Babbs in the Woods: There's a reason the zipline comes last

I looked my son in the eyes. I had to look up at him because he is 8 inches taller than I am. We stood on a 40-foot platform that overlooked a cow pasture in the Ozarks. “OK, is this going to jerk my neck back when I do this?” I asked.

“No, Mom,” he said coolly, “Just step off the platform and put your arms out. It’ll be all right.”

Alec and Barbara Baird. Photo by Paige Eissinger.

Talk about a role reversal. For a split second, a scene from his childhood flashed back in my mind; he stood beside a swimming pool – all three feet of him, shivering a little bit in his Hawaiian swim trunks – and I said, “It’s OK, Alec. I’ll catch you. Just jump out to me.”

He had to trust me then and I had to trust him before I stepped off the course. You see, he had fastened me to the zipline, and had been responsible for guiding me through a ropes course earlier in the day – at, did I already mention, 40 feet in the air. Associate Editor Paige Eissinger, along with about 12 teenage girls, a few counselors from Boys and Girls Town Missouri and I spent a few hours together on the ropes — up high and sometimes terrified.

Paige Eissinger at the high ropes course. Photo by Barbara Baird.

My son is a guide at this camp for kids at a 1200-acre outdoor campus called Meramec Wilderness Learning Ranch, near Steelville, Mo. Says Camp Director Brett Bailey – former infantry officer in the US Army, “Everything we do is challenge by choice. We don’t force anybody.”

The fitness and wilderness survival expert says, “So many of our kids have come from backgrounds where it’s been survival all the time, that they never got to be a kid.” Bailey and staff strive to make sure children from all four campuses – St. James, Columbia, St. Louis and Springfield – get the most from their weeklong camp in the wilderness.

Set on what is one of Missouri’s largest former cattle ranches, complete with cliffs, meadows and river access, the ranch caters to students who attend in groups of up to 40. Bailey describes the syllabus as a “mix of adventure therapy – high ropes, team initiatives, team challenges, equine therapy and canoeing.”

He adds, “We throw in some of the traditional summer camp activities where kids can be kids, like crazy mud games. We get messy and wet.”

Bailey says, “Competition, if it’s handled the right way, can be a big motivational factor, but we really stress teamwork.” He continues, “So many of our kids have never been in a safe environment where they had fun. That’s a key part we try to bring in out here. They’re in a safe environment where they feel supported.”

Babbs (in green) and girl on the ropes. Photo by Lindsay Odneal.

The high ropes course is American Mountain Guides Association certified, one of only a few such courses in the state. Certified instructors work alongside the campers, who first undergo a training session on the ground. Not all the campers, and on the day we did the course, not all staff members, will cross the ropes course, but most of them will. As they work in teams to conquer the challenges – with names like heebie jeebie, floating islands and Tarzan crossing – campers cheer and support each other while harnessed.

One camper told me, “When I was up there, I cried like a big baby, but I had to trust myself and had to have courage. When I finished, I felt awesome.”

For the grand finale of the course, and as a reward for staying the course, campers fly down an 800-foot zipline – which was an easy task compared to what lay behind us.

Bailey says the surveys returned my campers show that 90 percent have increased their self-confidence and teamwork approaches. Also, says Brett, with a grin, campers remember, “cooking by the fire and picking ticks off and generally having a great time.”

Paige and I would do it again – but probably not tomorrow, because our mucles are aching today. ~ Barbara Baird

See that lone figure atop the tower? That's my kid, the baby boy. Photo by Paige Eissinger.

Flying Superman style was one of three ways to exit the course on the zipline. Of course, it was the one for me! Photo by Paige Eissinger.

  • About The WON

    The Women's Outdoor News, aka The WON, features news, reviews and stories about women who are shooting, hunting, fishing and actively engaging in outdoor adventure. This publication is for women, by women.

     

The Conversation

10 Comments
  • Judy Hillyer says: July 26, 2010 at 11:06 am

    You rock Barb!! What a great story. Thanks for the tellin the world some good news.

    • Women's Outdoor News says: July 26, 2010 at 8:06 pm

      You know, Judy, that I always get more out of attending anything and working with the students at Girls Town than I give. Thank you … you are one of the right women doing the right thing at the right time.

  • Melita Ellington says: July 26, 2010 at 8:40 am

    Count me in on the reatreat! Awesome story, Barb. You and Paige had an awesome time and it shows. And what a ranch — too bad there aren’t more ranches like that around to help kids with self-esteem issues. What a great opportunity and much needed resource! And way to go Al – you rock!

  • Bill Bowers says: July 25, 2010 at 8:58 pm

    Another great Babbs in the Woods column. And it looks like the ropes course is exhilarating and confidence-building, in a scare-the-crap-out-of-you kind of way.

  • Paige "Chicki Chicki" Eissinger says: July 24, 2010 at 9:34 am

    Hey, that idea sure entertains me, Babbs. I’ll be the first to sign up. Gary, take it from me, it’s a LOT cooler at 40 feet in August than it is on the ground.

  • Terri Lee Pocernich says: July 24, 2010 at 8:24 am

    Awesome! I would love to do that some day.

    • Women's Outdoor News says: July 24, 2010 at 8:34 am

      TL, Tammy and Traci (the three T’s),
      You may well get to do it sooner than expected, as I am entertaining the idea of seeing if The Women’s Outdoor Media Association can book the camp for a summer retreat next year!
      Gary … it would only be fair for you to watch from 40 feet up in the air, too.

  • Tammy Ballew says: July 23, 2010 at 11:08 pm

    What a great experience, for you and Paige and all the girls. Sounds very exhilarating!!! And what an awesome day to get to spend with your son!

  • Traci Schauf says: July 23, 2010 at 8:46 pm

    Too fun! I wanna go!

  • Gary Figgins says: July 23, 2010 at 4:47 pm

    I would have paid good money just to watch.