When Camping Goes Wrong

Sometimes things just don’t go according to the plan.

You can buy or borrow almost any product that adapts to an outdoor lifestyle and experience, but sometimes oversight, lack of experience, or unexpected weather conditions can cause the best laid camping plans to run afoul.
Like forgetting a can opener when camp meals depend on canned goods or arriving at camp to find the tent poles never made it into the car, and heaven forbid there is no wine or bottle opener!
I’ve lived through a few camping mishaps of my own.

CampRue19
Rue  Mapp, age 19

For example, I can now (after 20 years) fondly recall a car camping trip along the California coast with my University Women’s Center staff back in college when I was 19. We were so determined to do the trip – women can and will do anything was our internal motivating mantra. And in the face of an incoming storm, a little predicted rain and cold was not going to stop us!
The day of our trip, I dug out and threw my 2-person hand-me-down day tent and sleeping bag into the car. Our group stopped at a Safeway along the way where we impulsively filed our basket with every comfort food and drink we could find.
By the time we reached camp with our bags of groceries, it was late afternoon, and light rain had begun to fall. I do remember how beautiful the redwoods were, filtering rays of sunlight on our camp.
CampRue191
But the rain picked up toward the evening, extinguishing our fledgling fire. The air chilled in character and on queue for the region.  So an early retreat to our tents was the best option– or so I thought, until I discovered my tent had a small leak.
I managed to plug the hole with tape, and rearrange my belongings and sleeping bag away from the moisture, forcing me to curl up on one side of the tent.
I knew it was going to be a long night.
After drifting off to sleep for a few hours, I woke to the sound of pouring rain and a soaked sleeping bag. Now, my tent was leaking all over, and without a tarp beneath me I felt moisture from the ground seeping in. All my earlier feminist bravado came to a screeching halt. I was wet, cold, and groggy. And as far as I was concerned, our camping trip had come to an end.
Thankfully, I've learned a lot since those early days of planning camping trips on my own as a young adult. Camping with my children over the years has necessarily sharpened my skills. I now make sure we have the right tools for the type and location of camping we do. Thinking back, I know that with some basic skills, research on where we were going; packing the right tent (tarps!), sleeping bag, and better layers of clothing, our camping trip would have been a more dry and cozy adventure versus a cold and wet one.
A Warm Winter Camping Option in Yosemite

This is one reason the correct gear and the knowledge of when and how to use it matters. If you don’t have a camping role model in your friend or family network, many REI stores, and organizations like Outdoors Empowered Network are answering the call with free and low cost gear closets and technical assistance to help groups like my Women’s Center crew get camping right the first time so participants can look forward to participating again and again.
Has camping ever gone awry for you? How did you make the best of it? – Or did you roll up your sleeping bag and go home? Leave a comment and tell us!


Apply to Join the Outdoor Afro Leadership Team Today!

Do you have a passion for the outdoors and want to share it with others? 

Consider applying to join the 2013 Outdoor Afro Leadership Team today!
rafting
In 2012, we successfully launched the volunteer Outdoor Afro Leadership Team of 13 folks - the OALT, who formed a team of "experience ambassadors" for Outdoor Afros all around the country. Between May and December of 2012, this team led 500 people to nature right in their own backyards, many for the first time, thanks to these inspiring outdoor role models and our generous sponsors! (see below!)

Hike

As you know, Outdoor Afro supports a vision of outdoor recreation and conservation engagement for everyone, especially for the African American community. At Outdoor Afro,  we can provide leaders a platform and the support to help others reconnect to natural spaces right where they live. Leaders can learn to be a role model for camping, hiking, kayaking, birding, fishing -- or any other recreational activity to share with others. 

