Connecting Alumni to Students: (PC36) Makyla's Blog
December 2009

Project Week
Ahhh Project Weeks…the indecision about where to go, who to go with, the planning, the shelling out of funds, realizing the night before that you are leaving the next morning at 7am and have yet to start packing…
For my first Project Week, I wanted something challenging that I had never done before. Something outdoors so I could finally get started on my dreams of backpacking through the rainforests or climbing mountains. Second years were giving advice on how to choose a project everywhere I turned. Who you go with is just as important as what you do, make sure it includes some time to relax, go with people you don’t know very well but want to get to know more, do something you really want to do, etc. If I were to give someone advice now I would say: don’t try to do too much. And do not, on any account, let four members of the male species who have no experience in such matters plan the food.
After much debate (well not really, I thought I had decided on a project but when I heard about this one I immediately jumped on board), I decided to join a project that involved sailing and hiking. In one week. Uh huh. We thought we could do it. Oh how mistaken our pre-project week naïve selves were. There were eight of us in total who went sailing, four per boat. That was quite the experience as my only sailing experience consisted of “sailing” (read: motoring due to lack of wind) to Victoria to practice. And then all of a sudden I found myself on a boat for four days with no choice but to jump right in (not literally of course, October and the Pacific do not mix well) and learn as fast as I could. I was quite proud of myself and how much my sailing skills increased. I’m no skipper by any means, but I do (usually) know what to do and how to do it when told by the-one-who-knows-all, in my case an Egyptian second year.
After sailing, freezing, exploring Sidney Island and Sidney itself and seeing some of the most beautiful landscapes and sunsets I have ever seen, we returned to Pearson to prepare for Phase 2 of our epic project week, hiking the West Coast Trail. Let’s just say that Phase 2 did not go entirely as planned. It started when myself and another member of the group were dropped off at the wrong entry point onto the trail. What ensued after involved many hours spent hiking a very short but difficult section of the trail hoping to meet up with the rest of our group, before experiencing that horrible sensation many hikers have felt when their trail disappears and they find themselves in the middle of the West Coast rainforest, lost and surrounded by warning signs about bears. That was when we decided to turn back. Luckily we found the rest of our group eventually, but by then it was impossible to finish the hike so we had to call for rescue and ended our week in Victoria.
In the end, I did accomplish everything I had wanted. I did something I had never done before and in the process learned a new skill, I challenged myself, and I relaxed and enjoyed the comforts of a real bed in my friend’s aunt’s home. And of course, I left that first Project Week with some solid new friends. In the end, it’s all about the balance.
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