Love Your Wild Spaces

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Love Your Wild Spaces (1) On October 8 it was announced that Obama declared the San Gabriel Mountains in LA a national monument. While this may not seem relevant to you all who don't live in LA, it is to me because I spent a lot of time escaping to those mountains when I lived there over 10 years. This decision by Obama was a good move because apparently according to the data out there only 30% of the people living there are within walking distance of a park! While there I often dragged my super citified friends up into the mountains (much to my one friend Ian's dismay because we ended up with serious poison oak after one trek through the woods) to show them what "nature" really looked like. And if I couldn't get them to go far, I at least took them up into Topanga Canyon which was often surprisingly empty for a city of millions of people! When you live in a super urban environment like LA it can often be a major struggle to step into nature because everything involves a long drive just to get out of town. The San Gabriel mountains weren't exactly right there and not as easy to head out to like the Gorge or Mt. Hood is for Portlander's, but it was still there and I did go out into those mountains often enough to recognize how important it is to have that piece of nature on the edge of such a massive urban sprawl (no offense to our HiB LA and HiB Santa Clarita of course). Getting more parks and wildlife areas designated on the edges of cities is critical for our children and our own sanity. I can't tell you how lucky I feel to be able to travel in almost every direction from Portland and be able to find open space to adventure in from Silver Falls to Bend to the Olympic national forest. And then we have the parks and space within Portland that also can't be forgotten like the 40+ miles of trails in Forest Park. This last week I decided while Obama was signing off big old bills to commit resources and awareness to the big spaces like the San Gabriel range, I would do my own little awareness campaign for nature locally. So I signed myself and 10 Hike it Love Your Wild Spaces (2)Baby mamas up to clean up the parks in Portland. I didn't even bother to ask if anyone would join me, I just signed us up and hoped people would show up. I picked Forest Park near Pittock Mansion because we hike the Upper Macleay a lot and then Arbor Lodge park because these are two areas Hike it Baby Portland frequents. My thought was if even 10 of us came out and cleaned up the park for a few hours, that would make a difference because every little bit counts! I didn't know if anyone would really show up because I had no prizes to offer and really I was just asking people to come work on the trail over hike...but sure enough a bunch of mamas came through and we had our own little Hike it Baby clean up crew. And what was great was people really noticed we were there. When you have women with babies on their backs working, people really take notice in America. I am hoping we will make this a regular thing where all across America Hike it Baby branches look for 1-2 parks or trails to help clean up as part of our contribution for all of the space we are using with our ever growing park. And as our little ones grow, lets get them cleaning up on the trails too. What do you all think about that? And on a final note...if you are going for the Hike it Baby 30 in November (30 miles on trail in 30 days! The big baby challenge!), here's a thought...what if on one of your hikes in the month of November you carried a small trash bag with you on a hike and you picked up anything you saw on trail. Imagine if we did that in 30+ cities across America what an impact we would have on our parks? Just an idea to think about as you head our for your hikes this next week!   Don't forget to check out our Indiegogo Crowdfunding campaign! It's going on for a few more weeks.  Love Your Wild Spaces (3)

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Are We Sharing Our Adventures Responsibly?
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I can now see how one picture can inspire hundreds, and even thousands, to go to a place. And that's where the true impact becomes detrimental to nature. To share or not to share As I thought more about my responsibility in getting people out there, I also noticed others talking about it online. In addition, there were articles on this topic in well-respected outdoors publications, like Outside this spring and even further back in online publications like The Outbound. So the ethical question: Is sharing beautiful outdoors spaces on social media destroying those hard-to-reach places? To some degree, it's a contributing factor. Are groups like Hike it Baby, which helps get more people outside, also contributing to this? Possibly, but it depends on the messaging we share and the guidance and principles we instill in our community before we share places. I can make an impact As founder of Hike it Baby, I have the opportunity to impact how families utilize and treat parks and open spaces. I can see how, in our hyper share-everything world, my one image can accidentally harm nature, even if that's not my intention. I like to think that while I may share, or overshare, my outdoors life and encourage hundreds of people to follow in my family's footsteps and get out there, I also know that making the outdoors more accessible for all comes with a price. And sometimes that price means the less aware, less prepared people venture out there thanks to our posts. On September 2, 2017, some teenagers playing with fireworks in the Columbia Gorge set off a massive fire. It trapped 150 hikers overnight, and resulted in 49,000 burned acres by the time the fire was out. My guess is that it was not these kids' intention when they carelessly tossed fireworks into the Gorge and filmed it, undoubtedly for their social media feeds. For those of us with younger children, we have an opportunity to teach respect before they become teenagers. 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According to the study, "Connecting Americans and nature must be a vibrant, ongoing effort supported by all members of the public. The state of the natural world and our place within it cannot afford for us to act slowly. We must act now to ensure that present and future generations are connected with nature.” I can encourage respect for nature So while it's not necessarily a bad thing that we Instagam every beautiful moment because it connects others to nature and inspires them to get out, it's good to stop and think first. Before you post, ask, "Am I posting responsibly and not necessarily broadcasting every nook and cranny in nature with GPS coordinates?" Go ahead and share those space. But consider regular reminders and support networks to encourage people to get out there with respect. This is our moment to change the world and help others touch nature. Nature heals and is always there for you. It connects people better to one another. Nature teaches our children valuable lessons. She helps us all connect with ourselves better. Go ahead and share her beauty. But remember to do it wisely and with instructions so people just learning to connect with her do it well from the start. It all starts with you and that picture you post of your child lying in a field of wildflowers. "I feel like, as photographers, we have a bigger responsibility to ensure that we don't meadow stomp then share and be aware of the environment around us. It's easy to be lured by mountain scapes and to run through wild flowers because of what we see on IG and Facebook. It's also easy for others to see it and not think of the consequences they have to the land, but rather, because someone else has done it, so surely one more couldn't hurt. I feel like the power of social media will oftentimes be more about the likes rather than the experience, thus creating more traffic on our favorite trails and people not adhering to Leave No Trace and accidentally creating patches and new small paths that lead astray for just a photo. "I do a lot of research, alone and with the kids, to find desolate areas and trails that not many have wandered. But I also try to make sure that my kids adhere as much as they can to the LNT philosophy. There are times when they stray, or forget that their footprints and their new paths can hurt their favorite landscapes. Harrison even cried once because he didn't stay on the trail and stepped on a small plant. He was absolutely devastated because I reminded him of how big we are. 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What are You Reading?
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