On the trail
On the trail

We are specifically interested in leaders who can represent the New York, Washington DC, and Pacific Northwest regions, but members from all US metropolitan regions are welcome to apply!
Here is what we require:

  • Facilitate 1-2 OA sponsored events every two months
  • Contribute to blog entries and social media
  • Participate in a monthly conference call with other OA Leaders
  • Help to further the mission and exposure of OA throughout local communities

Leader perks include:

  • Select FREE premium gear and supplies from sponsors KEEN Shoes, REI, and Clif Bar
  • Professional support, coaching, and outdoor skills development opportunities
  • The ability to make a tangible and positive difference for communities and the natural world

Apply now to join our diverse team from around the nation to bring the outdoors to more people in your community.
Next Steps to be Eligible for Consideration:

  • Complete the application and submit via email by Friday February 22nd and participate fully in the interview process via video conference
  • Be available for a mandatory in–person training from April 19-21 in Northern California

The 2013 Class of Outdoor Afro Leaders will be confirmed and announced in March, 2013.
For any questions please contact [email protected]
The Outdoor Afro Leadership Team is possible because of the generous support of:
Toyota Audubon Together Green
KEEN Shoes
Clif Bar
REI
The Golden Gate Audubon Society


Geocaching Your Way Through Black History

What exactly is Geocaching, you ask?

"Geocaching can be a fantastic way to spend some time outdoors, discovering and learning more about your world, in places both near and far, alone or with family and friends. It’s like treasure hunting, but the treasure is the experience."
Guest Blog by Cat Clark tells us more about it!
When the weather in the Washington, DC area is mild, it allows me to enjoy one of my favorite outdoor activities: Geocaching!
Geocaching is a kind of high-tech scavenger hunt. Participants use handheld GPS receivers to find hidden containers (geocaches) of varying sizes all over the world, sign the logbooks inside, and share their adventures on websites such as Geocaching.com. And geocachers hide caches everywhere-- from national parks to the city streets. Chances are good that you've passed within a few feet of several geocaches without ever realizing it. It's a fun, family-friendly way to spend some time outdoors wherever you are.
One of the things I love most about geocaching is that it's so much more than an outdoor game to play with family and friends. Geocaching leads me to amazing places I might not have otherwise visited or noticed. I've found caches in exquisitely beautiful small parks and in curious locations such as a mausoleum in a hotel parking lot (true story!). But some of my favorites are the ones that lead me to historic landmarks. Just recently, my geocaching adventures sent me to some local Black history sites.
The first cache was hidden near Ben's Chili Bowl in Washington, DC, the famed restaurant frequented by Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Ella Fitzgerald, Cab Calloway, Nat King Cole, Redd Foxx, Dick Gregory, Martin Luther King Jr., Donny Hathaway, Roy Ayers, and Bill Cosby. During the riots that followed the assassination of Dr. King, Ben's was allowed to stay open after curfew to provide food and shelter for activists, firefighters, and other public servants. Visiting Ben's is a must for all DC tourists, and the food is fantastic. I'd eaten there before, but I was grateful that geocaching gave me yet another reason to grab a chili half smoke! The amazing history of Ben's Chili Bowl is summarized on Ben's website:
The second Black history cache I visited was at the home of educators and civil rights activists Dr. Edwin B. and Mary Ellen Henderson in Falls Church, Virginia. Dr. Henderson was the first African American to be certified to teach physical education and argued passionately for equal opportunities in thousands of editorials. Mrs. Henderson, an educator in Falls Church's segregated school, fought for 29 years to have a new school built for Black students. Falls Church's current middle school is named for her. The Henderson House was recently nominated to the National Historic Register of Historic Places and Virginia Landmarks Register. Check out the Henderson House on Waymarking.com
The third cache, very close to the Henderson House, was hidden at a granite arch I pass frequently in my car but had never stopped to investigate. It turned out to be a monument honoring the men and women of Tinner Hill. In 1915, local Black citizens-- led by Dr. Henderson (see above) and Joseph Tinner-- formed the Colored Citizens Protective League (CCPL) to fight housing segregation ordinances. This group became the first rural branch of the NAACP in the nation. You can read more about the inspiring monument and other local history sites on the Tinner Hill Heritage Foundation site.
Previous geocaching outings have taken me to the Freedmen's Cemetery and African American Heritage Park, the latter quite close to a beautiful sculpture of abolitionists Emily and Mary Edmonson, in Alexandria, Virginia.

