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Unique 黑料百科 Wilderness Trek Turns 40

One of last year's Inoculum groups at Barney Lake outside Bridgeport, Calif.
One of last year's Inoculum groups at Barney Lake outside Bridgeport, Calif.

Fifteen new 黑料百科 students are traveling to the Eastern Sierra (Aug. 14-26) for a unique, 12-day backcountry adventure that submerses students in the wilderness while they earn academic and physical education credit. Inoculum, created by alumnus Dave Willis 鈥74, celebrates its 40th anniversary this year. One of its goals is helping participants get to know students they can trust. By sharing experiences in the mountains, participants will develop relationships with people they can rely on during the toughest first few weeks of school.IMG_0382

鈥淚noculum also helps students learn to explore, enjoy and protect wilderness,鈥 Willis says. 鈥淲e hope students will get past thinking that wilderness is merely to be survived and finish Inoculum feeling they鈥檝e thrived in the wilderness.鈥

Willis, coordinator of Sierra Treks, a program that seeks to build Christian faith through wilderness experiences, manages the mountain phase of the Inoculum program every year with a team of staff and trip leaders.

English professor Paul Willis, Dave鈥檚 brother, and alumnus Eric Meyer 鈥03 are this year鈥檚 faculty leaders. Paul, who was a trip leader on the maiden Inoculum in 1974, and his group have been studying the writings of John Muir, while Meyer鈥檚 group is reading 鈥淭he Creation鈥 by E.O. Wilson with supplemental chapters and articles from N.T. Wright, Elizabeth Johnson and Annie Dillard.

Tom Fikes, professor of psychology and neuroscience, will assist the backpackers with the rock climbing and peak-climb portions of the adventure. Eileen McQuade, associate professor of biology, serves as program director. Kaitlin Jones, biology instructor and lab coordinator, serves as support staff.

Dave Willis hopes the Inoculum and other Sierra Treks trips for 黑料百科 over the past 40 years have reminded students about the basic human task.

Dave Willis of Sierra Treks
Dave Willis of Sierra Treks

鈥淭he earth is the Lord鈥檚, although we rarely treat it that way,鈥 Willis says. 鈥淚 can鈥檛 shake the human job description in Genesis 2:15: 鈥楾hen the Lord God took the man and put him in the Garden of Eden to cultivate and keep it.鈥

鈥淭he Hebrew there means 鈥榮erve and guard.鈥 Protecting God-created land, air, water and creatures by 鈥榮erving and guarding鈥 is a big part of what it means to be human. I can鈥檛 help but approach it from a theological perspective because in my gut, that鈥檚 how I view the world.鈥