Thursday, December 29, 2011

Happy New Year

We hope everyone had a truly merry Christmas. The coming new year has us quite excitedabout another summer of ministry. A few quickyear end reminders for everyone:

  1. We’re still booking trips so if you’ve beendreaming about bringing a trip in 2012; we can help make that happen. Give us a call - (206) 525-0791.
  2. Guide staff applications are due January 1stand basecamp applications are due January 15th. If you or someone you know would be anawesome guide at Beyond, now’s the time to get your applications in. Link to applications is here.
  3. ‘Tis the time for year-end giving. If you’d like to financially support Beyondin 2011, follow this link. Your support of Beyond Malibu is appreciated.

Thursday, December 15, 2011

360 Degree View






The view from Globe Theater.  Photo:  Alex Herbig. 

Monday, December 5, 2011

A Letter From Gail Grimston


Dear Beyond,
I had to write you. Our Capernaum Kids spent the night here after Beyond. NEVER have I heard such clear elations and talk of Christ- you and your staff deserve medals, money, and praise. They loved thier "buddies"- working with them repeatedly was the highlight!!
I have taken kids (like these) and I come home exhausted beyond words and usually crying too. So thank you so much. You won't get any WC or guides from this group but know Jesus is clearer to them because of you.

Blessings and Love,

Gail

Monday, November 14, 2011

Throw Back

Here is a sweet account of one of the earliest Beyond trips. A lot of things have changed at Beyond over the last 35 years but the adventures and the memories still last a lifetime.



Beyond Malibu 1975!

Awesome trip!

Incredible weather--sun the entire time! One Eye ascent...spent the night of the Fourth of July on the summit and watched the fireworks of the campers down below at Malibu. We signaled the campers with some lights. Our friends down below at camp saw us and all screamed! Their voices were carried up the inlet and canyon and we could hear them!

The day before, we had spent the night on the snow, just above tree line. We were very fortunate to see a copper-colored wolverine drinking water in a pool of ice-blue water just above the tree line after we climbed up out of the mud and rain in the rainforest on the first day!--the only wolverine in the wild I've ever seen!

The next day we summited One Eye and spent the night there.

In the morning we then hiked across a knife ridge, then down onto the BonBon Glacier! Incredible views!!! And that glacier was amazing--so flat!! Spent the night on a sun-warmed slab of granite.

Our last day we traversed the stream above the waterfall at the end of the Princess Louisa Inlet and spent our last night in the cabin next to the stream. It was so powerful and so beautiful.

When we got down to the inlet the next day, we all jumped in for an ice-cold but refreshing swim & bath! And ate a steak dinner! I think the best steak I've ever tasted!

Awesome trip with great people, enjoying the great outdoors made by a Great God. Thanks Young Life and counselor Steve Murray from Willow Glen High School in San Jose, California!


--Dana Schilperoort

Wednesday, November 9, 2011

Vertical Limit

I don’t know if any of you have ever seen the movie Vertical Limit. A few months ago after a day of first-aid training a bunch of us Beyond Guides watched the movie again. It was hilarious. A lot of the stunts they pull are so outrageously unrealistic that we all burst out laughing at some of the most intense moments of the film. We felt kind of bad for our instructor who hasn’t spent a lot of time in the mountains and who had never seen the film before. Apparently a lot of our campers have seen the film. It is not uncommon for a group of high school boys to start off snow school by throwing themselves onto the snow clinging to their ice axe screaming for their buddy to help them up. We take snow school pretty seriously so this behavior can get a little frustrating. One guide had a particularly infamous outburst in response to this, shouting, “You will not fall, you will not trip, if you do fall, this is how you will arrest. I don’t want to see any of that bush-league Vertical Limit crap.” I don’t know if all of this means you should watch the movie, but I’m pretty sure it means you should book a Beyond trip. Our mountain adventures are not as intense or ridiculously dangerous as the shenanigans in Vertical Limit, but you do get to use an ice axe. We’ve already started booking for 2012 so give us a call (206.525.0791) or check out our website to reserve your own mountain experience- wicked explosions not included.

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Jessica Goes Beyond

For the past four years we have had the privilege hosting a Young Life Capernaum group from the Sammamish area. For those of you who don't know Capernaum is Young Life for kids with exceptionalities. One of the stars of this year's Capernaum trip was Jessica
Kitz. We recently received an update from YL Sammamish with this note in it and we wanted to pass it along. The following is what Jessica's mom says about her Beyond experience.


Jessica went to Beyond Malibu the first week in August with the Issaquah Capernaum group. Her leaders, Stacy and Scotty, were fantastic. I wanted to tell you one story that was the highlight of Jessica’s trip and I believe has changed her forever! Jessica always has to have two feet on the ground; very insecure on unlevel ground and going up or down hills. One day they were going on a hike to the waterfalls. My understanding was that the walk was over trees, rocks, hills, and not just a nature walk on a nicely groomed trail. Jessica was really scared. With the support of Stacy and Scotty and the other leaders, she made it to the waterfalls and back!! The leaders noticed the increase in her confidence after this little adventure and the first thing she told me when I picked her up was about this hike and that she made it! She kept saying that the hike was the best part of her trip. She is still showing an increase in confidence – nothing is stopping Jessica. Thank you Stacy, Scotty and Young Life!
- Becky Kitz

Thursday, October 27, 2011

The New Boat Arrived!!


