Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Carleton. The Cowling Arboretum, Lyman Lakes, and Cannon River are on campus (or run through campus) and make for great hiking, biking, running, and kayaking. In the winter there’s cross country skiing (and downhill skiing at an artificial slope 20 min away) in the Arb and skating on the Bald Spot. Lots of natural beauty!
Hiking in Minnesota is an absolute joke. The coasts are where this student needs to go.
Spoken like someone who has never been. There’s 15 miles of trails on Carleton’s campus, starting about a 1 min walk from the nearest dorm, almost all of which are out of sight of roads. Few if any of the schools you are thinking of can say the same. You have a narrow view of hiking and a the outdoors.
Would you like to elaborate on what schools I’m “thinking of?” Hiking isn’t just walking on flat trails either, and a student whose really outdoorsy would be bored out of their mind in Northfield.
Can’t say I know of others with 15 miles of trails starting at a dorm, but I’m willing to believe some might exist! But it would seem to me the burden of proof falls on those claiming MN has a poor outdoors scene. In fact the below ranking puts it well above average and ahead of all the NE states except Maine. That’s before adding the benefit of a college campus with its own arboretum, lakes, and river access.
https://www.culturalcurrents.institute/insights/best-states-for-nature-lovers
Being a nature lover and being a rock climber are...not the same thing. There is overlap, but they're not the same. DP
I haven’t seen a claim to the contrary. The thread is titled “outdoorsy liberal arts colleges.” There’s quite a bit to outdoorsy life beyond rock climbing. That would certainly involve a road trip if starting from Northfield.
Did you read the OP or just the title?
Sure did. That’s why I pointed out kayaking and not rock climbing as being available right on campus (unless you consider the indoor wall in the rec center!). There’s a lot of space between “Carleton has everything an outdoors lover could ever want right on campus” (which I never said) and “the coasts are where this student needs to go” (which someone else actually did say); unsurprisingly, reality is somewhere in between the extreme statement that wasn’t made and the extreme one that was. OP’s description of their kid sounded like our own, and they loved their time in Minnesota as many other avid outdoorsy types do. That seems more relevant to the thread than people who have never been blathering about how boring their narrowly imagined version of life there is. I think OP’s kid might like it there and a number of other places too. Ok?
Good post. (And there is rock climbing in southern Minnesota for those that want it.)
Where is there rock climbing that’s accessible from Northfield? I guess you’re counting indoor gyms in the Twin cities?
DP. Red Wing is about a 45 min drive from Northfield.
https://www.mountainproject.com/area/105812663/red-wing-aka-he-mni-can-barn-bluff
PP was arguing that the outdoors needs to be right at your door, not a “road trip” away.
Re-read. The claim trails and lakes are on campus, but real rock climbing was a road trip. But it’s typical after all the claims there’s no rock climbing in southern Minnesota you would move the goal posts when hearing it’s less than an hour away!
Why are you derangedly screeching for Carleton? It’s in the plains, and the rock climbing there is so-so, not that great for an outdoorsy student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Carleton. The Cowling Arboretum, Lyman Lakes, and Cannon River are on campus (or run through campus) and make for great hiking, biking, running, and kayaking. In the winter there’s cross country skiing (and downhill skiing at an artificial slope 20 min away) in the Arb and skating on the Bald Spot. Lots of natural beauty!
Hiking in Minnesota is an absolute joke. The coasts are where this student needs to go.
Spoken like someone who has never been. There’s 15 miles of trails on Carleton’s campus, starting about a 1 min walk from the nearest dorm, almost all of which are out of sight of roads. Few if any of the schools you are thinking of can say the same. You have a narrow view of hiking and a the outdoors.
Would you like to elaborate on what schools I’m “thinking of?” Hiking isn’t just walking on flat trails either, and a student whose really outdoorsy would be bored out of their mind in Northfield.
Can’t say I know of others with 15 miles of trails starting at a dorm, but I’m willing to believe some might exist! But it would seem to me the burden of proof falls on those claiming MN has a poor outdoors scene. In fact the below ranking puts it well above average and ahead of all the NE states except Maine. That’s before adding the benefit of a college campus with its own arboretum, lakes, and river access.
https://www.culturalcurrents.institute/insights/best-states-for-nature-lovers
Being a nature lover and being a rock climber are...not the same thing. There is overlap, but they're not the same. DP
I haven’t seen a claim to the contrary. The thread is titled “outdoorsy liberal arts colleges.” There’s quite a bit to outdoorsy life beyond rock climbing. That would certainly involve a road trip if starting from Northfield.
Did you read the OP or just the title?
Sure did. That’s why I pointed out kayaking and not rock climbing as being available right on campus (unless you consider the indoor wall in the rec center!). There’s a lot of space between “Carleton has everything an outdoors lover could ever want right on campus” (which I never said) and “the coasts are where this student needs to go” (which someone else actually did say); unsurprisingly, reality is somewhere in between the extreme statement that wasn’t made and the extreme one that was. OP’s description of their kid sounded like our own, and they loved their time in Minnesota as many other avid outdoorsy types do. That seems more relevant to the thread than people who have never been blathering about how boring their narrowly imagined version of life there is. I think OP’s kid might like it there and a number of other places too. Ok?
Good post. (And there is rock climbing in southern Minnesota for those that want it.)
Where is there rock climbing that’s accessible from Northfield? I guess you’re counting indoor gyms in the Twin cities?
DP. Red Wing is about a 45 min drive from Northfield.
https://www.mountainproject.com/area/105812663/red-wing-aka-he-mni-can-barn-bluff
PP was arguing that the outdoors needs to be right at your door, not a “road trip” away.
Re-read. The claim trails and lakes are on campus, but real rock climbing was a road trip. But it’s typical after all the claims there’s no rock climbing in southern Minnesota you would move the goal posts when hearing it’s less than an hour away!
