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Camp overview
High Lonesome Downhill Skills Bike Camp
Come join us in the forests near the High Lonesome Hut to improve
your downhill mountain bike skills. The Huck Forest Bike Park
features a mountain cross course, ladder trails, a downhill course
and a series of gap jumps in beginner, intermediate and advanced
lines. New features are always being added as well.
Your base camp is a fully equipped, solar powered cabin with
hot and cold running water, a shower, a flush toilet and comfy
beds.
Riders ages 8-16 will bike to the camp over a 2.4 mile trail.
Evenings will be spent playing, riding and sitting around a campfire.
Daytime activities will include building mountain biking skills
and exploring in the woods. Food will be plentiful, including
marshmallow roasts around the campfire.
Great care is taken to ensure students only ride courses they
are comfortable with, after extensive practice on beginner features.
The Park is on a private wooded parcel at 9400 feet elevation,
near the High Lonesome Hut. The property is surrounded by National
Forest, and students ride to the camp along a permitted right
of way through the forest. Parents are welcome to ride into the
hut with the students on the first day and check out the Park
and the Hut. You may ride in again on the final day to see the
new skills your children have learned.
The Camp Director is Forest Miller, a student at Ft. Lewis College
in Durango. Forest is a member of the Fort Lewis College downhill
team. He and his brother Skyler race on the Mountain Cup Circuit,
the local mountain bike race series in Colorado. Wade and Cody
Wilderman and Totally Wired Cyclery in Fraser are also sponsors.
The Camp Manager is Andrew Miller, a qualified and experienced
Colorado elementary teacher, manager and owner of the High Lonesome
Hut, and a licensed Colorado Large Child Care Center Director.
Camp insurance is with USA Cycling, participants must register
as NORBA members (registration packets available through the
camp, fees are minimal).
2008 Huck Forest Bike Camp Schedule
Weekend Camps, Friday- Sunday
July 18- July 20
July 25- July 27
August 15- August 17
Campers will meet Friday at 1:00 p.m. at the
High Lonesome Hut trailhead. Please make sure as a camp participant
you have had lunch before you come to the trailhead. Snacks and
water will be provided when we reach the bike park. Camper's
gear will be loaded into the truck and taken to the bike park.
The group will then ride in to the bike park on a 2.5 mile jeep
road. This is not a very challenging ride and we will take our
time. Parents are welcome to join us on the ride. We will spend
Friday afternoon looking at the features, learning a few basic
skills, and of course, riding. After a brief visit, parents will
leave the children to enjoy the camp on their own. After the
group is done riding we will ride the remaining .25 miles to
the High Lonesome Hut were the group will stay. Dinner will be
served at the hut and we will spend the evening outside around
the campfire. Breakfast will be served Saturday at the hut. We
will then ride up to the bike park were we will spend all day
riding, and learning the fundamentals of mountain biking. Lunch
will be served at the park. That evening we will ride back down
to the hut were dinner will be served. Breakfast will be served
on Sunday morning, and the campers will pack up there gear and
load it into the truck. We will then ride back to the bike park
to the final morning of riding. Parents are welcome to ride into
the bike park and meet us at noon to see some what their kids
are doing. We will depart the park at 1:00 and meet at the trailhead
at 2:00 for camper pick-up.
Ages:
8-16
Cost:
Weekend camps- $300.00 per person
Staff:
Director, Andrew Miller Certified
large child care center director, State of Colorado. B.A. in
Elementary Education, former teacher of all elementary grades
except fifth. Professional Contractor. Founder, designer and
builder of the High Lonesome Hut.
Technical Skills Instructor and Equipment Manager Wade
Wilderman, owner, Totally Wired Cyclery, competitor Mountain
States Cup, age division winner.
Instructors Forest Miller mountain states cup compertitor,
student Fort Lewis College, designer and builder, Huck Forest
Bike Courses. Cody Wilderman, Pro gravity competitor in the mountain
states cup and Team Totally Wired rider. Also a designer and
builder of the bike park.
Camp Safety Director A First Responder certified first
aid professional will be added to the staff before the camp begins.
Other instructors may be added depending on registration numbers.