Geocaching can be a fantastic way to spend some time outdoors, discovering and learning more about your world, in places both near and far, alone or with family and friends. It's like treasure hunting, but the treasure is the experience.
Want to give it a try? First, visit Geocaching.com to read Geocaching 101 and set up a free account. If you don't have a handheld GPS receiver but have a smartphone, some great geocaching apps are available. I'd also recommend investigating some online tutorials and tips posted by friendly geocachers around the web, such as HeadHardHat's "Geocaching Basics and Geocass' "GeoCaching with the iPhone: Preserving Battery Life". Don't be intimidated, just start with some regular-sized, traditional geocaches with easy difficulty and terrain ratings (1 to 2 stars). After you've found a few caches, you will get the hang of it!
If you get hooked and you're thinking about investing in a handheld GPS receiver for geocaching and other outdoor activities, don't forget to ask about GPS navigation classes at outdoor sporting stores such as REI.
More interested in finding the history than the geocaches? There's another option for you! Visit Waymarking to get the coordinates for millions of interesting locations. Just plug in some keywords and a location and you can custom-design a tour you'd never imagined possible. Did you know about the Glen Echo Park Civil Rights Protest? You can visit the restored carousel yourself!
Happy hunting!
Cat Clark
Outdoor Afro Contributor for Black History Month


Outdoor Afro Wins Inspiration Award at Outdoor Retailer Show

What an amazing week! Just got back from Outdoor Retailer Winter Market, the largest outdoor industry show in the country that occurs twice yearly in Salt Lake City, Utah.

In a proud and humble moment for Outdoor Afro, we received the Outdoor Industry Inspiration Award, presented by adidas Outdoor, in the company category pared down by industry vote from over fifty esteemed and well-established organizations, including our rockin' partner and supporter REI.
Check out the press release here.

I feel the award is shared by all the people who make up the Outdoor Afro community of support, especially the Outdoor Afro Leadership Team who are getting people outdoors around the country to enjoy and conserve the natural world.

The Inspiration Award

OR is the place for manufacturers to demonstrate and sell their newest wares to buyers and retail outlets. It also provides an important forum for education, networking, media, and professional recognition for brands and efforts that are making an impact in innovation, advocacy, and inspiration. For me, it brings so much satisfaction to be with friends old and new to imagine together how we can connect more people to the outdoors.
Rue and Vanessa Garrison, co-founder of Girl Trek

I also especially enjoyed rallying around the 2013 NOLS Expedition Denali team in a celebration of its new partnership with REI and The North Face,and had a blast with Outdoor Afro sponsors KEEN and Clif Bar!
Check out all our photos:
While brands are important, it’s really about people and relationships. So thanks to Myrian Solis Coronel, Laura Swapp, David Munk, Ryan Mayo, Stacy Bare, Melanie MacInnis, Juan Martinez, Brook Hopper, Caroleigh Pierce, Vanessa Garrison, Charlie Lunan, Chris Fanning, James Mills, and Kyle McDonald who each stood out in their enthusiastic thought partnership, and support of Outdoor Afro’s experience at the show. A fly shout out to new friend Chad Brown of Soul River Runs Deep for providing such a cool jacket for me to rock on the floor - check out the design on the back!
Soul River Mermaid

Oh - and look who I ran into on the plane ride back to Oakland - Talib Kweli!
Rue Mapp and Talib Kweli

Like I said...an amazing week! And I am re-energized about the fun work ahead!


Outdoor Afros and Audubon Come Together for King Holiday Conservation Fun

We are so proud and grateful to have spent another day with Northern California Outdoor Afros in partnership with Golden Gate Audubon. Together, we connected more people to our local natural assets to help preserve and enjoy them with others. It was such a perfect day. The warmth of the sun and people who attended made us all forget it was still winter.

Outdoor Afro Leader Cliff and Keshia of GGAS discuss native plants

Clay, the official Outdoor Afro bird specialist!

Thirty Outdoor Afros and fifty more attendees from Girls Inc., California Conservation Corps, with Golden Gate Audubon staff and interns descended on the Martin Luther King Jr. Shoreline with the support of the East Bay Regional Parks, to plant native trees and shrubs, identify local birds, and pick up trash along an important shoreline home to the endangered Clapper Rail among other wildlife, and the bustling human population of East Oakland just over the freeway. After a few hours of rotating activities, we enjoyed a picnic lunch, while the younger children played out their remaining energy.
Fatherhood in Nature

Mike Lynes, Golden Gate Audubon Executive Director said, "We are so glad to partner with Outdoor Afro for this event, as we believe these activities are for everyone."
Leslie Hardy Hood, an Outdoor Afro mother of two, and Oakland physician said, "Our family had a great time planting, birding and being with other like minded families!" Most in our group had never birded with binoculars, or participated in deliberate conservation activities in a preserve. Chanel of Oakland exclaimed, "I planted my first tree today...looking forward to future events!"
And so are we!
Thanks to our sponsors Toyota Audubon Together GreenREI, KEEN, Clif Bar, and Golden Gate Audubon for helping make the event a success - you all were the talk of the town for your inspiring presence and support!
A table to share and celebrate our sponsors and friends!


