Teresa Baker, Activist and Hiker, on Why Kids Are the Future of Our Public Lands

Instagram feeds and internships are encouraging young people of color to join the environmental movement. But we can do more.

When I was a kid, my brothers and I would get kicked out of our house in Richmond, California, and told to play outside until further notice. In the summer months, that meant being outdoors for hours on end; the only time we were called in before the nighttime deadline was for lunch and snacks. There were never-ending games of chase, tag, and hide-and-seek in the park across the street. Or we鈥檇 walk 30 minutes to Point Richmond, where we鈥檇 hike the bayside hills, stopping to daydream and enjoy the ocean views. It wasn鈥檛 until I was much older that I realized it was serenity that brought us back to these trails so often.

Years later, I felt the same sense of serenity under the ancient sequoias in Yosemite National Park. Over the course of a solo, weeklong trip across the park valley in 2013, I ventured past towering evergreens, soothing waterfalls, snowcapped peaks, and skittish wildlife. While taking in the beauty around me, I started paying attention to the people I encountered, too. Among the droves of visitors, none looked like me. The lack of color in the human landscape was painfully obvious.

After returning home, the observation nagged at me. So much that I reached out to an African American ranger at Yosemite to ask if he, too, had noticed the low diversity on the trails. He explained that it across the country, and he encouraged me to do something to address it. Thus began my quest to draw underrepresented communities and youth into nature.

 

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To diversify the outdoors, we must first get to the heart of the issue: the history of our public lands, which have traditionally been getaways for the privileged. The founding of our national parks, for instance, , some sacred, that they鈥檇 long inhabited. More recently, our parks were segregated. Take Shenandoah National Park: In the 1930s, signs directed 鈥淣egroes鈥 to one area, Lewis Mountain, while the rest of the park鈥攖ens of thousands of acres鈥. The rule was finally lifted in 1947, but it sent a message to African Americans that has lasted for generations: Public lands do not welcome you. That legacy affects how African Americans view our place in the outdoors today. We tend not to venture out to the places that society has deemed 鈥渨ild spaces,鈥 like Yosemite. Staying closer to home offers a sense of safety that these faraway locations don鈥檛.

That has to change. We must loosen the grip of historical exclusion. As climate change and other crises threaten our parks, monuments, refuges, and resources, we need to grow our ranks and build a conservation movement that reflects our increasingly diverse nation. It is time to dig in our heels, work diligently to reconnect people of color with our natural areas, and craft a new message for generations to come: Public lands are everyone鈥檚 lands. And if we want future stewards to adopt that tenet and to be moved to protect wild places, they need to see themselves reflected in wilderness鈥攚hether it鈥檚 on the trail, in social media feeds, or in the pages of magazines.

Since my own eye-opening visit to Yosemite, I鈥檝e made it my mission to encourage people of color across the United States to get out on public lands. Inspired by my conversation with the ranger, I kicked off my first campaign, the , in 2013 to encourage families and individuals to explore national parks on a designated weekend in June. About 500 people took part that first year, and participation has grown exponentially since. I鈥檝e received thousands of photos from individuals and groups who鈥檝e participated in the event, along with stories of how they鈥檇 always wanted to visit Zion or Yellowstone and had finally taken the leap.

 

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More recently, I started , which encourages families and friends to hit the trails on a chosen weekend in May and document their adventures on social media. It鈥檚 an open invitation for women, many of whom have reached out to me over the years, to embark on a hiking adventure that鈥檚 been on their bucket list and, of course, inspire each other. And though the campaign is targeted toward women, men often join in as well to spend time with their kids.

I鈥檓 hardly alone in my endeavor to diversify the trails. Groups such as , , , , , , and many others are working tirelessly on matters of equity, racial diversity, and inclusion in nature-based activities. They are providing underserved communities across the country with invaluable opportunities to enjoy and protect open spaces

As for young people, they aren鈥檛 just showing up; they鈥檙e taking on active roles to lead. They are addressing environmental and political issues and are making their voices heard, through protests, voter-registration drives, and social media. Almost every week I learn of more groups of students across the country banding together to address issues of climate change and social justice. Teenage activists such as , the director of Earth Guardians and a plaintiff in the Our Children鈥檚 Trust lawsuit, are setting legal precedents to hold governments culpable for defiling our air, land, and water.

