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Take the first STEP! Get ready to experience Colorado’s wild frontier, rich with dense pine forests, rocky outcrops, and stream crossings, that will excite your curiosity and challenge your endurance on this thrilling wilderness adventure where nature becomes your greatest mentor. STEP (Survival Training Expedition Program) is a guided wilderness skills hike designed for outdoor enthusiasts seeking immersive survival training on the move while carrying minimal food and supplies, or the essential gear in a hiker’s day pack. Over the course of four days, you will witness an untouched landscape armed with little tools to deepen your connection with both the natural world and your lionheart within. Students will complete multiple phases with the last being an evening solo where they will implement the skills they’ve developed.
Day hikers are statistically more likely to confront danger in the wild due to their lack of knowledge, skill, and gear. This excursion is designed to be a ‘path to preparedness’ as you will learn crucial techniques such as fire-building, disinfecting water, foraging for edible plants, primitive food procurement methods, creating improvised shelters, navigating without a GPS, on top of several exercises to enhance your survival mindset while under the guidance of experienced instructors. Opportunities to learn and grow in resilience while tasting and testing your self-reliance will leave participants filled with courage to take their first step in future backcountry adventures. Participants will test their creativity in how to utilize environmental resources on top of the items they’ll depend on - a cutting edge, poncho, water container, and fire-starting tool. Each phase of the journey presents new challenges that will foster personal growth that will unlock your potential on your personal hero’s journey.
Phase 1 of the course begins on Day 1 where kits will be inspected, safety precautions will be thoroughly discussed, and an introduction to critical skills such as self-aid, fire, shelter, and water will be presented. Students are not required to stay on site on this night but are highly encouraged to do so to promote social bonds as we prepare to travel together in the remote wilderness.
The following day will begin Phase 2 where we will embark on the expedition off the grid and dive into valleys and through gulches to gather materials from the forest floor for the evening’s fire. This phase emphasizes practical, hands-on learning, encouraging participants to engage fully with the environment while developing confidence in their abilities. Students will learn primitive trapping and fishing methods, friction fire off the landscape, how to read weather patterns, navigate via terrain association, and how to conquer both environmental and personal challenges. Whether you're seeking to prepare for the unexpected, challenge your skills in a remote setting, grow as an outdoor enthusiast, or simply embrace the simplicity of life on the trail, this immersive experience promises to leave you with invaluable survival training and unforgettable memories. By the end of the journey, you’ll walk away with an enhanced confidence, practical skills, a new appreciation for the natural world—and an ability to overcome that will continue to grow and inspire others.
Participation in the expedition phase requires full commitment. Once the journey begins, quitting at any point is not an option, as it impacts the safety, learning, and cohesion of the group. This phase is designed to challenge you and foster growth through resilience and teamwork. While it may push you outside your comfort zone, instructors will support you throughout, ensuring your safety and success.
Consider this commitment carefully before joining—once on the trail, perseverance is key to completing this transformative experience.
The final phase, Phase 3, will begin the afternoon of Day 4 and involves preparation for an individual evening alone. Students will complete the final leg of the expedition and gather materials needed for food and fire before scouting their desired location for a night in solitude. The following morning we will gather in community and discuss our challenges and triumphs of the previous evening and the prior days. This final phase will complete the program leaving students ready to take the first STEP in future wilderness adventures.
Basecamp Essentials is a course that is designed to promote a sense of wilderness living with others and beyond our basic needs of survival. Students will learn how to build varying means of comfort entirely off the landscape including benches, chairs, and beds. As a class, we will learn how to build instruments such as mallets, sawhorses, and vices and how they can aid in processing fuel and other materials. Other topics will include plant and tree identification, firecraft, cutting tool safety, food procurement and preservation, camp maintenance, simple pioneering as well as several different knots, notches and lashings on top of some handcrafted projects at the end of the course. Students will walk away with the knowledge of how to construct a basecamp to share in a community or as individuals in the wild.
Course Project Examples: Creating grass mats with a woodland loom, vices, sawbuck, bucksaw, mallet, dakota fire, tripod smoker, ground refrigerator, brooms, rakes, chairs, spatula, spoon, benches, rope beds, ladders, wash area, utilizing wood ash for hygiene, making a torch from Pine Tar
Embrace the power of nature and the beauty of sisterhood on this transformative women’s retreat set along a serene river in the majestic mountains of Colorado. Over the course of this immersive experience, we will explore the elements of fire, water, and earth, learning essential wilderness skills while reconnecting with our hearts and intuition. Through hands-on activities and shared moments, you’ll cultivate confidence in outdoor survival, deepen your connection to nature, and nurture your inner strength.
This retreat offers a harmonious blend of practical skills and heart-opening techniques. Learn fire-making, shelter-building, and other bushcraft essentials while embracing grounding practices inspired by the natural elements. Awaken your senses and enhance your intuition, a vital skill for navigating both the wild and the complexities of modern life. Together, we’ll celebrate the joy of sisterhood as we gather around the campfire, share stories, and laugh beneath the starlit skies.
Set against the breathtaking backdrop of Colorado’s rugged mountains and flowing rivers, this retreat is more than skills training—it’s a journey into aliveness, connection, and renewal. Whether you’re a seasoned adventurer or new to wilderness exploration, this experience invites you to step into your power, deepen your relationship with the natural world, and design a life grounded in joy and resilience.
This class is led by Jacks Genega and Jessica Caldwell and is hosted by The Survival University in Cripple Creek, Colorado.
Ethnobotany 101 is a course designed to encourage participants to develop a deeper understanding of plantlore and the resources available to them in the fields of bushcraft, survival, homesteading, and more. This class is catered towards students from all skill levels and no experience is required. Students will grow a sense of how to harvest various materials from their woodland environment for numerous means. Each day participants will learn to positively identify a handful of plants and trees and build on that knowledge with hands-on experience in preparing medicine or food, as well as fire or craft such as cordage and containers from the individual plants they identify. Students will walk away with a couple of handcrafted projects and a deeper understanding of the forest in how certain plants and trees cater toward a particular medicine, craft or skill over others.
Projects may include burn bowls, shrinkpot containers, and basketry amongst salves and tinctures from plant materials we will learn how to identify and ethically harvest.