Winter Trails Day Was a Blast!

I am still tickled from our time this past weekend in the California Sierras as eleven Northern California Outdoor Afros participated in the annual Winter Trails Day by REI, coordinated by Outdoor Afro leader Rahman Batin and hosted by the co-op's Sacramento market.
This was a cross-promoted MeetUp of Outdoor Afro, designed to help people learn through easy and fun lessons and demonstrations how to snowshoe and cross country ski. Participants were also exposed to brands that can help make these experiences comfortable. I was especially stoked to see our sponsor KEEN Footwear represented to compliment snowshoeing. Check out our photos below!
In the week prior to our trip,  I had to make sure my ever growing younger children and I had the right gear. So with the help of our friends at Bay Area Wilderness Training, The North Face, and KEEN Footwear, we were exceedingly prepared with everything we needed to stay warm and dry in the snow.
After rustling up sleepy folks on Saturday morning, and filing them into my trusty truck loaded with snacks and gas, we drove up without a hint of traffic before dawn. Joining me for the ride was my Cal alumna Barbara Henry and her daughter Emma, who had never been exposed to the snow. Admittedly, my own younger kids had never experienced snow play before, (yup, the children of Outdoor Afro) so this opportunity was a perfect chance to try on a new outdoor experience. See, in the San Francisco Bay Area, we have to go to the snow, therefore the pursuit is not without a tremendous commitment of time and cash for things such as gear foraging, lodging, transportation, lift tickets, trail passes, and more.

emma and barbara

It is no surprise that unless you cultivate the interest and passion for snow play, especially at a young age, it may not be a high priority for people who have other, and more accessible, outdoor/nature or sports options available closer to home. This is why the REI event was so cool - it allowed moms like Barbara and myself, to try on new activities that ignited a passion in our family we now know can bring us back to the snow again and again!
One of many inspiring parts of the trip was how we got to see snow for the first time through our children's eyes. Many wide-eyed audible ooohs and ahhhs were heard from the back seat, as we climbed elevation with increasing snow visible on the side of the road along the highway, and caked on alpine branches and mountains.

3 of The Most Memorable Moments of our Trip:

1. Learning to cross country ski -  It was a completely new experience for all of us, and we fell in love!


2. Observing wonder  and passion - the children jumped into the snow as soon as they saw it and for five hours straight, never stopped enjoying it. It was so hard to leave!

3. The sunset on the drive home - it felt like one big validation banner for a perfect experience had by all.

Thank you REI Sacramento Market, KEEN Footwear,  The North Face, Bay Area Wilderness Training, Outdoor Afro Leader Rahman Batin, and Sacramento REI's Erin Harrington for coordinating the whole event - you all rock, and we will be back!
Do you play in the snow? How do you make it happen? What do you enjoy most about it?


Musings of an Urban Park Manager: A Black Male Reflection

You are at Stuy Cove Park, NY

Greetings Outdoor Afros:
I’m Morgan Powell and this is my fifth blog here at Outdoor Afro.  I’m the founder of Bronx River Sankofa - a documentary series on Cable TV and Facebook featuring African-American environmentalists from New York City’s greenest borough.  Many male Harlem Renaissance writers and other 20th century brothers-on-a-soap-box wrote about the invisible man phenomenon or mistaken identity in general stemming from low expectations by others of men of African descent.  The playful piece you are about to read contrasts a photo-documentary of my busiest days when I was  a manager to a public park with the historical writing I was doing out of view at that time.  Among the many conversations with park users that prompts this blog was a conversation in which a well-meaning park volunteer told me she thought I was too smart for my job.  Consider this a modern version of so many essays by figures like Langston Hughes, Ralph Ellison and James Baldwin by an emerging eco-writer.  Please ponder parallels between my park and story with places and workers familiar to you as you read this meditation on the park and its regional context in New York City!
Maintaining Paths

