On the eastern shore of Payette Lake in McCall, Idaho, the Youth Four Week Program invites young climbers to trade screens for sneakers and learn outdoor climbing fundamentals over four one-day sessions. Hosted at 3771 Eastside Dr, McCall, ID 83638, USA, this week-by-week course is designed for ages 10–14 and caps groups at 10 climbers to keep coaching personal and safe. Across four consecutive full-day meetings, participants move from basic gear familiarization to confident movement on real rock and taught routes. The program schedule runs in seasonal blocks: Session 1 meets May 30, June 6, 13, and 20; Session 2 is July 7, 14, 21, and 28; Session 3 falls on August 4, 11, 18, and 25; Session 4 is TBD. Each day focuses on practical skills—crag etiquette and safety, partner checks between belayer and climber, efficient footwork and rest positions on the wall, and breathing strategies that help kids manage stress while pushing their limits. The setting near Payette Lake and Payette National Forest gives the program a classic Idaho alpine-climbing backdrop: pine-framed granite outcrops, cool lake breezes, and clear mountain air. Instructors emphasize stewardship, teaching young climbers to leave routes better than they find them and to read the rock for fragile plants or lichen. Outdoor instruction pairs movement drills with short classroom moments on knot craft, anchor logic, and risk awareness so each participant leaves with measurable skills and a safety mindset. What makes this program stand out is the cadence: repeated, weekly exposure to outdoor settings accelerates learning more than a single clinic. Small group sizes allow instructors to tailor difficulty and build confidence through progressive challenges. The curriculum balances technical skills—belaying, top-rope safety, tying figure-eights—with soft skills: communication, focus, and calm breathing techniques to manage fear while on the wall. Over four weeks kids develop better balance, route-reading, and problem-solving that transfer to hiking, scrambling, and other outdoor sports. Families will appreciate the clear age range (10–14), the controlled maximum of 10 climbers per session, and the predictable schedule that makes planning summer calendars easy for busy parents. Expect hands-on climbing, route-specific coaching, and time for recovery and reflection each day. The program also reinforces environmental ethics common to McCall’s recreation community — a town that has long served as a gateway to Payette National Forest and seasonal outdoor culture. Register through the provided booking link to secure a spot and verify session dates; bring layered clothing, sturdy shoes, snacks, and refillable water. Instructors focus on paced progression, positive feedback, and transferable skills that prepare kids for more advanced routes, youth competitions, or independent day climbs with family supervision. Space is limited; early registration is recommended to guarantee enrollment. Questions can be directed via booking.