The new boat arrived at Beyond Base camp July 22nd, 2011. What a celebration. After several years of fund raising we were able to purchase the new 12 passenger Stanley landing craft water taxi. Production of the boat started at the end of March and it arrived just in time to pick up the week 4 trips from the trail head. After picking up the first trip we knew we had the perfect boat for Beyond. The participants relaxed in the spacious cabin and the backpacks loaded into the open bow with ease. Powered by two 150 horsepower Yamaha outboards the loaded boat cruises comfortably between 27 and 30 knots making our trip pick up and drop off schedule run very smooth. The final test came when we did our first Frankenstein beach landing. The Frankenstein pickup went so well that we also changed the Pearkes pickup to be a beach pick up and drop off as well to avoid the risky dock.

Thank you to those of you who helped us purchase this boat. It is a fantastic addition to the Beyond Malibu ministry.

Friday, August 5, 2011

Sea Kayaking Trip

Last week I headed up to Beyond to guest guide a high school co-ed trip from Midland, Michigan. It was quite a group. There were only two guy campers in the whole bunch so I was thankful for my guide partner, this year’s lone first year, Barb. Within a few hours it became pretty clear to me that these girls had no idea what was in store for them, they had no idea how hard it would be. The leaders were relentlessly positive and kept the group afloat with countless rounds of Taylor Swift songs. But the looming clouds and oppressive wind took its toll and eventually the struggle set in.

The second day down the Sechelt Inlet, we could see the first fish farm a few miles off. As we paddle towards it, the green building seemed to never change size. The wind howled into our face, each paddle stroke moved us only a small push forward. To stop paddling meant to actually move backward, away from our camp site and rest. As this was the groups' first day using a new skill, paddling, they all struggled against the wind and waves. One boat in particular, paddled by two younger girls, was having a challenging day.  We approached the fish farm,  and because of boats, garbage bins, and cables are were forced to move away  from shore; to move toward where the wind was stronger. At some point  before the fish farm, my encouraging words lost their luster. All  that could be done was to ask the Lord for strength to make it around the  next point.  There we would find rest and delicious snacks. 



That day, was harder than any of us had planned, it was  frustrating and exhausting, but God is good and God’s strength  sustains.  In five days time the tide had turned completely. I found  myself needing to go full speed ahead to catch those same girls, who  were no longer struggling. They were so deep in conversation they did  not even realize how effortlessly and quickly they were paddling. As sea  kayaking guides, we frequently say the trip is about our journey, not  our destination. We have no summits, no cruxes, our routes can be seen  for miles, and our view stays at sea level. However, through the journey  each person changes. They learn the small changes to a paddle stroke  that make a large difference, they grow in their relationships with one  another, and most importantly they, we, learn to trust the Lord for  endurance against the wind and the waves. Water can take rough granite  and make it smooth as glass, but it takes time, as does our journey to  become more Christ-like.

Marshall Potter was a second-year sea kayaking guide and assistant to  the operations manager for the 2010 summer.  We’re glad he was able to  join us again for a trip this summer.

Friday, July 15, 2011

Freedom of the Hills


Sabbath- a day at Beyond set aside for staff to be still and seek the Lord, process the past week and prepare for the week to come, to find joy in fellowship and in play. Fourth of July sabbath- a day that included all of the above, plus a rare sustained ability to bask in the sun all day and bellow patriotic songs over a dinner together on the dock. Being part of the 5% minority (yes, this is the exact math) of Canadian staff at Beyond, it was fortunate that the other Canadian and I were well versed in the ways of America and were proudly able to holler the anthem, those “bright stripes and bold stars, through the dangerous night,” declaring the independence and freedom of America.

Freedom was something that had already consumed my thoughts that day, before I had even realized that it was the fourth of July. I had just returned from the mountains. For me, the mountains have been marked by reoccurring encounters with the Lord teaching me what freedom in Him looks like. Last summer, I spent most of the summer in the Wyoming wilderness and it was there that the Lord freed me from lies and bondage that had held me back from confidently coming near to Him. I returned from the summer clinging to two truths that had become real to me, “now the Lord is the Spirit, and where the Spirit of the Lord is there is freedom” (2 Corinthians 3:17)... “let us then with confidence draw near to the throne of grace” (Hebrews 4:16).

As I prepared for another summer in the mountains, I began to pore through the technical mountaineering book “Freedom of the Hills” that we had been assigned to read. I think that the title of the book points to one aspect of the freedom that is encountered in the mountains, a removal from distractions of everyday life that consume- the cell phone, the internet, the seemingly never ending list of things to accomplish. The mountains are free of these things that bind. The hills stretch out before you, inviting you to explore their vast expanses. Yet, I have come to realize that there are other things that bind- thoughts, conceptions, and feelings that can't be left behind like a cell phone can be; the towering peaks and expanses of land point to something much more than the idea of freedom. It isn't the wilderness by itself that has brought healing and freedom in my life, it is God who has used the mountains as a space that I've been able to come away from the busyness of life, come to the quiet and seek Him. It is here that He has renewed my focus, softened my heart, stirred my affections for Him, renewed my desire to pursue Him, and brought freedom from the lies and burdens that keep me from approaching His throne with confidence.