On Stuyvesant Cove Park

The soil and ground of and around Stuyvesant Cove is a regional resource.  The park and neighboring Stuyvesant Town development are reclaimed from the East River which met the shore of Manhattan Island further inland along 1st Avenue before Western civilization reached the New World, reshaping the shoreline with landfill and structures built on pilings.  A 19th century resident of the Stuyvesant Cove area, George N. Lawrence, recorded a glimpse of local natural history in 1889 published as “An Account of the Former Abundance of some Species of Birds on New York Island, at the Time of their Migration to the South.”
South entry to Stuy Cove Park
“When I was a schoolboy a favorite skating place was Stuyvesant Creek, a considerable body of water, which had its head quite close to the Third Avenue, about 20th Street, and it emptied into the East River—I think at about 12th Street.  On the north side of it, there were high woods, where I have seen Robins pursued by gunners, when the ground was covered with snow and the creek frozen.”
Here we have a historical snapshot that includes a reference to a time of wild hydrological features in the landscape before public waterfront access was an issue.  It continues  - beyond the selection above - with a description of local bird populations in which their presence is painted so richly as to seem fantastic.  But those who have lived in the Stuyvesant Town development adjacent to this park for more than a decade may remember a louder and more diverse seasonal bird community in years past.  That was before suburban sprawl paved over yet more thousands of tracts of formerly natural habitats.  Such places once supported our regional web of life as near as the neighboring county of Staten Island or as far as the Catskills region to the north.  Thanks is owed to the groups of citizens who worked on the transformation of this post-industrial relic we now enjoy as Stuyvesant Cove Park which opened in 2002.  Similar praise is worthy for those who helped acquire and restore other parcels of land in the greater New York area one acre at a time.
One plant at a time, we restore the habitat that wildlife need.  Our trees provide shelter to migratory birds, but cool shade to strollers walking below them as well.  Both hummingbirds, seen occasionally, and butterflies—among them the Great Swallowtail (Papilio cresphontes) and Monarch (Danaus plexippus)—feed on the nectar of park flowers.  They come here for different types of blooms.  The hummers prefer tubular shaped flowers like hibiscus, monarda, and trumpet vines that they can probe with their long beaks while hovering in mid-air.  By comparison, the butterflies prefer to land atop flower platforms and walk about while sipping nectar.  Such butterfly-attractive flowers can be found among the Cove’s asters, goldenrods and other North American native composite blossoms like echinacea.  Each year, the plantings at Stuyvesant Cove include more species, making the park a better and better stopover habitat for these winged migrants.  Woody plants, as well, play their role to recreate a welcome and familiar habitat amid the concrete jungle that is Manhattan island.Morgan Powell doing repairs
If we could have taken refuge in the local forest of the pre-modern period, what a forest we would have found!  Most of the trees would have been oaks, hickories and tulip-poplar trees.  Some of the tulip-poplars would have been almost 300 feet tall, taller than any trees we can find in New York City today.  Among the prettiest migrant birds, both then and now, are the ones that depend on them.  Some of these winged friends make the 2,000+ mile trip to Central and South America in autumn, and then back again each spring.  These include the warblers who fuel their journey by feeding upon caterpillars.  This food chain exists as just one of numerous life cycles vibrantly played out year round.
When winter temperatures turn East River water to ice on our local industrial relic, the rocky outcrop (at 20th St.) , we see another face of nature.  Waterfowl appear there and on neighboring floating ice.  Though the waters that lap along our granite bulkhead are not formally part of the park, we remain mindful of it as we hold to a non-toxic cleaning regime that minimally drains through them.  Indeed, wetland grasses planted along portions of the bulkhead are our homage to the seamless connection between earth and water.  This connection existed before modernity imposed his way.  We know that worms in the soil have moved far below the surface and are safe from frost, assuring us that they will help us maintain a quality of growing medium for plants unseen in most urban parks.  Much fruit from hardy shrubs such as gooseberry and roses lend color to our walks amid the elegant architecture of trees.  Such living gems as red rose hips – faithful sights in cold and even snow – promise leaves and flowers in spring.
Reading is life!
From 18th to 23rd Streets, we enjoy the Cove as a unique station along a network of waterfront parkland that is being rehabilitated within and surrounding our city.  This network extends to points north and south of New York State forming the emerging East Coast Greenway.  In winter and all seasons, we can depend on a steady program of public activities at the park’s museum of green living, Solar 1.  Not unlike ancient English house museums that serve as points of departure or destination to amblers of national trails, Solar 1, the environmental classroom here, opens its doors to the public and shares the wisdom of ecology through the creative prism of the arts.  As one of just a few sustainably managed public parks in this network, we serve as an example for new park designs from Maine to Florida.  We may be known far and wide because our mission and accomplishments have been celebrated in print from the New York Times to design-trade media.
