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Locality: New York, New York

Phone: (646) 543-9246



Website: www.outdoorfest.com

Likes: 2926

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OutdoorFest 17.11.2020

An update on the future of the Fest. For now, we'll be keeping this Facebook page live and sharing links to resources and events in the city related to getting outdoors (or learning skills if we can't physically be outdoors). We hope you'll keep in touch <3 Thank you everyone for being part of this event and community. It means a lot.... https://www.outdoorfest.com//an-ode-to-six-years-of-outdoo

OutdoorFest 05.11.2020

NYC news https://thecliffsclimbing.com/dumbo-reopening

OutdoorFest 30.10.2020

Highline re-opens this week! Make sure to make a reservation though: https://www.thehighline.org/visit/

OutdoorFest 25.10.2020

To the entire NYCICO Community: The weight of this current moment is felt heavily. As our city enters its first curfew imposed in 77 years, we can’t stop think...ing about the youth we serve, our volunteers and supporters, and the communities of New York City. Our city, and our nation, are in a deep moment of struggle. After months of battling the invisible enemy of Covid-19, which exposed so many inequities, injustices and pain, without even having a moment to breathe, we come up against the present moment. From the brutal murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor to the harassment and threat of Christian Cooper for bird watching in our very city, we are reminded that there is still an incredible amount of work to be done to create a world in which every person, regardless of race, religion, gender, age or ability can be treated equitably. Our nation has a long and ugly history of exclusion. The parks department, and indeed The Sierra Club itself, once had a heavy hand in creating an environment of exclusion in the natural world, and it is in moments like this that we need to own up to our part in it and take action to undo the harm we have done. Please join us in turning your outrage into justice: what can you do individually, and what can we do as a collective, to use our anger and frustration to make things better? Over the coming weeks you’ll learn more about what Sierra Club and NYCICO specifically are working on behind the scenes, but we welcome your feedback, criticism, and ideas now as always. We are advocating for critical messaging: Vote. Make calls. Back these critical issues with dollars and support. Track federal, state and local legislation that could positively or negatively impact our communities. Please consider checking out these resources if you are looking to make positive change: Americans of Conscience - Empowered positive action. https://americansofconscience.com/ Rogan's List - https://roganslist.blogspot.com/ Support additional organizations dedicated to fighting racism and bigotry. There are many, such as the NAACP Legal Defense & Education Fund, Equal Justice Initiative, or your local ACLU chapter. It is the culture of Sierra Club NYCICO to value the transformational over the transactional. We practice the Jemez Principles at all levels of our organization and include them here as a rallying message: 1) be inclusive; 2) emphasis on bottom-up organizing; 3) let people speak for themselves; 4) work together in solidarity and mutuality; 5) build just relationships among ourselves; 6) commitment to self-transformation. Please read below for the message from Michael Brune, Executive Director of the Sierra Club, who encourages fighting and advocating for change. Kind regards, Katie George, Chair, NYCICO in conjunction with the Steering Committee and NYCICO Leadership Team From Outrage to Justice By Michael Brune May 29, 2020 Photo by iStockphoto.com/Coast-to-Coast By now, you’ve likely seen the video of Christian Cooper, a Black birder, being unjustly harassed by a white woman who was illegally walking her dog off leash in Central Park. Amy Cooper’s call to the police could have resulted in yet another death of an unarmed Black person at the hands of an officer -- just like George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and so many others before them. What happened to Christian Cooper is part of a long, ugly history of racial exclusion in our parks and public spaces. Like water fountains and lunch counters, many national parks were once segregated. Black people have been killed for drifting into waters that were supposed to be for whites only. Just a few months ago, a Black person, Ahmaud Arbery, was killed for running in a neighborhood that his murderers seemed to believe was for whites only. Racist incidents like these go a long way toward explaining why Black people feel excluded from our country’s wild places and national parks. But Black people and other people of color deserve to be safe in our parks and public lands. They deserve to be safe while going for a run. They deserve to be safe sitting in their own vehicles, as George Floyd was before he was pinned to the ground and murdered by police. They deserve to be safe relaxing in their own homes, as Breonna Taylor was doing when officers fired more than 20 rounds into her kitchen and living room. They deserve to be safe, period. We should be outraged -- and I know that millions of us are indeed outraged -- by the racist violence inflicted upon Christian Cooper, Arbery, Floyd, Taylor, and so many others. But as Sierra Club members and supporters, we need to go beyond outrage to working for justice. As an organization, we’re committed to making the outdoors a safe place for everyone. So many of us have found peace, joy, and community in the woods, on the water, on the mountains, and in the desert -- and we know that everyone deserves to have the outdoors as a refuge, especially in these challenging times. To make that vision a reality, we need people like you -- people who have joined our outings, who volunteer their time and money to protect their local wilderness -- to become anti-racist allies. You are the person best positioned to make sure that your local trails and birding spots are safe places for people of color. Just like we need to work hard to fight climate change and protect nature, we need to be active in dismantling the racism that is tearing our country apart. Indeed, we cannot separate these issues. The companies that have profited from fossil fuels and accelerated the climate crisis are the same ones who have benefited from environmental injustice, colonialism, and racism. What does it look like to practice anti-racism in the outdoors? I’m not going to pretend to have all the answers. But if you’re white and you get outdoors with people of color, listen when they talk about what they need to feel safe, and work to make it happen. Don’t dismiss people’s stories of experiencing aggression or fear in the outdoors, even if they don’t match your reality. Ask your local park administrator what they’re doing to protect people of color. If you or your friends encounter an Amy Cooper on the trail, step in to de-escalate the situation and reduce harm. What bystanders do matters. And we need folks of all identities to get involved with existing efforts to make the outdoors safe for everyone, because everyone can benefit from time spent in nature. Learn about the Sierra Club’s Outdoors for All campaign and how you can get involved. Support our partners in this space, like Latino Outdoors, GirlTrek, and Outdoor Afro (full disclosure, I serve on their board). None of us will end racism through our individual actions. Systemic evils demand systemic changes. But together, we can work to make the outdoors a safe haven for everyone who needs one. As Christian Cooper told The New York Times, We should be out here. The birds belong to all of us. And our anti-racist practice must not end when we leave the park, or get into our cars and drive away from the trail. As so many have noted, Amy Coopers are in our workplaces. They’re in our schools. They’re in our churches and temples. The racist fears that drove her to call the cops on Christian Cooper are the same ones that motivate officers to use deadly force. We must hold ourselves responsible for calling out injustice wherever we see it, and working for change. Because, to paraphrase Christian Cooper, this world belongs to all of us. Michael Brune is the executive director of the Sierra Club, the largest grassroots environmental organization in the United States. You can email him at [email protected] and follow him on Twitter (@bruneski) and Facebook. See more stories by this author