God has been so faithful in reminding me of His goodness, His provision, and His sovereignty. As guides, before each trip we are given a sheet that fills us in on what each group wants the framework of their trip to look like. Skimming over the folder of what would be my first trip guiding at Beyond, the leader had written her desires for spiritual content: Freedom in Christ. That week we grappled with what it really means to have freedom in Christ through the trials and challenges of the trip. Our girls were able to recognize the lies that they were enslaved to, surrender them in a new way, and claim the truth of who they are in Christ. It was through this week in the mountains these girls were able to see a glimpse of their strength and beauty as they overcame challenges, redefining over and over what is possible through Christ who lives in them.

Now that we are back from the mountains, I want more than ever to continue to claim those truths for myself and those around me. Truth: it is only through Christ that full and complete freedom can come. Truth: because of Him, the power of sin over us is broken. Truth: because of these truths, we can freely come into the presence of the Lord with confidence. Truth: where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom.

-Rebecca Chin, first year mountain guide,
never without her stellar and smokin guide partners Taylor Rice, and Whitney Agassiz.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

Mid Summer Update and Poll

Wow, the Beyond summer is flying by.  Our third week of mountain trips is already hiking into the heights and our first sea-kayaking trip is completing its final paddles.  It’s only Week 3 and our summer has already been chock-full of adventure and growth. We've already had WAFA for 1st Year Guide Staff; Sea Kayaking, Mountain, and Base Camp 10-day training; and two weeks of crazy mountain epic-ness, and we're just getting started.

Surprises abound this summer.  First off, so much snow!  For those that are familiar with Chatterbox, the guides on 10 Day began kicking steps before Log Cabin Pass.  Base Camp wildlife expanded from the usual otters, rats, squirrels, and birds to include two fawns, Phil and Bill, that have made Base Camp their home.  Our fearless leadership staff—GTL’s, base camp and food service coordinators, and Rob-- are working hard to keep up with the changes and surprises of life in the Princess Louisa; they're doing a great job.  


We have trips out this week on Frankenstein, Pearkes, Long Pearkes, One Eye, Zion, Albert, JJ, and Sun Peak. You counted correctly, that's EIGHT trips, and we have seven coming up next week.  We are so excited about everyone that's coming up.  Our guide staff is not as big as it could be so if you are an ex-guide with current first aid certification, and a week to spend in the inlet, you should give Mike and Alissa a call.  If not, we'd love it if you would lift up and celebrate all of these folks in prayer-- guides, participants, base camp, and leadership.
That's all from Beyond for now.  Hopefully we'll have our first round of Base Camp blogs within the next few days.  Until then, please keep us in your prayers.

We want to share everything that's going on in and around Base Camp, but so much is happening we hardly know where to begin.  So...

What do you want to know about Beyond this summer?
I'm sure you have things you're dying to know.  Choose your favorite question and look forward to a detailed, juicy explanation next week.  We certainly appreciate the help.

Monday, June 27, 2011

Summertime at Last

The summer has finally arrived! The last month has been full of first aid trainings, base camp set up, and tons of travel. By June 13th all but a few stragglers had arrived in base camp and we were ready to kick off our last round of training. This year the sea kayaking guides were available to join the mountain guides on their training trip up Sun Peak. With everyone, including the sea kayakers, in base camp at once, we were stuffed like sardines in the back of the barn those first few rainy meals. That didn’t last long though. The guides only had three days of training in base camp before hitting the trail.
With the guides, the sea kayakers, and the trainers there were thirty-three people who headed up the mountain last Thursday. To make things a little more manageable, everyone split into three different groups, Safety Third lead by Abbie and Yonkers, the Bleating Fawns lead by Jeff and Becca, and Doyacopy lead by Joe and Alissa. These names may sound a little weird but they’re an indication that there was a lot of laughter ringing through the mountains this last week.
Day one up Chatterbox was obligingly sunny for the intense 4400 ft hike up to Sun City. Unfortunately that was the last we would see of the sun for several days. We woke up the morning of day two in a cloud that stayed with us until we climbed down off the summit four days later. But we weren’t too bothered by the mist, or the snow we hit at just 2800 ft. Days 2 and 3 were a pleasant mix of snow rotations, life stories, sneak leaps, Bible studies, epic snow ball battles, and a quick hike up to Contact Lakes.
We woke up early on day four, packed up camp, and headed to the top of the moraine (the west lateral moraine of the JJ glacier). Three of the trainers headed out early and trekked across the glacier to find a spot to practice crevasse rescue. Their recon was successful; they located a crevasse large enough to send four people in at once. It was a cold and rainy day but the weather is hardly noticeable when you get to spend the whole day jumping in and rescuing people from a sweet crevasse. By the time we got back in our rope teams and slogged back across the glacier to our campsite we were all totally exhausted, but it was a good day.

Day five was summit day and the tough ascent conditions had been on the minds of the trainers the whole week. The heavy snow threw our original plans of summiting Sun Peak into question. This week the usually steep and rocky ascent route was now steep and heavy with snow. Last year the snow was lower but there was still enough to keep us off Sun Peak and move us over to JJ. We didn’t give up that easily though. First thing that morning Jeff, Joe, and Yonkers headed up Sun Peak to see if they could find a route up and over. The snow was deep and steep but our fearless trainers managed, with the help of five hand-lines, to make the Sun Peak knife ridge passable. It took the thirty of us nine hours to clear the summit- a trip that takes less than two under different conditions. It was late, raining, and windy when we finally rolled into Miners Rock and Maurie’s Mound, but we’d made it and it was worth it!