A Meditation on the Cove’s Air
Devotees of urban parks are doubly fortuned by nature’s compelling inspiration coupled by the convenience of designed spaces.  We may gaze spectacular natural and man-made views often with benches, tables and restrooms nearby.  Praise to urban living!  One may marvel at the view from 20th Street in Manhattan, New York – all its glistening, moving water we call the East River – and recall or imagine more rustic settings beyond city limits.
Sunflowers are easy to grow
How do air, water, and earth combine in the urban ecology?  Waterfront parks provide space to wonder at the answers.  Though city parks may seem somehow removed from our conceptions of the natural, an essay by Simon Shama offers us that “they are all the nature we ever had.”  Let us be mindful that we humans are part of the web of life and have been agents of change in the local landscape and beyond since days much earlier than writings record.  Let’s explore a few natural aspects of the park we love over time and in focus!  Perhaps we will see that these Stuyvesant Cove Park’s 1.9 acres are integral to a community of life both locally and regionally.
Local air seems to be a regional resource.  Ken Chambers of the American Museum of Natural History has written on birding here and celebrated his subjects as “the aristocracy of the air.”  I think of birds mostly as natural soundtrack musicians.
The “tseep, tseep, tseep” calls of the warblers, orioles and their kin in summer bends our ears to the sounds of “traffic” along an ancient “highway.”  It’s called the Atlantic Flyway.  This Flyway is a continental swath of land and air that see heavy concentrations of winged migration among a wide range of bird species.  Though no two migratory bird species follow exactly the same route, there are annual travel patterns between particular breeding grounds and wintering grounds for each species.  I’ve asked myself often, “How large an airborne community passes over this land at the height of their season on the busiest nights?”  Chambers and other birders have informed me a hundred birds might pass through per hour at peak times.  Quiet and early mornings that follow such nights reward the visitor with glimpses of migrants having landed to rest and feed.  We have seen warblers such as the American Redstart, with its black and red plumage feeding upon insects around the shrubs and larger perennials (i.e. grasses and milkweeds).  We once saw an Ovenbird walking and foraging, making its loud “tea-Cher, tea-Cher, tea-Cher” call too.  The night migrants, many thousands, even millions of them, pass over Manhattan on their journey north in spring and again on their way south in autumn.  River valleys like ours along the great Hudson can be ideal for flyway routes.  Over fifty-five species of birds, close to a dozen butterflies, and even a bat have been observed at this site in season.
Weeding tools
We would also be wise to appreciate the air itself.  Consider the heat island effect—that phenomenon wherein the dense infrastructure and intense human activity of cities create thermal halos, making a center city warmer than the suburbs that extend from it.  Your and my conservation work helps restore the primordial balance within the blue-green world that predated so many highways, gas pipe networks, housing complexes, and miles of asphalt.  Scientists at Cornell University and elsewhere are studying ways to mitigate the heat island effect by planting groves of trees in and around metropolitan areas.  They are also using such groves to study the way trees clean the air with the removal of VOCs (volatile organic compounds) from the air we breathe.  Fewer VOCs in the air mean healthier environments for people, especially the young, old and ill.  By the way, these considerations may be yours should you repaint an interior environment because low VOC paints are popularly available on the retail market!
Our urban forests, inclusive of cherry trees and other key air cleansing species are, indeed, both cooling and cleaning all that we inhale.  These woods – both modest as city vest pocket parks and grand as large destination ones – are valuable.  Our care for them is our commitment to the good life.
Hedge cleaning
“I love to think of nature as an unlimited broadcasting station, through which God speaks to us every hour, if we will only tune in.”
? George Washington Carver
My Favorite Parks to Visit and Write About
Antwerpen Parks, Antwerp, Belgium
Barcelona Botanic Garden, Spain
Battery Park City Parks Conservancy and Historic Battery Park, New York
Boerner Botanic Gardens, Wisconsin
Brooklyn Botanic Garden, New York
Chicago Botanic Garden, Illinois
The Cloisters, Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Commons, Boston, MA
The Conservatory Garden (of Central Park), New York
Crotona Park (Great example of depression-era WPA successes), New York
Whistle while you work
Devon House (estate museum and crafts market), Jamaica, West Indies
Flagler Museum & the Breakers (Hotel and golf club), Palm Beach, FL
Huntington Botanical Gardens, San Mareno, CA
Jardin Botanique de Montreal, Canada
Jardin Exotique de Monaco (famous for rare succulents and Riviera views), Monaco
Le Jardin et les serres d’Auteuil, Paris, France
Le Jardin de Plant, Paris
Lincoln Park Conservatory, Chicago, IL
Longwood Gardens, PA
Madison Square Park (19th century sculpture of), New York
Megeve (alpine forest of), France
NYC Historic House Trust
Old Port of Montreal, Canada
Planting Fields Arboretum, New York
Quaker Hill Native Plant Garden, New York
Real Jardin Botanico, Madrid, Spain