OutdoorFest 21.10.2020

For those watching our story - this is a video of the presentation Soijen was talking about from Mappy Hour in 2018! Give it a watch and give them a follow ^^ #Patagonia #TrailRunning #MappyHour

OutdoorFest 14.10.2020

Haven't heard of Prospect Park's "Mean Hill", "Condom Hill" or "Mud Hole"? Now you have: https://mappyhour.org//thoughts-on-trail-running-in-new-y/

OutdoorFest 11.10.2020

What's your pledge? #EarthDay2020

OutdoorFest 09.10.2020

Free photo + video class! https://www.nikonevents.com/us/live/nikon-school-online/

OutdoorFest 06.10.2020

Free photo + video class! https://www.nikonevents.com/us/live/nikon-school-online/

OutdoorFest 24.09.2020

OutdoorFest 2016 Speaker Michael Wardian just won the first ever Quarantine Backyard Ultra: outsideonline.com/24/quarantine-backyard-ultra-mike-wardian

OutdoorFest 19.09.2020

Want to hang? Join us tomorrow night for a game of trivia! The theme is LAKES. https://mappyhour.org/events//04/virtual-trivia-night-lakes

OutdoorFest 13.09.2020

Tonight, we cook White Bean & Kale Soup. Who's in? https://mappyhour.org//virtual-cooking-demo-white-bean-kal

OutdoorFest 24.08.2020

NYC runners leading the way: https://www.outsideonline.com//coronavirus-marathon-race-c

OutdoorFest 19.08.2020

Don't have plans tomorrow night? Come hang with #mappyhour on Zoom: https://mappyhour.org//virtual-campfire-adventure-stories-