COURSE OVERVIEW

Course Number

HWM2-2523

Date

August 07, 2025 - August 13, 2025

A back-country experience at HIOBS' Burnt Island basecamp - a spectacular and remote 265-acre island located 4 nautical miles off the coast. Burnt Island is an ideal setting for a rewarding shared experience that promotes personal and collective belonging, teamwork, and reflection. 

Students will bring all gear and food to the island and sleep in tents. Instructors will guide students through the basics of remote camp living, turning over responsibility to students as the course progresses. Throughout the days, students and instructors use the island as a base for activities like sailing and rowing in a 30' open pulling boat, including spending a night or two on the pulling boat; rock climbing and rappelling a sea-cliff rising out of the ocean; hikes around the island; service work; and other outdoor activities. This way of living and working closely together will challenge students to hone leadership skills, collaborate, communicate, solve problems, and resolve conflicts while helpings students to feel a sense of belonging.

Course Skills

Group Dynamics

  • Leadership and decision making
  • Followership and expedition behavior
  • Communication and Conflict Resolution
  • Individual and group goal setting
  • Independence and Interdependence
  • Community Building and Empathy

Rock Climbing (dependent on various factors)

  • Belaying and rope handling 
  • System safety
  • Climbing technique 
  • Rappelling

Open Boat Sailing Skills

  • Boat handling skills, sailing and seamanship  
  • Live aboard skills
  • Tides, currents, and weather forecasting 
  • Anchoring 
  • Marlinespike seamanship

Island Camping Skills

  • Emergency preparedness
  • Safety management and basic first aid
  • Campsite selection & Route finding
  • Shelter construction
  • Outdoor cooking
  • Conservation practices
  • Ropes and knots
  • Stove use and maintenance
  • Leave No Trace wilderness ethics
  • Nutrition and ration planning
  • Navigation using map/chart & compass
Course Area

Your course is based on Burnt Island, a 265-acre, private island 4 miles from shore along the coast of Maine. With an intricate shoreline, the Maine coast is a unique segment of the North Atlantic seaboard. It is renowned among sailors for its picturesque beauty, iconic lighthouses, abundant bays and harbors, rocky islands, and quiet coves. Our potential cruising area covers nearly 200 miles of the Maine coast, with countless rivers, bays, and islands to explore. The rocky, spruce-covered islands are the summits of a prehistoric mountain range. Many generations of inhabitants have made their livelihoods here. Evidence left behind on the islands reveals the historic presence of indigenous Abenaki camps, pre-colonial fishing communities, post-colonial timber and farming operations, and early 20th-century granite quarries. Cold, nutrient-rich waters flow from the Canadian Maritimes and make the Gulf of Maine home to a wide range of sea birds, seals, porpoises, and whales.

Course Progression

The essential goal of any Outward Bound course is for the students to learn autonomy. Our expedition curriculum supports this happening in a progressive way.

During the first third of a course (a phase called “training expedition”), the instructors are very present in the group. They teach outdoor skills, the technical aspects of the activities and guide the students as they form a team.

In the middle third of the course (what we call the “main expedition”), the instructors take a step back so students may step forward. Students begin to teach what they’ve already learned to each other, and experiment with applying basic skills to bigger challenges. The instructors continue to coach and support as the students practice leadership roles. When the group meets a particular situation, environment or activity they haven’t learned about before, the instructors jump back in and teach. Each time this happens, the group reaches competency more quickly.

By the last third of the course (the “final expedition”), students are the stars of the show. They are applying what they know, leading each other, setting goals, and solving problems collaboratively. The instructors are close by and ready to step back in to prevent a safety issue from occurring but will let students find their own resiliency when they make mistakes, and ensure they feel the full spotlight of success when they meet their goals.

Course Activities
Rock Climbing

During your course you may have the opportunity to do some rock climbing on one of this area’s many granite cliffs or on our ropes course at the Outward Bound basecamp. You will learn to use climbing equipment, tie knots, climb and belay each other, while instructors provide overall supervision of the site. Climbing gives you a chance to practice your balance, coordination, and flexibility as well as the group’s ability to trust and encourage each other.

It is important to keep in mind that being able to climb is dependent on a variety of factors such as weather, course route/length, and staffing availability. We intend to have this be an element of your course, but it is not guaranteed. 

Solo

The solo experience is a standard element of Outward Bound courses. With sufficient food and equipment, you will set up camp at a site on your own. The solo will last anywhere from a few hours to a few days, depending on the length of your course. Your solo site is chosen to offer as much solitude as possible, yet be within hearing distance of other group members. You will not travel during this time alone, and your instructors will check on you occasionally. The solitude and break from the fast pace of your expedition allows for rest and personal reflection, which is necessary to make the most of your experience.

Service

Service projects are often incorporated into Outward Bound courses through coordination with local land managers, conservation groups, government agencies or social service agencies. While in the wilderness, students are encouraged to practice service to the environment and their team by sharing responsibilities and following Recreate Responsibly ethics throughout the expedition.

Personal Challenge Event 

Our courses end with a Personal Challenge Event, an individual final physical push. These events typically take the form of a running and/or swimming activity, though may include another element that you learned during your course.  This event is a chance to finish your Outward Bound Experience with a true personal challenge where you can own all of your decisions and efforts in contrast to the time you have spent operating within an expedition team.

Sailing

You will spend time aboard our 30-foot open sailboat. These seaworthy boats are sailed and rowed, depending on weather and destination. Underway, you will learn to set your sails properly for sailing at different angles to the wind and to anticipate and respond to changes in weather and navigation needs. As you practice rowing, two to six of you at one time, you will discover that by coordinating all rowers’ movements so that the oars work as one, you halve the effort it takes to travel on windless days.

For the one or two nights spent sleeping on the pulling boat, the deck will be configured as a sleeping platform. Through the night you and your watch mates will take turns at anchor watch under brilliant night skies.

Program Outcomes

On your HIOBS program, you will learn four important Outward Bound Core Values:

  • Compassion
  • Integrity
  • Excellence
  • Inclusion and Diversity

Some of the most important lessons you take home are learning about yourself and your community while acquiring backcountry skills and having an adventure. As you will be traveling through wild places on your expedition, you’ll also learn to protect and appreciate the unique, unspoiled environments through which you travel.

Middle School Courses 

Our courses for 13- to 14-year-olds are designed to introduce young teens to Outward Bound. Supportive instructors teach the skills of wilderness travel, and guide the formation of the group into an expedition team. As the students’ abilities grow, the instructors intentionally and progressively challenge them to take on more responsibilities, try out more leadership roles, and develop a heightened sense of self and purpose. Under the close supervision of caring instructors, students are permitted to share ideas, experiment, triumph…and sometimes fail. While safety is conscientiously maintained, students may feel moments of frustration, disappointment, cold, wet and tired. At such times, we coach young teens to review their choices, weigh the results, decide what changes to make, and try again. We find this teaches decision making, responsibility and resiliency, and ensures that the group knows that all successes are truly theirs! Students return readier to fully participate and positively engage at home, at school, on teams, and in their communities.

You need to be physically fit, and motivated to live, learn and work together within your expedition team. You will need to be ready to work and live with crew mates with different views and values from all different parts of the country and world. No previous wilderness travel or camping experience is necessary—all travel and leadership skills are taught from the beginning, and each day of the expedition builds on the previous one.