The next morning, day six, we were rewarded for all of our hard work with a view that would take your breath away. We woke up to partly sunny skies, which after the weather we’d had felt like a blue bird day. We yard-saled all of our gear hoping the sporadic sun might dry things out, then we sprawled out on the rock ourselves and settled in for a morning of hot bevies and life stories. A quick rock climb, rappel, and first aid scenario broke up the afternoon, and we were all full from dinner when we finally packed up and headed back down into the forest for our last night on the trail.
Throughout the week, with rotating Leader of the Day teams facilitating spiritual content and the delegation of daily responsibilities, we focused on Romans 15:1-7. Within our groups we processed how Jesus gives us the kind of hope, endurance and encouragement that allows us to live in harmony as a community. Authentic conversations ensued about how we feel most connected with the people around us and how to truly accept ourselves, and those we are in community with, as God has accepted us . We tried to define what glory actually is, how to give that glory to God, and how to become “little Christs”. Sitting on the side of a mountain, in the freezing rain under the McFly, we realized how much this experience, with these people, feels like home. Our common struggle, our shared moments of weakness, and our ability to be strong only as one united body, brought the scriptural content alive for all of us as we paralleled the mountain with our lives.

Now, we’ve made it back to base camp and have even headed back to the wilderness again. Our first trips are out in the mountains experiencing that same sense of common struggle and drawing the parallel between this mountain experience and their lives at home. We’re thankful for our training, for the ways our lives are changed through struggle, through community, but mostly through Christ. We pray for continued transformation, for ourselves and for our participants, throughout this summer. Thanks for your prayers and support for this adventure.

Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Snow Weekend

Lauren (left) and Alaina (right)
We are just flying through our training season here at Beyond. We finished our weekend trainings with an overnight excursion on the snow near the Mt. Baker ski area. We spent the days practicing building anchors, setting up belays, perfecting our self-arrest technique, and working through our crevasse rescue system. We have less than two weeks before we all head up to the inlet for our last week of training, and then trips arrive! Here are the thoughts of Alaina Sawaya, a second year mountain guide, as she reflects on snow weekend and the summer to come.

Journal Entry *Snow Weekend 2011*
God is good. He has given me the most extraordinary group of individuals to be in community with and working along side. I am so stoked for our summer!!
I often feel as though I don't deserve this experience, along with so many other such moments in my life to which I feel unworthy. I am floored by his grace. My life is good because of him and all that he gives to me, and I am so thankful!

It is because of, and not in spite of, the snow and the rain and the cold and the exhaustion, we grow closer. The skills begin to solidify in our minds and the friendships take a deeper place within us as we dangle ourselves off of snow walls in harnesses and hurl them down steep slopes with ice axes flailing to "gain control before we roll"! Between rotations we challenge each other to deep snow frog-jump races and push-up challenges on foamies and ice-axe sculptures. It's all part of the madness we call Beyond. And we love it. We crave it. We anticipate it and tell stories about it. And now we are about to experience it all summer! This crazy bunch of imperfect but wonderfully made people become a working body of Christ! It's a miracle and we are part of it! We have been chosen to come together for his purpose, and as we approach this summer with enthusiasm, we should take an attitude of humility and responsibility for the work we have been given. He has great plans for us as we are woven into the lives of one another and the participants we encounter at Beyond. My hope is for us all to be fully present, fully engaged, fully aware of and fully thankful for each moment of those plans. Here we go!!
"For I can do everything through Christ who gives me strength" Philippians 4:13

"Yes a person is a fool to store up earthly wealth, but not have a rich relationship with God." Luke 12:21

Lord, let there be less of me, and more of you! Amen.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

Water Taxi Update

This is so exciting. Here are the most recent pictures of our new water taxi! We’re obviously cruising along with the production of the boat itself. It is really the perfect water craft for Beyond. Like our current boat, the Laker I, our new water taxi will comfortably seat twelve passengers. But, this new boat has the additional awesomeness of a large cargo area, for all of those packs, and a landing craft design (the front part lowers down) to facilitate trip drop-offs even at points that do not have a dock. The one thing this boat is missing is it’s engines! We currently have roughly 36.8% of the funds needed to purchase the “engine package,” that’s $12,900 out of $35,000. You can help us fill that 63.2% gap by clicking here and making a donation of your own.





Big or small, every little bit helps. We appreciate your support so much.

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

All-Staff Weekend

We are flying through training season this year. Two weeks ago we had our all-staff training weekend in Anacortes. It was a blast. We e-mailed our new Female Base Camp Coordinator Robyn Zachry to get her take on the weekend. Here is her response. Check out our Staff Profiles page to read up on the rest of this summer's crew.

Howdy! I’m Robyn Zachry from Midland, Texas. I’m 21 years old and I’m heading into my senior at Texas A&M University as an Education major. I’m also a Young Life leader at Bryan High School.