Why are you derangedly screeching for Carleton? It’s in the plains, and the rock climbing there is so-so, not that great for an outdoorsy student.
Screeching? This is one of the few posters who is balanced and calm here. You can practically feel the spittle from the "But it's the plains!" "There's no rock climbing there!" people. One gentle post about Carleton and the snarling snots come out of the woodwork. Give it a rest, boys.
And to the people who keep asking where there is rock climbing, I'm not going to tell you because if you cared, you'd look it up. And Red Wing isn't the only place.
Anonymous wrote:In general I would head west.
UC Santa Cruz has very nearby rock climbing and a very outdoorsy campus. They run an active rock climbing club, and the nearby mountains are filled with good climbs.
UC Davis has a very active kayak/river rafting club that has open kayak sessions in the campus pool every Wednesday and runs the nearby rivers. Kids who get involved with their programs often get part time jobs as river guides on the American River (see link below). Look up the UCD “Outdoor Adventures” Instagram account for more info. The river rafting and kayaking there is very well established and the rivers runs are some of the best in the country.
https://campusrecreation.ucdavis.edu/events/become-whitewater-rafting-guide
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Always LAC parents that are the most toxic and screaming at each other. I agree with PP on UVM, stay away from the Carleton crowd is all I’ve learned from this thread
Idk, as someone with no ties to LACs, the people who come across by far the worse are the LAC haters. Admittedly they always sound crazy in DCUM.
Anonymous wrote:Always LAC parents that are the most toxic and screaming at each other. I agree with PP on UVM, stay away from the Carleton crowd is all I’ve learned from this thread
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Carleton. The Cowling Arboretum, Lyman Lakes, and Cannon River are on campus (or run through campus) and make for great hiking, biking, running, and kayaking. In the winter there’s cross country skiing (and downhill skiing at an artificial slope 20 min away) in the Arb and skating on the Bald Spot. Lots of natural beauty!
Hiking in Minnesota is an absolute joke. The coasts are where this student needs to go.
Spoken like someone who has never been. There’s 15 miles of trails on Carleton’s campus, starting about a 1 min walk from the nearest dorm, almost all of which are out of sight of roads. Few if any of the schools you are thinking of can say the same. You have a narrow view of hiking and a the outdoors.
Would you like to elaborate on what schools I’m “thinking of?” Hiking isn’t just walking on flat trails either, and a student whose really outdoorsy would be bored out of their mind in Northfield.
Can’t say I know of others with 15 miles of trails starting at a dorm, but I’m willing to believe some might exist! But it would seem to me the burden of proof falls on those claiming MN has a poor outdoors scene. In fact the below ranking puts it well above average and ahead of all the NE states except Maine. That’s before adding the benefit of a college campus with its own arboretum, lakes, and river access.
https://www.culturalcurrents.institute/insights/best-states-for-nature-lovers
Being a nature lover and being a rock climber are...not the same thing. There is overlap, but they're not the same. DP
I haven’t seen a claim to the contrary. The thread is titled “outdoorsy liberal arts colleges.” There’s quite a bit to outdoorsy life beyond rock climbing. That would certainly involve a road trip if starting from Northfield.
Did you read the OP or just the title?
Sure did. That’s why I pointed out kayaking and not rock climbing as being available right on campus (unless you consider the indoor wall in the rec center!). There’s a lot of space between “Carleton has everything an outdoors lover could ever want right on campus” (which I never said) and “the coasts are where this student needs to go” (which someone else actually did say); unsurprisingly, reality is somewhere in between the extreme statement that wasn’t made and the extreme one that was. OP’s description of their kid sounded like our own, and they loved their time in Minnesota as many other avid outdoorsy types do. That seems more relevant to the thread than people who have never been blathering about how boring their narrowly imagined version of life there is. I think OP’s kid might like it there and a number of other places too. Ok?
Good post. (And there is rock climbing in southern Minnesota for those that want it.)
Where is there rock climbing that’s accessible from Northfield? I guess you’re counting indoor gyms in the Twin cities?
DP. Red Wing is about a 45 min drive from Northfield.
https://www.mountainproject.com/area/105812663/red-wing-aka-he-mni-can-barn-bluff
PP was arguing that the outdoors needs to be right at your door, not a “road trip” away.
Re-read. The claim trails and lakes are on campus, but real rock climbing was a road trip. But it’s typical after all the claims there’s no rock climbing in southern Minnesota you would move the goal posts when hearing it’s less than an hour away!
Why are you derangedly screeching for Carleton? It’s in the plains, and the rock climbing there is so-so, not that great for an outdoorsy student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVM is very outdoorsy, but unlike most outdoorsy LACS it doesn't have a preppy or bro vibe. Highly recommend, if that description sounds good.
No LAC suggested has either vibe, so this is an unnecessary suggestion.
your post is the definition of an unnecessary post
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:UVM is very outdoorsy, but unlike most outdoorsy LACS it doesn't have a preppy or bro vibe. Highly recommend, if that description sounds good.
No LAC suggested has either vibe, so this is an unnecessary suggestion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beginning to think about a college list for my sophomore son, who loves kayaking and rock climbing but doesn't like traditional sports (either as a participant or spectator) and probably won't be interested in Greek life. He will likely want to major in some sort of quantitative social science. At this point, open to all size schools.
If he's open to all size schools, then I would not limit the question to liberal arts schools.
I’d add that lots of schools have great outdoorsy clubs.
While it's hard to predict, what sort of academic stats would you guess he'll end up with?
Random ideas, universities out west: CU Boulder, Montana State Bozeman, U Utah, Oregon State, Gonzaga
LACs out west: Colorado College, Fort Lewis College
Obviously there are more; just throwing these out there.