IMG_0842

Rock Garden Park, New York
Royal Botanic Garden at Kew, Great Britain
Stuyvesant Square Park (19th century charm), New York
Staten Island Botanic Garden, New York
Ile de St. Marguerite, Nice, France
Vanderbilt Historic Site – FDR Presidential Library, Hyde Park, NY
Versailles Palace and Grounds, France
Woodlawn Cemetery (world famous for classical fine art and architecture), Bronx, NY
Bronx River Sankofa lives on Facebook and YouTube


2012: An Amazing Year!

Outdoor Afro Leader Reginald Mitchell

As many of you know, this year marks a big transition as I fully embraced Outdoor Afro as an important part of my purpose, and since, the quality of my life has improved as it allows me to spend more time enjoying my family, and nature!  But beyond the scope of my personal life, for me Outdoor Afro represents a chance to help make a positive difference for the world, and I am grateful for each friend and colleague who believed in this vision and cheered me on.

rafting

Now for some highlights of 2012
In May, we received our first grant from Toyota Audubon Together Green, and launched the first class of the Outdoor Afro Leadership Team (OALT) that reflected each region in the US. These leaders, hailing from diverse backgrounds, helped get more than 500 Outdoor Afros off the couch and into the outdoors.  I am grateful and proud of them, and aim to help this team grow and continue to succeed in 2013. Check out our current Indiegogo campaign and Chicago OALT leader Viva Ama's reason for being on the team:

Outdoor Afro was humbled by the tremendous media recognition this year, including ABC, CBS, and Backpacker Magazine.  I was especially floored, and a little more than tickled to make The Root 100, where I was recognized as one the most influential African Americans in the country and later to receive a humanitarian award by Hidden Villa Ranch. Each of these moments helped to push the message that black people do have a relationship to the outdoors, and show the ways we each can take meaningful action that gets more people connected to nature.

photo (3)

We are sustained by the many partnerships we have formed since Outdoor Afro began, and thrilled about our new corporate partners, KEEN footwear, REI, and Clif Bar. I have also enjoyed working on important projects this year with NAAEE, EE Capacity, The Children and Nature Network, Golden Gate Audubon Society, the Georgia River Network, the Maryland Coastal Bays, California ReLeaf, Akiima Price Consulting, the Oakland Museum of California, National Wildlife FederationCamp-California; the RV community, and many public speaking opportunities that have helped me to further the work of connecting more people to nature in ways I never imagined.
Hike
But the work and community of Outdoor Afro depends on the support and involvement of each of you. This includes all of you who join our conversations on Facebook, Twitter, (Retweeting, Liking, Sharing), or attend our many fun events all around the country – each action and each one of you matters! And you don’t need an afro to be involved!
So thank you Outdoor Afros for a fabulous 2012. Please join me now to celebrate our success, and spread the world to help more people live better lives through meaningful connections to nature.
Happy New Year,
Rue Mapp
Outdoor Afro Founder and CEO


Happy Holidays!

Hope you are enjoying the winter and holidays as much as we are! Join us on Facebook and share your outdoor winter fun photos with us, like this one!