As a Young Life leader, I have always heard about Beyond Malibu, but have never really given it much thought. Then earlier this Spring, a local YL staff person called me up out of the blue and told me that he had recommended my name to work at Beyond and I might be getting a call soon. Sure enough, a few days later, Holly called me and said that I should apply. I thought about it and realized this is a once in a lifetime chance for me to do something like this. It would be silly for me to pass up this sudden opportunity.

So I sent in my application for Female Base Camp Coordinator. Someone asked me “why that position,” and honestly the requirement 21 and up just caught my eye. I thought “Oh, I’m 21! I can do that for sure!” I saw that it is a leadership position and just felt the Lord tell me, “Ok Robyn, it’s time to step it up. Do you trust me?” So, I went for it! I did not have a clue where I was headed or what I was going to be doing. I had never been to Beyond before, so applying for FBBC was just me trusting the Lord. He is so faithful and good all of the time, through any circumstance, so I trust that He has a perfect plan to carry out at Beyond.

Before the first training weekend, I was definitely nervous about going to the opposite side of the United States, into an already close-knit world not knowing a soul! Not going to lie, I may or may not have Facebook creeped on the names that were on the Yammer website and memorized the pictures off of the Beyond Blog. Don’t judge! I was definitely intimidated because it looked like everyone could step out of their back yard and climb a mountain. In Texas, you have to drive hours to reach even a small foothill. I probably emailed Holly 5 different times leading into the weekend. But again, I heard the Lord say, “Robyn, do you trust Me? I promise that I am sovereign.” So I got on a plane headed to Seattle. When I stepped off of I met my first friend, Mercedes. I am so thankful for her! She calmed so many of my fears and brought peace to my frantic and scatter-brained mind. The training weekend was great. I instantly fell in love with all of the people there, and I was welcomed with open arms. Everyone was so encouraging and assured me that it is going to be a wonderful, Christ-filled summer.

The hardest part of the weekend was getting my job description. Before the weekend, I was nervous about the unknown. Now I am nervous about the known! The job is definitely way bigger than what my strength can handle. The FBBC position is overwhelming, and I am anxious because I know how inadequate I am for the job ahead of me. There is absolutely no possible way, depending upon my own strength, that I can do any of it well. But this word from my devotions the other morning has really encouraged me,"I am a mighty God. Nothing is too difficult for Me. I have chosen to use weak ones like you to accomplish My purposes. Your weakness is designed to open you up to My Power. Therefore, do not fear your limitations or measure the day’s demands against your strength." The Lord is so gracious to me. He will give me the strength I need for every moment of every day. I had a great training weekend, and because of God's promise, I know I will have a great summer too.

Despite my anxiety about the position, I am really looking forward to encountering the Lord in a way that I never have before. The verses that He has put on my heart the past few weeks are Hosea 2:14, 19-20.“Therefore I am now going to allure her; I will lead her into the wilderness and speak tenderly to her…” Reading that fires me up! I can’t wait to go to the wilderness and listen to the Lord speak tenderly to my soul! My greatest desire is to serve and love on others unto the Lord. He is sending me to Beyond for a reason and I pray that I can be a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing in His sight.

Monday, May 2, 2011

Paddling Towards Faith

If you missed last weeks quarterly email newsletter,  you also missed this great story.  Justine was a Sea Kayak guide for us the past few years and wrote this for us.

On the first night of most Beyond Malibu Sea Kayaking trips everyone gathers around a campfire and listens while one of the guides shares his or her life story.  Last summer my trip with Emily started the same way.  The first night I shared my story as a way to introduce myself and set a tone of intentionality, vulnerability, and community for the rest of the week.  That first night last August, I looked around the circle and every kid seemed intrigued and present.  Every kid except Emily.  Emily sat with her ipod headphones “secretly” slipped into her ears and annoyed expression resting on her face.  She clearly did not want to be there.  I immediately liked her.  Not surprisingly, Emily had the hardest trip of anyone that week, but she also had the best.

After that first night we loaded up our kayaks and set out along the mighty Jervis.  As we paddled along the coastline I found myself asking God what He had prepared for this week, and for this girl.  I paid close attention to Emily, in my head I wondered what kind of person she was.  By the way she was paddling, determined and quiet, I assumed she was strong-willed, stubborn, but also precariously independent. As I got to know her throughout the week, I realized that she was indeed all of those things… but for good reason.  She had come from a difficult family background. Her father wasn’t around, her mother was decently stable but often left her daughter to fend for herself, which left Emily to be raised largely by her emotionally abusive grandmother. I found out she worked at Dairy Queen for months just to afford this trip. She came hoping to connect to this youth group that invited her.  Emily came pretty much as a loner. She hadn’t yet developed friendships with everyone on the trip. She was guarded against their genuine love because these kids had a faith she did not. As far as Emily was concerned faith was beyond her comprehension.

I was thrilled to spend a week with brave, independent, tenaciously authentic girl.  I admit my excitement didn’t come because I felt she had “things to learn,” or because “this could be her chance to experience God.”  God works in His own time, and I trust that.  I was just so excited to spend a week with a girl that reminded me so much of myself when I was her age.  We noticed our similarities right away, and found ourselves talking every chance we could.  She admitted to me that she has gotten used to doing everything for herself for so long that she rarely accepted anyone’s help.

