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Jacobs Gains Mobility Freedom Through Outdoor Ability Foundation

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Nate Jacobs can now enjoy playing in the creek in his new track chair. Photo courtesy of Scott Phillips

By DAVID RAINER, 黑料天堂

Logan Black, a Conservation Enforcement Officer with the 黑料天堂鈥 Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries (WFF) Division, approached Nate Jacobs and said she鈥檇 heard about him hunting a certain piece of property. Black played her part in the ruse well and had Nate squirming, wondering where he鈥檇 run afoul of the law.

That鈥檚 when Outdoor Ability Foundation鈥檚 Scott Phillips unveiled a new Action Trackchair that was being presented to Nate for his 16th birthday. The look of concern on Nate鈥檚 face quickly turned into a wide grin when he realized he wasn鈥檛 in trouble and the all-terrain wheelchair was for him.

Jacobs has been in a wheelchair since he suffered a stroke during heart surgery when he was 5 years old. He鈥檚 always loved to hunt and fish, but mobility has been a serious obstacle.

The way Outdoor Ability Foundation found out about Nate was through the Kidz Outdoors (kidzoutdoors.org) program, an organization started by Carol and Rick Clark of Hueytown to help kids with disabilities get outdoors.

鈥淣ate had gone hunting with Kidz Outdoors, and Carol told me about him,鈥 Phillips said. 鈥淚 connected with Wes, Nate鈥檚 dad, and we made sure Nate didn鈥檛 know about the chair. We did the fundraising for the chair without him knowing it.

鈥淲e set the organization up based on our model, what happened to us. We go out and find the track chairs or whatever equipment is needed. I鈥檓 usually able to get these chairs at less than retail. We ask the families to raise half the money, and we raise the other half because it gets more people involved. It also lets more people know about the needs of the disabled kids who want their freedom to go hunting and fishing. You get family, friends and the community involved with the focus of let鈥檚 get this kid outdoors.

鈥淣ate loves to fish and hunt. I told Wes not to stress about the money, that God will provide it. Once people know what you鈥檙e trying to do and why you鈥檙e trying to do it, it will happen. It happened within a month.鈥

With fundraising just short of the goal, Donnie Yates, Phillips鈥 right-hand man at the foundation, reached out to Vance Wood, WFF officer and member of the 黑料天堂 Conservation Enforcement Officers Association (ACEOA), and asked if the association could provide the remaining funds for the chair. Wood made the presentation to the ACEOA board, which approved the funding.

The ACEOA has 140 members from State Parks, State Lands, Marine Resources and Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries.

鈥淥ur mission is to perform public education and outreach and enhance professional standards,鈥 Wood said of the ACEOA. 鈥淚t was very satisfying to see Nate get the chair. We鈥檙e happy when we can help give a child the ability to enjoy what our great outdoors has to offer.鈥

Phillips added, 鈥淲e got wildlife officers (Black and Lt. Brian Fisher) to help us present the chair. What was neat about it was Wes had trained Officer Black when she went through the police academy. We had that connection also.鈥

Nate Jacobs is all smiles after being presented the new track chair by Scott Phillips, left, Grayson Phillips, right, and Donnie Yates. Photo courtesy of Scott Phillips

Phillips鈥 son, 23-year-old Grayson, has spina bifida, which led to the formation of Outdoor Ability Foundation in Gardendale.

鈥淎t the age of 10 Grayson wanted to go hunting,鈥 Phillips said. 鈥淚 did not grow up hunting, but we said okay if that鈥檚 what he wanted to do. We鈥檝e told him all his life that he can do anything he wanted to, but he鈥檒l have to do it differently. We connected with several organizations that took him hunting, and we鈥檙e very grateful for that. It gave him the bug to do more and more, but we didn鈥檛 have a way to get him from point A to point B.鈥

The lack of mobility was highlighted on a turkey hunt with Grayson.

鈥淭he guides had a popup blind for him,鈥 Phillips said. 鈥淲e knew where the turkeys were, but they wouldn鈥檛 come to us. We decided to take Grayson to a point a little closer to the birds. I had to throw Grayson over my shoulder and drag his wheelchair. The guides were gathering all the stuff they needed to get to the next position. It had rained and it was muddy, not good conditions to try to be doing this.