 

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We have to encourage these youth and include them in our adult conversations on diversifying and protecting the outdoors. The Crissy Field Center, a major community hub at the Golden Gate National Recreation Area, is doing exactly this by recruiting middle school, high school, and college interns. The candidates, who are mainly individuals of color, get the opportunity to work and play in the second-most-visited National Park Service unit in the country. Internships and jobs are invaluable in creating a sense of ownership of and responsibility for the land.

Progress is gradual, but the transformation has already begun. A lot of the change has been driven by the National Park Service, which is intentionally making sites more accessible and secure for all. It鈥檚 reaching across the table to leaders of marginalized communities and increasing youth visits through the . And it looks like the efforts are working. During my recent trips to Yose颅mite, some of the very first faces I saw belonged to people of color. They were a welcome sight.

The movement has seeped into the outdoor industry as well. REI, for example, has to show a more representative audience, especially on its website and in its social media feeds. Publications such as Outside have dedicated articles, magazine covers, and podcasts to diversity heroes.

 

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People ask me why I turn the conversation about the outdoors into a conversation about race. Why can鈥檛 a nature essay just be a nature essay? The answer is simple. There are boundaries on communities of color, boundaries that we鈥檙e now working diligently to erase. It鈥檚 hard to convince someone they belong in a place that they鈥檝e historically been excluded from. That鈥檚 why I talk about equity, diversity, and inclusion with such ferocity and consistency鈥攏ot to divide a country more than it already is, but to bridge a gap that鈥檚 been in place for far too long.

My hope is that one day we can do away with this diversity movement. But until then, let鈥檚 work together to be inclusive in empowering the next generation of environmentalists. Let鈥檚 do it so our kids can connect with their land, learn their purpose, and redefine their own 鈥渨ild spaces.鈥

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Into the Wild

These six programs reflect some of the numerous opportunities 爆料公社 offers to connect kids with nature, from paid internships to summer camps. To find more activities in your area, check with an 爆料公社 group .

WildLife Guards Program


WildLife Guards serve to protect by educating beachgoers on "being a good egg" around nesting shorebirds. Based along the Long Island Sound, this paid summer gig provides local high school students with hands-on experience in protecting adorable plover and tern chicks. Monitors share knowledge and tips for safe practices like picking up trash, respecting string fences, and leashing pets. More .

Wild Indigo Nature Exploration


Spanning nearly 70,000 acres, the forest-preserve network around Chicago is one of the largest in the country, yet it draws just a fraction of the city's diverse population. Wild Indigo seeks to change that. Through dozens of events, from bird walks to native plantings, the program gets underserved kids into nature just minutes from their homes. More .

爆料公社 Youth Leaders


They aren't all bird nerds at the beginning. But by the end of this nine-month internship鈥攊n which teens camp, plant trees, and work in a native plant nursery鈥攄isadvantaged youth from Marin County, California, develop an appreciation for the environment and skills for conservation careers, which some graduates have pursued. More .

Birding 101


Hot tip: Dissecting owl pellets is a great way to hook kids on birds. That's the point of this six-week elementary school program in Miami designed to inspire a new generation of avian aficionados. As the final lesson, students put their knowledge to the test by ID'ing species at the Steinberg Nature Center. Contact the chapter for more info.

Green Leaders Program


When the bell rings at 3 p.m., the climate activism begins. At least, that鈥檚 how it goes for Baltimore鈥檚 Green Leaders. In this afterschool program, junior-highers learn how to use advocacy and public engagement as a tool to fight climate change. And then they put it to action, hosting local events and even speaking at state rallies. More .

New Roots Summer Camp


Public lands are just a stone's throw from downtown Boise--yet for the city's humming refugee community, they can still be out of reach. That's why Idaho's biggest 爆料公社 chapter started a free camp where young immigrants spend two weeks shadowing scientists, visiting reserves and parks, and engaging in environmental action. More . 鈥擝enji Jones

This story originally ran in the Summer 2018 issue  of 爆料公社 as Public Lands for One and All. To receive our print magazine, become a member by