I am always amazed by Beyond trips, how beautiful and intentional and downright unpredictable they always end up being.  This same girl who worked so hard to get on this trip, who was excited to develop some real friendships, who had spent the first couple days opening up to me, suddenly had everything cut short.  We had stopped at a beach for the afternoon and on her way up to a waterfall she slipped and dislocated her shoulder.  This girl, Emily, had worked harder than anyone around her just to be there and suddenly she had to be whisked away to base camp, separated from group.

It took us two days to paddle to base camp, a standard campsite for this route, where we finally got to meet up with Emily. We planned to stay for just a day so we took advantage of our night with Emily and had her tell her life story. So we gathered around the campfire in the stillness of the inlet and let her speak.  When she finished, her need for this group of friends that encircled her was astonishingly clear.  We had to find a way for her to finish the trip with us.  The problem was she couldn’t use her left arm to paddle. My guide partner, her leaders, and I spent the evening and the next morning talking with the doctor going over our options and just praying.  Finally we decided to put her in a double kayak with a guide.  She obviously wouldn’t be paddling but the guide would do the work, with a little help of some towing by the stronger paddlers in the group.  The result: the girl who never relied on anyone for anything had no choice but to let people take care of her for the rest of the week.

It was beautiful, and let me tell you, Emily did not always like it.  For me it was awesome.  The experience allowed her to open up in ways that I had never seen before. I paddled her to our next campsite that first day, and she poured out every question that she’s ever had about God, parents, life, pain, friends, everything!  She couldn’t name it but she slowly began to realize that something bigger than her was going on.  She wanted a part of this Love that was so unexplainable. Still, she was afraid to trust something so unknown to her.  So we kept the dialogue open and just continued to care for her.

Emily, despite obvious difficulties, had one of the best weeks of her life.  She learned that if a loving community is worth trusting, maybe God can be looked at in a similar light.  She went home with that group feeling  love from people and from God, knowing that her life had been changed.  I have kept in touch with Emily a little bit. She still has her questions and doubts (like everyone does), but she has fallen hard into this crazy thing we call faith.  She started a dialogue with God, attends church, and was even baptized with all of her Beyond friends surrounding her.  The story of Emily reminds me how incredible Beyond trips are.  I am so thankful for the way this experience truly creates an environment that lets kids feel comfortable and safe to ask questions, to search, and to feel loved by God.  Everyday I am blown away by the ways in which God works and breathes into our lives. I’m grateful for having seen this through Emily’s story.

Friday, April 29, 2011

Staff Needs

We are still looking for an Assistant Cook this summer!

We are looking for an individual 18 years or older to come and spend the summer serving in the Basecamp kitchen! Responsibilities include working with the Head Cook to prepare meals for staff and guests, and managing campsite meal preparation for hiking trips. This person should be hard working, detail oriented, and have a passion for serving God by serving others.

Spread the word!

If you know someone who would be a perfect fit for this position, please encourage them to apply. For application materials and a detailed job description, check out our website: http://beyondmalibu.younglife.org.

If you are interested in applying for an unforgettable summer of serving, call our Seattle office at (206) 525-0791. Thank you!

Friday, April 15, 2011

Map and Compass

I just got home to Bend Oregon from map and compass weekend in Seattle with the rest of this year’s Beyond guide staff. I’ll try to describe it in a nutshell… We were privileged to have Dave Taylor instruct us in the ways of the map and compass, with patience and humor . He has been faithfully training Beyond guide staff for many years. We felt particularly honored to receive his instruction this year because he informed us that this would be his last Beyond training. That's right, Dave Taylor is moving on to serve God in other ways and other places. We just want to thank Dave for serving so many generations of Beyond guides. He is one of the highlights of every training season.

We began the weekend with an intro to map reading and a group activity of designing clay landscapes and drawing our own topographic maps of those landscapes to better understand topographic lines on a map. The next day, after spending some time learning and reviewing declination and compass techniques, we headed to Woodland park in Seattle to practice taking compass bearings. We broke up into teams and worked on triangulating known features on the map to determine our exact location.

On Sunday, after working on some Bible study skills, we we headed back outside, this time to Hamlin Park, for a “non-competitive” (yeah right!) orienteering race. Teams of two scoured the park with a map and compass and raced to be the first to find 11 points marked on our maps and return to the starting point. This was a super fun activity that really tested our skills under pressure. I love orienteering!

All in all this was another great weekend of fellowship and learning. Next up is All Staff/Rock Weekend, I can't wait!

Gracie King is a second year mountain guide who never gets lost.

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

First Training Weekend

Oh-So-Ko-No, Jeff's favorite.

It’s spring here in Seattle and training has officially started for the 2011 Beyond guide staff. We kicked off the season with our first training weekend March 24-27. As usual the returning guide class showed up early Thursday evening for a fun reunion and a few extra sessions on leadership training. They locked themselves in a room, caught up on their adventures from across the country, and went about setting their goals for this upcoming summer. After a day and a half of work, our newly fearless leaders had developed a their own mission statement, “Cultivating encounters with God through worshiping together,” and were ready to greet their partners, Beyond’s newest class of sea kayaking and mountain guides.

