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The Wilderness Trails History
Wilderness
Trails motto is 'Reaching out with God's love to youth'
in Southern Oregon through camping and other outdoor adventures.
It all began in 1967 by a Southern Oregon minister named Earl Best
who had a heart for children in difficult situations and who may
have never experienced the love of Christ. What better place to
show and experience God's awesomeness than through his creation?
The children that come to Wilderness Trails are referred through
the Oregon Department of Human Service Child Welfare Department,
Juvenile Department, and other private agencies.
The first camps were backpacking trips into the wilderness. But
as the program grew, there was a need to have a home base campsite
for younger campers. In 1972 this dream became a really when volunteers
and supporters raised $42,500. Under the leadership of Jack Smith
they were able to purchase 160 acres off of Dead Indian Memorial
Road east of Ashland Wilderness Trails' current home.
During that same year volunteers built a teepee village and the
first cabin on the property an A-frame house that has been dedicated
to a friend and longtime Wilderness Trails supporter, Ken Mainwaring.
It was used to house campers during winter camps and has recently
been
remodeled and updated. A few years later a second, larger cabin
was built so that Wilderness Trails could serve more children and
staff. And in 1976, a home was built for the property's caretakers.
Teepees, cabins, bigger cabins, acres of land
to explore, what more could a camp like Wilderness Trails want or
need for its young visitors? Any kid would tell you a swimming
hole! So in 1982, with
the help of friends from the John Knox Presbyterian church, a spillway
was built giving Wilderness Trails a swimming and boating pond.
It's the main attraction for many camps today.
In 1999 after a very large fundraising campaign
lead by Chris Smith, Wilderness Trails' current Executive Director,
a beautiful 4,000-square-foot lodge was completed. Many of the camp's
follow-up retreats are hosted at this facility. It sleeps up to
36 people and has a full-service kitchen. Some
of the kids who attended summer camp are invited back during the
winter months for a retreat at the lodge where a nearby sled hill
and warming shed are often the main weekend attraction.
Today summer campers still enjoy the outdoors
in the primitive setting with no electricity. They stay in teepees
and cook their own meals as a team.
Decades
of volunteers and supporters have helped make Wilderness Trails
the topnotch camp that it is today. Thousands of kids have been
impacted for Christ through this ministry. Although Wilderness Trails
depends on private donors, receiving no government funding, it continues
to offer programs to youth free of charge.
Wilderness Trails has served youth in Southern
Oregon since 1967 and though it has survived some physical and personnel
changes, one thing that remains the same is its focus in sharing
the exciting, life-changing message of Jesus Christ to kids who
need to hear about and experience His love.
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Camper's
Corner
Dear Wilderness Trails,
I had such a great time at camp two weeks ago.
I've decided it's the best camping experience I've ever had. I rode a horse for the first time. His name was Billy. I also really like hanging out at night around the campfire.
Love, Mandy
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