Deep inside the monstrous brick barn that a year ago was home only to a dirt floor and cobwebs, 13-year-old Jahbri Jones scrambled for footing against a rock wall while he hung suspended 25 feet in the air.
On the ground, 15-year-old Johnny Her, a Boy Scout from north Minneapolis, supported Jones -- not just by holding tight the rope that kept him aloft.
"You can do it! You can do it!" Her shouted to the boy in the air. "Carefully! Climb it!"
This is Base Camp, a groundbreaking attempt to attract urban youth who otherwise might not give the Scouts a second thought.
The Boy Scouts of America Northern Star Council on Saturday will celebrate the grand opening of the first urban Base Camp of its kind in the country at Fort Snelling to coincide with the 100th anniversary of the organization.
The 27,000-square-foot building overlooking Hwys. 55 and 5 features indoor and outdoor climbing walls -- including rock faces modeled after those at Taylors Falls, high ropes, an archery range, an amphitheater and a NASA space shuttle simulator.
But it's not just home to any kid's wildest dream. It's also home to the Northern Star Council's initiative to bring the outdoors to urban kids, and ideally, continue to diversify the ranks of the Scouts. As the project launches, the whole Boy Scouts of America organization will be watching.
"It's not just simply climbing a wall," said Base Camp Program director Jonathan Jones. "It's the interaction they'll have with their peers, the leaders they're going to be working with, I feel is going to be life-changing."