This is a two or three week sailing expedition on the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Maine designed with younger teens in mind. Sailing was one of our original expeditions in 1964, has been a big part of how Outward Bound became what it is today. This course takes place on an open sail boat and students live aboard at sea for most of the course. Ideal students are ready for a team experience that is physically challenging and infinitely rewarding.
Youth Courses
Our instructors are committed to bringing younger teens into the wilderness and exposing them to the beauty, freedom and adventure of Outward Bound. Youth courses are typically more structured and focused on student success, self-confidence and teamwork. Students are expected to try their best, exercise compassion, practice craftsmanship, show tenacity and to have fun.
Course Area
The intricate and indented shoreline of the coast of Maine is unique along the North Atlantic seaboard. It is known for the picturesque beauty of it bays and harbors, rocky islands, and relative lack of development. Your course will begin at our Sea Program base at Wheelerís Bay in St. George, Maine. The coast of Maine is rich in history. The islands still hold evidence of the Abenaki Indians, early Europeansí use of islands for farming and timber, the quarrying of granite, and centuries of fishing. Natural history is also abundant. The coast is home to a wide range of sea birds, seals, porpoise, and the occasional whale. The many islands were once the peaks of a sunken mountain range, and the geology reflects its volcanic origins.
Course Description
Your course will begin at Outward Boundís Sea Program base on Wheeler's Bay in St. George, ME. Here you will get an introduction to your boat and get basic instruction. You will soon cast off lines and begin your adventure.
Your sailing expedition will be demanding. Sailing windward takes teamwork and skill, navigation is complex at night, and picking a route through shallow flats can be very challenging (and rewarding!). You will cruise under sail or oars (if there is no wind) all day.
Start with a morning dip, breakfast and a meeting to listen to weather forecast and plan the day's route. Once you raise anchor you will row or sail all day taking turns navigating, handling lines, rowing, steering, etc. In the evening you set the anchor, furl the sails or stow the oars and begin cooking dinner and rigging the sleeping tarp. Over dinner, enjoy the stars of the summer sky and relax as the boat rides peacefully at anchor. After an evening meeting to discuss tomorrowís plan or talk about the events of the day, youíll spread the oars across the boat to create a sleeping platform under the tarp, lay out your sleeping bags and crawl in. Throughout the night, everyone takes a shift awake at anchor watch making sure allís well and maybe journaling a bit, while the sleeping crew rocks gently to the motion of the boat.
What is a pulling boat? Pulling boats are 30 foot open boats. Groups live, cook and sleep on board. Travel is either under sail or using oars. Groups spend some nights on shore but the majority of the nights are spent aboard under a tarp pitched between the masts.
To enroll in this course click the enroll button next to the course dates that work for you. To shop comparatively on line visit our Advanced Course Finder or better yet call one of our expert Admission Advisers at 866-467-7651. Course tuitions listed below do not include our Application Fee or Transportation Fee.
| DATES | DAYS | AGE | TUITION | COURSE # | APPLY |
| 8/01/10 / 8/14/10 | 14 | 14 - 16 | $2895 | Q4SY42-002 | > Apply |
| 7/06/10 / 7/26/10 | 21 | 14 - 16 | $3895 | Q4SY52-002 | > Apply |
| 7/14/10 / 7/27/10 | 14 | 14 - 16 | $2895 | Q4SY42-001 | > Call |
| 6/18/10 / 7/08/10 | 21 | 14 - 16 | $3895 | Q4SY52-001 | > Apply |



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