鈥淚 thought there鈥檚 got to be a better way to get someone in a wheelchair from point A to point B. I started to do some research and ran across Action Trackchairs.鈥

Phillips called the Action Trackchair rep in Georgia and asked about the chairs and the cost. When the rep quoted $12,000, he knew the family couldn鈥檛 afford it.

鈥淚 think Grayson was 13 or 14 at the time, and we didn鈥檛 have that kind of cash,鈥 he said.

The Phillips family met the chair rep at a basketball tournament, where Grayson was playing for the Lakeshore Foundation, and he brought a chair for Grayson to test.

鈥淗e tried it and loved it, but we still didn鈥檛 have $12,000,鈥 the elder Phillips said. 鈥淎 few months later, I get a lead on a used chair. I called the people. It was their father鈥檚 chair, and he had just passed away. They wanted $8,500 for it. I told them I didn鈥檛 have $8,500, but if they鈥檇 give me a little time, I would try to raise that money.鈥

Phillips started a GoFundMe account, sold brownies, held car washes and other fundraising events. About half the money needed was raised from those efforts, and the deadline was coming up quickly. Then a private donor stepped in and graciously provided the remainder of the funds needed to purchase the chair.

鈥淲e met the people with the chair in Florida, where they lived,鈥 he said. 鈥淕rayson got on the beach in the chair, and he was all over the place. It gave him the freedom to just go. We get back home, and he takes it to the woods, going everywhere he can go. He got his independence.

鈥淲hen Grayson got his first deer after getting his chair, he wanted to drag the deer out of the woods, so that鈥檚 what he did. We decided at that time that we needed to help other disabled kids with the same desire to go hunting and fishing.鈥

Outdoor Ability Foundation was formed in 2014, and the first mobility chair was presented in 2016 to a youth in Gardendale. Nate鈥檚 presentation was the 14th for the foundation in seven states. Phillips also found out it wasn鈥檛 one-size-fits-all when it comes to dealing with disabilities.

鈥淥ne of the kids had autism, so it鈥檚 not just mobility,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e try to find whatever adaptive equipment is necessary to help the kids. The father said he wouldn鈥檛 be able to mount the rifle to his shoulder and look through the scope, so we got him a screen that attached to the scope, and he was able to go hunting that way.

鈥淭he thing I talk about is being the game changer. When kids get these chairs or equipment, it鈥檚 a game changer, not only for the kids but for the parents.鈥

Wes Jacobs, a Tuscaloosa police officer who is involved with training at the Tuscaloosa Police Academy, agrees wholeheartedly with Phillips鈥 last statement.

鈥淚t鈥檚 made life so much easier for Nate and us,鈥 Jacobs said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 pretty much opened the door to so many opportunities for him to be independent that he would have never had without it.

鈥淲e live out in the country, so if we ever wanted to get outside and do something, we鈥檇 have to get him on the Polaris or get in the Jeep. The electronic chair he had is not made for the outdoors. A manual chair is not going to go over roots or through creeks with you trying to push it.

鈥淣ow we can put him in the track chair in the carport and he goes where he wants. He鈥檚 as happy as he can be. We took him to the beach, and he was able to go on the sand. It鈥檚 been great. It鈥檚 been a blessing, plain and simple. We鈥檙e very thankful to Kidz Outdoors and Outdoor Ability Foundation. They work well together on helping kids.鈥

Wes said Nate is a student at Berry High School, makes good grades and loves being around his friends.

鈥淚 love it,鈥 Nate said of the track chair. 鈥淚 can play in the creek and help Papa (his grandfather Arthur Williams) in the garden.鈥

Phillips added, 鈥淲e need people to understand that it鈥檚 okay to go outside and have fun.鈥

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Wildlife and Freshwater Fisheries' Lt. Brian Fisher and Officer Logan Black joined in the fun when Nate received his track chair. Photo courtesy of Scott Phillips