Snowgirl


Homecoming: Discovering Great American College Art and Architecture

B.C.C. Campus, NYCHello Outdoor Afros:
My name is Morgan Powell and this is my fourth blog here at Outdoor Afro.  I'm the founder of Bronx River Sankofa - a documentary series on Cable TV and Facebook featuring African-American environmentalists from New York City's greenest borough.  This meditation on the sprawling college campus as outdoor museum will be a departure from the more conventional green profiles I am known for.  I hope you enjoy, share and post comments!  This one's for the historic preservationists out there.  This piece borrows the motto that, "The greenest building is the one that's already built."
Have you ever heard about the Emancipation Oak at Hampton University?  This Virginia Landmark on the Chesapeake Bay helps define that fine HBCU campus.  It is a silent witness to the freedom of our people through education for over 150 years.  Great buildings and great institutional campuses - many inspired by the University of Virginia - can command our attention and tell critical stories too.  BCC - Gould Library InteriorI have found this to be true at my own alma mater.  Did you attend one of our nation's many temple - hilled public institutions like me?  These places, largely built in the exuberant nineteenth century, communicate a powerful sense of place with their generous lawns and buildings inspired by ancient Greece, Rome and Egypt.  They can be a lot of fun to visit and walk around.  Perhaps you live by one such place and can savor their architecture and landscape planning as a free recreational treat.  Welcome to mine.
Bronx Community College (B.C.C.) in New York City acquired the former uptown campus of New York University in 1973 under the leadership of Bethune - Cookman University's second president, James A. Colston.  This campus's most famous landmark is also America's first hall of fame.  The Hall of Fame for Great Americans includes two bronze busts by African-American sculptor Richmond Barthe.  There you can see his casts of both Booker T. Washington and George Washington Carver.  Dr. Colston wrote the following letter to his students at the close of the school's first full academic year.  His words say so much about the power of time spent in an exalted place.  I like to believe this letter you are about to read was also written out of the mind of a man who contemplated the opportunities and challenges before the Civil Rights Movement's first children.  The sites displayed here -in the order they appear – are: the Hall of Fame for Great Americans, Gould Memorial Library and a composite view featuring the Hall of Fame, Language Hall, and Gould Memorial Library as seen on their west facades.
BCC iconic library
To the Class of 1974:
The Commencement that will honor your graduation this year is significantly different from all previous such ceremonies in the college's history.  It will be held outdoors in a beautiful, park-like campus setting to mark a new era at Bronx Community College.
You have been fortunate to have experienced the excitement and thrill of moving to a "new" campus, and it is my sincerest wish that the uplifting experience you have had during this first year at the University Heights campus will provide the impetus to your post-BCC phase, be it at a four year college or the world of work.  I hope you will come back to visit us and bring that "special" feeling you have as the first graduates of the Heights campus to a reinvigorated Alumni Association.
Of course, we hope to welcome you back not just as alumni but as subscribers to the life-long learning process.  Your degree does not close the book on benefits you can derive from BCC.  There are many programs and courses, both credit and non-credit, that can help you toward a better career and a better life.
All of us cherish fond memories of the "Old Main Building" [at Creston Avenue and 184th Street] and the mad dashes under the Jerome Avenue El to get to class on time.  In those widely separated facilities, we created an inner campus of "spirit."  Even though we now have a real campus, we have all profited from the personal fortitude that enabled us to transcend our surroundings and achieve education and closeness.  You are special because you have experienced the best of both worlds.
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If there is any lesson to be drawn from your unique experience, it could be that a consciousness of one's past is the only reference point for determining the future.  A life motivated in escaping the past, no matter how humble, will abort any real sense of purpose.  We release ourselves from the enslavement of escapism by recognizing the essential connection between past, present and future.  The totality of perception is sometimes called heritage or culture.  It is the mark of civilized man.
Sincerely yours,
James A. Colston
President
This article is dedicated to Chuck Vasser who publishes a blog called Community Green. He is a founder and current board member to the Bronx River Alliance whose articles of Incorporation he signed. He first got involved with the Bronx River as an earlier Director of Community Affairs (promoted from Human Resources Director) at the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Bronx Zoo. He was advocating for active lifestyles, food security and neighborhood greening city-wide as a New York City Housing Authority consultant at the time of publication.
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