A flash of lightning, a torrent of flame; the cabin was on fire. In the aftermath of a disaster, Big City Mountaineers is determined to rebuild.
A massive thunderclap shook the rural town of Tower, Minn. It was an exclamation point to a June storm that signaled summer had arrived. To many, it would have been a momentary shock lost to the fading rumble of distant thunder.
But in that moment, an entire season changed. Scores of boys and girls lost a home away from home. And a life’s work, meant to carry on through generations, burned to the ground.
Big City Mountaineers‘ Minnesota basecamp of one year, a two-bedroom cabin and bunkhouse set on 120 acres along the southern tip of the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, succumbed to fire following a lightning strike. The cabin was built by hand in 1978.
Now, after a summer spent rescheduling and planning, BCM prepares to rebuild.
Big City Mountaineers Bunkhouse
Big City Mountaineers is a not-for-profit that “transforms the lives of under-served youth through wilderness mentoring expeditions that instill critical life skills,” according to its mission. It serves about 1,000 youth annually.
Prior to last year, BCM paid handsomely each year to rent out a base of operations for its BWCAW expeditions. The property and structures, donated to the group by a family as a retreat for city kids to get outside, meant the non-profit was free and clear of a “tremendous” expense.