what the expectations are into getting accepted into the program. I've recently just finished thru hiking the PCT and am getting my WFR this fall. Does NOLS require previous leadership experience before one can join this course? How much technical skills (e.g. mountaineering) does one need?
ReplyDeleteHey Justin. I'd say go for it! It can't hurt to look into the instructor courses, and if you're really interested in outdoor education, I can't think of any better place to do it than NOLS.
ReplyDeleteMy course-mates were from all backgrounds in outdoor leadership– some were experienced guides, some fresh out of college. I think you can do well even without having significant leadership experience, but it does help.
As for technical knowledge, you don't need much of any, really. My course was 99% backpacking, with a tiny bit of climbing, but you could do fine as just a backpacker. The biggest shock was just carrying heavier backpacks, but even that isn't always the case, apparently.
Feel free to email me with more questions if you like. guthookhikes@gmail