This
 year marks CASC's 31st annual expedition. It's Dominica's fifth time 
hosting the event. The Bahamas is slated to host next year's expedition.
							
							
								
								
 
						
						
							
							The GGYA is a 
							
							challenging and rewarding programme of personal development for persons age 14 to 25. 
								
								
 
						
						
							
							The programme has three levels - Bronze, Silver, and Gold.  Each
 level is comprised of four sections: community service, skills, 
physical recreation and adventurous journeys. There's a fifth component 
that all Gold Award participants must undertake - a residential 
(worthwhile community service) project abroad.
								
								
 
						
						
							
							Gold Award candidates must first be nominated in order to be eligible for this trip, said the 
							
							GGYA's national director, Denise Mortimer.
								
								
 
						
						
							
							"They must also demonstrate confidence, self-reliance and resilience," she explained.
								
								
 
						
						
							
							Thanks
 to the G.O.L.D. Initiative - a financial partnership between the 
Ministry of Youth, Sports and Culture and the GGYA - four youths from 
Grand Bahama are embarking on this adventurous journey. 
								
								
 
						
						
							
							While
 in Dominica, participants will have three days to prepare for the 
expedition. They will undergo jungle training and first-aid review, 
among other things.
								
								
 
						
						
							
							However,
 GGYA participants began their physical preparation six weeks ago with 
training hikes over Sears and Hawkins Hill, along Collin's Avenue and 
across both Paradise Island bridges.
								
								
 
						
						
							
							"Fitness
 training was a must," said Maria Knowles, a 17-year-old graduate of St.
 Augustine's College who is going for the Gold Award. 
								
								
 
						
						
							
							"I'm super excited about this trip," said Knowles. "We get to meet new people from other countries and make new friends".
								
								
 
						
						
							
							Knowles' schoolmate, Cynthia Rahming is just as eager to embark on this latest adventure. 
								
								
 
						
						
							
							"I will see parts of Dominica that many tourists won't," said Rahming.
								
								
 
						
						
							
							Monique Cooper, a unit leader and teacher at Government High School, expressed a similar sentiment.
								
								
 
						
						
							
							"Being in an unfamiliar land on foreign terrain is exciting," she said. 
								
								
 
						
						
							
							The
 group's goal is to reach Boiling Lake situated in Dominica's World 
Heritage Park. It is the second largest hot spring in the world, 
covering several miles of mountainous terrain. 
 
						
						
							
							A trek to 
							
							Boiling Lake is said to be the ultimate test of strength.
								
								
 
						
						
							
							"It's best to 
							
							expect
 the worst and hope for the best," said contingent leader Jacquetta 
Lightbourne Maycock. "That way when they encounter different situations 
they would see that it's not so bad."