Proceedings of the 1st Tarumanagara International Conference on Medicine and Health (TICMIH 2021)

Freya Mayer - Summer Job !!install!! May 2026

"Normally, a supervisor does the high-risk checks," she explains. "But it was just me and two new hires. We had a booking of 30 people arriving in two hours."

Freya didn’t spend her summer in a sleek downtown internship. Instead, she could be found at 6:45 every morning, keys jangling on a carabiner clip, unlocking the gates of West Coast Canopy Adventures —a high ropes and zip-lining course nestled in the old-growth forest of Lynn Headwaters. freya mayer - summer job

By J. Harper

And sometimes, that bridge is made of rope, suspended 80 feet above a creek, swaying gently in the wind. Freya Mayer is a student at the University of British Columbia. West Coast Canopy Adventures will be hiring for the 2025 season beginning in March. "Normally, a supervisor does the high-risk checks," she

Instead of panicking or shutting down the course (which would have cost the company thousands in refunds), Freya improvised a solution. She called the owner on speakerphone, walked him through the visual inspection via video link, and then meticulously re-torqued four loose cable sleeves herself using a manual winch—a tool she had only watched YouTube tutorials on the night before. Instead, she could be found at 6:45 every

But it was a specific Tuesday in July that turned her summer job into a turning point. A thunderstorm had rolled through the North Shore the night before, forcing an emergency closure. When Freya arrived the next morning, the lead ranger was out sick. That left Freya—the senior-most guide on shift despite only having six weeks of experience—to perform the post-storm line inspection.

For most university students, the summer job is a transactional affair: trade time for currency, endure the heat, and return to campus with a few extra dollars in your pocket. But for 21-year-old Freya Mayer, a junior majoring in Environmental Design at the University of British Columbia, this past summer became an accidental masterclass in leadership, logistics, and lateral thinking.