An Experience Unlike Any Other
Having grown up in small towns, neither Michael nor I had ever been anywhere like TreeRunner. Set in the heights of the loblolly pines on the Jewish Community Center campus in Raleigh, TreeRunner’s aerial obstacle courses integrate themselves into the existing natural world rather than destroying it and building on top of the remains.
We started on the ground with an orientation to the park and an introductory ziplining lesson. The harnesses, carabiners and gloves required are reminiscent of those used in rock climbing. Once we learned how to use our equipment and practiced zipping low to the ground, we were released to take on one or more of the obstacle courses in the air or on the ground.
To reach the aerial obstacles and ziplines, we walked up a set of stairs from the ground onto the Main Deck, a central platform from which we could choose a course by level of difficulty. On each course, various obstacles hung suspended on ropes stretching from platform to platform, leading from one tree to another. We made our way across cargo nets and planks forming rope bridges; tried to keep our balance on ever-shrinking platforms swinging between trees; and zipped from one tree to another or back to the ground at the end of the course. We even tried out the 40-foot auto-rappel jump, another first for each of us.