By Friday evening the new guide staff had arrived at Concordia Lutheran Elementary school to a warm welcome from the returning staff. We have fourteen new guides this year who traveled from all over North America including New Jersey, Southern California, and even Canada. The excitement from the welcome, with the help of plenty of coffee and animal crackers, carried on throughout the night. After plenty of get-to-know-you games, the great Beyond historian Jim Caldwell graced our presence and filled the guide staff with a sense of eagerness and anticipation for the joys of weather and surprises of the wilderness that the mountains and inlet holds for them this summer.

Jim Caldwell back in the day. Not much has changed.
Saturday, too, was filled with some amazing guest lecturers. Sarah Field, a Young Life leader from Tacoma, shared about the Beyond experience from the leader’s perspective. She spoke about her trip last summer with 14 high school girls and shared some valuable insight on the goals, expectations, and experiences of a trip leader. Dudley and Kathleen Miller returned again this year, too. These wise counselors have given our guide staff instruction the past few years on interpersonal communication. The skills they teach our staff consistently prove to be invaluable tools on almost every trip. We so appreciate their willingness to serve us, plus that egg toss was totally epic.

Of course the weekend was littered throughout with instruction on hard skills and opportunities for physical and spiritual development. We want to send out a huge thank you to all of our trainers. I won’t list them all by name because I’m sure to forget someone but we are so grateful for your continued support of our program. We couldn’t do it without you. Thank you too to the guide staff for your sacrifices and commitment to serving God and serving kids. We’re excited for the ways in which God will work and eagerly anticipate the new Beyond season.

Saturday, March 26, 2011

We Want to Know

Alright everyone. We here at Beyond have an ongoing debate. It's tearing us apart and we need your help to resolve it. For years there has been a strong contingency among us whose knees buckle with joy when the twisting and twirling of the the knotted black meal bag suddenly stops and it's calorific contents empty onto the lap of the eager guide to reveal the ever longed for framboise etched across the otherwise pristine packaging of our most beloved beverage. Others scream with triumph and delight when it is Peche, the most wonderful Peche, that greets their anticipating eyes and their tantalized tongue. Still others despise these supple fruits of Canada's powdered beverage bounty and wait patiently for the otherwise monotonous wasa meal and it's promise of sweet and sour blended so perfectly into the rosy crystals of Pink Lemonade. Our camps are clear and our passion is real. Save us from our own intractable taste buds and cast your vote for your favorite flavor below:

Which is your FAVORITE Ricky flavor?

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Friday, February 25, 2011

Beyond Sea Kayaking: The Depths of Adventure


If you're looking for freedom, flexibility, and depth in your next outdoor adventure, you should check out Beyond's sea kayaking program. Enjoy the freedom of paddling some of Canada's most beautiful inlets and exploring the wilderness that skirts their edges. Sea kayaking trips offer an extreme amount of flexibility in both the length of the trip and the size of the group. Spend the day spotting God in the wildlife around you and in the conversations you share as you paddle. Enjoy streams and waterfalls and water that literally glows at night. End your day cozied around a beach campfire listening to the stories of the lives of your fellow travelers and sharing your own. Sea kayaking is a challenging but low-impact sport, making it an excellent choice for participants of all ages. So get a high school group together and ask a couple of moms or dads (or grandpas) to join you. The best part is, we're still booking trips for this summer. Check out the calendar below and then click here to get your trip planning started.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Life as a Beyonder


It's hiring season here at Beyond. We have a huge summer coming up so we need a large staff for 2011. I've found it difficult to put into words why people should be on staff. Being on Beyond staff was an epic experience for me and it's been hard to convey that epic-ness in small get-the-word-out posts. So I thought I'd get a little more in depth. I learned so much about God, myself, community, and service at Beyond. Here is a snapshot of what Beyond staff was like for me. Maybe it will encourage you to serve with us this summer

I was a mountain guide for three years (that's right, I liked it so much I came back for an extra year), and I have to tell you, there's nothing like it. I loved guiding because it demanded everything of me and more. I loved planning our weeks, setting up our route and then poring over God's word with my guide partner. I loved reading about the group we would spend the next week with, throwing ideas back and forth, thinking outside of the box, and inevitably being drawn back to the outrageous mystery of God contained in the simplicity of Jesus' words. I loved jumping up and down on the dock on Saturdays as the Papoose came in and having to be on my gregarious A-game as we greeted the campers with skits and ice-breakers. I loved sitting around the campfire that first night, our stomachs over full from the delicious juicy hamburgers we just inhaled, listening to each other as we talked honestly about our fears and expectations for the upcoming week. Beyond taught me a lot about listening, about putting my own fears and expectations aside in order to serve and connect with each kid in each group. It was such a privilege to be brought into the story of each of my campers' lives, to be able to ask difficult questions and have them respond with honesty and vulnerability. I learned the real meaning of authenticity when I saw it on the tired faces of fifty-year old men and sixteen-year old girls who trusted me to take them up a mountain.

Beyond was physically challenging in a way that was also mentally challenging. I never knew how many miles I hiked in a week or just how heavy my pack was when I had to carry water up to our first night campsite. But I grew to appreciate the sometimes inexhaustible strength in my legs and the immediate presence of life that greeted me with every heaving breath I took. I loved the puzzle of high school girls and finding the right words to convince them that they will make it, and it will be worth it, even though it's only the first day and they already want to sit down and never move again. I also loved the puzzle of figuring out a route in the thick fog of a white-out. I felt like I was the best I could possibly be when I guided Beyond trips and I was never more aware of how much I was dependent on God. I was my most confident and simultaneously utterly filled with humility.