Staff, student ratios will be at least one to four.
Camp Gear list
-Light weight sleeping bag, the cabin is warm. A set of twin
sheets is ok if you don't have a bag
-Pillow
-toothbrush and toothpaste
-Water bottles will provided
-Sneakers (in good shape, no riding in sandals), extra pair if
possible
-Bike Helmet-
A full-face helmet is recommended, but it is not required. An
open shell bike helmet will work. If you have both types of helmets,
bring both. It is recommended that the camper has a cross-country
helmet for the ride in. A full-face helmet can be unpleasant
to wear pedaling up hills.
-Knee Pads/elbow pads are also recommended but not required.
-Bike gloves
-Rain gear
-Sun screen
-Spare clothes- enough for 3 or 4 days
-sunglasses
-Long pants (jeans recommended)
-Shorts
Food
Will be plentiful. Please let us know if your child is a
vegetarian or if (s)he has any special dietary needs.
Bike info
Mountain X style bikes are recommended for the camp. If you
do not have a mountain bike, they can be rented from the Totally
Wired Cyclery in Fraser. It is required that you take you bike
in for a tune up at any bike shop before the camp. Totally Wired
can tune you bike and make sure it is in good running order before
the camp. The more time spent on fixing the camper's, the less
time he/she will be riding.
Safety
The camps will have medical personnel
of wilderness responder or similar certification at all of the
camps. If the camp participant is hurt and is unable to ride
his/her bike, the camper's parent/ legal guardian will be notified
and REQUIRED to pick up the participant. Riders are always
told to stay within their limits and it is the instructors and
the participant's decision to move to more challenging features.
This sport does come with inherent risks as do all sports.
Adult camps
If you are an adult and interested
in riding at the park you have several options:
1. Ride at the bike park for one or multiple
days with instruction or without instruction
2. Stay at the High Lonesome Hut (.25 miles from the bike park)
and ride at the bike park with or without instruction.
Camp personnel will be present during the
days that you will be riding with or without instruction.
Pricing for adults:
Flat fee of 120.00 per day for use of bike park. (up to 4 people)
-Each additional person- $20.00
- Instruction for the group $10.00 per person
Reservations for adult camps must be reserved seven weeks prior
to the date(s) requested for insurance purposes.
High Lonesome Hut pricing
-$200.00 whole cabin (it is required
that you rent the whole cabin on Friday, Saturday, and Sunday
nights.
-$20.00 per person on weekday nights
Girls Camp
Stay tuned for more info, still working
out logistics.
Sign up info
To register call (970)-726-4099 or send an e-mail to fdmiller@fortlewis.edu
Contact info
For High Lonesome Hut info- lonesome-hut@lonesome-hut.com
For Bike Park and camp Info- fdmiller@fortlewis.edu
More info and pictures at http://www.leelikesbikes.com/a-private-riding-paradise.html
Please call us if you have any questions. A staff member will
be coming out from camp at least once to get supplies, and will
check the answering machine at 970-726-4099 if you have any messages
or if there is an emergency. Cell phone reception at the hut
is not possible, but is pretty good up at the bike park. Be persistent
and call during the day, 970-531-0674.
Philosophical Statement- The greatest danger modern children
face is boredom. Lack of direction and commitment leads many
young people to make poor decisions. Auto accidents, drug use
and alcohol abuse takes or destroys the lives of many of our
children. "Extreme" sports, such as snowboarding, skiing,
rock climbing and downhill mountain biking provide the thrills
which attract youthful exuberance. Learning these skills and
taking them to competitions (such as downhill mountain biking's
Mountain States Cup) helps our children focus. Focus helps them
recognize the futility and danger of substance abuse. The well
defined risks of extreme sports replace the chaotic nature of
children making poor decisions about their life's direction.
The risks of extreme sports can be alleviated in many ways through
proper equipment and skill development. The risks of self-abusive
behavior are beyond the control of adults.
It is the goal of the Huck Forest Bike Camp to teach skills in
a well reasoned, progressive fashion designed to build advanced
skills on a broad foundation of fundamentals. Students will not
be pushed beyond their comfort level. Enjoyment and fun will
be the basis of all Camp activities.
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