Every other week I had to come down out of the mountains and work in base camp. My second and third summers, once I got the hang of guiding, I preferred the mountains to base camp. But my first summer base camp was the best. Even on the summit I would look down at base camp and long to see the smiling faces of my friends and community. Six of my closest friends are the women in my guide class. I have countless more from the base camp and guide staff of the years I served at Beyond. At base camp, we rose early on Saturday mornings to share coffee, laughter, and tears on the dock before we headed up to celebration breakfast. We dragged ourselves out of bed "before" the 7:15 breakfast bell and staggered down to set the table, satisfied despite the sleepiness because we were beautiful and we were together. Every morning we took an hour just to sit with God. I have felt God's presence more distinctly in those hours than in any other time of my life. God dripped from every branch and saturated the air as tangibly as the rain. And we worked. Hard! But that was good too, because at 4:30 everyday I could relax and swim knowing that I had spent my time well, I had served people, and I had worked hard.

Life in the community of base camp was not always easy. We, forty of us each summer, for all intents and purposes lived on an island. We ate together, slept together, and worked together and we did not always get along. The thing about an island though is that you have to figure it out. It would not suffice to let conflicts go unresolved. More often than not those conflicts ended up being the fertilizer to deeply rooted life-long friendships, and in some cases even marriages (wink, wink). Oh, and then there was the singing. Crazy, raucous and hilarious, or quiet, beautiful, and reflective but always a capella at celebration breakfast. Evening dishes usually included an ad hoc band which usually included a dance party. Either way, I learned a lot of Pearl Jam and Canadian folk music and we all pretty well figured out how to harmonize with each other.

These were my experiences as a guide at Beyond. They changed my life. They showed me more of who God created me to be than I had ever seen before. They showed me how great it is to give that me freely in service to others, both campers and fellow staff. Most significantly, through my experiences I knew God, and because of my experiences I know God more. If you want to see what your experience would be you should start by sending in an application. Click here to get started. It's worth it.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

40 Years in a Nutshell

Our 40 year reunion gave us a great opportunity to reflect on our exciting history.  Here's a brief look at where Beyond came from and where we are going.



Beyond Malibu began in the early 1970s when Barney Dobson, a Vancouver, B.C. Young Life leader, caught a vision for taking kids into the mountains surrounding Young Life’s Malibu Club in the Princess Louisa Inlet.  Barney wanted to take kids “beyond” the normal camp setting.  In 1970, the Beyond experiment began when three groups each climbed what would eventually become the One Eye Route.  Those first three trips were a great success. So the following summer Beyond kicked off its inaugural season.




That first summer in 1971 Beyond set up a base camp on the Jervis Inlet at the mouth of Potato Creek.  They had a small staff of pioneers, enough to lead just one trip each week during the summer, so some trips had as many as 20 campers.  In 1972, Beyond more than doubled its staff and with it the number of trips into the mountains.  This growth allowed Beyond to shrink the size of the groups and begin to customize trips to the unique dynamics of each group.
That same summer, 1972, Beyond left Potato Creek and transformed an old logging camp in the heart of the Princess Louisa Inlet into its new base camp.  Today, nearly forty years later, that same small strip of land continues to serve as the home base for Beyond’s mountain ministry. But a lot has changed since 1972.  In 1998, after leasing the property for twenty-six years, Young Life purchased that old logging camp.  Since then we have remodeled the barn, torn down and rebuilt the red house and the long house, added five new buildings including the sauna and the luggage shelter, dug too many biffs to count, and completed three of seven campsite structures.




And Beyond continues to grow.  In 1998 Beyond added a sea kayaking program and with it a new base of operations in Egmont.  Today, Beyond has as many as eight mountain trips and two sea kayaking trips exploring the mountains and inlets of British Columbia’s wild coastline each week.  With improvements in the Princess Louisa base camp came the opportunity, beginning in 2008, for some midweek base camp service trips and rustic camp experiences for Capernaum (Young Life’s ministry to special needs populations), college, and adult Young Life groups.  In the next few years we hope to increase the size of our staff and the number of our trips, purchase a new water taxi to better facilitate transportation in and out of the inlet, build four more campsite structures, extend the roof of the barn, and so much more.  The history of Beyond is most easily tracked through these tangible growths and changes.  But the real history exists in the lives that have been moved and utterly transformed by God’s presence in these mountains and on these waters.  Come be a part of Beyond’s history.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Make Your Summer Count

The 2011 season is shaping up to be an epic Beyond summer. Our trip calendar is full and growing and we are bursting at the seams with people signed up for an adventure of a lifetime in the mountains and on the water at Beyond. With all of these trips we need a pretty large staff to put it all together. We're still taking applications for mountain guides, sea kayaking guides, base camp staff, and leadership. We're looking for people who are adventurous, passionate, and committed to living out God's love through service to others. If you or someone you know fits this description click here for more information and to fill out an application. You can also click on the "Meet Our Staff" tab above to learn a little bit about people who have been on staff before, and even some people who will be up there this summer. Serving a summer or two at Beyond is one of the best things you can do. You will change lives, yours included.