'Nature Keeps Me Grounded' - The Trail Posse

‘Nature Keeps Me Grounded’ – The Trail Posse

It’s hard to say how or why Chevon Powell was granted a rebirth so close to the beginning of her life. She was only 5 months old when her family’s Houston apartment burned down. She was rescued after suffering first- and second-degree burns on about 75% of her body.

At one point the Powell family was summoned to bid their baby girl farewell.

More than 35 years later, Powell has gone to plenty of places, just not the destination the medical staff at Hermann Hospital had feared.

Powell was released from Hermann on May 12, a date she counts as her “second birthday.” Her friends call it her “Phoenix birthday,” because she rose from the ashes like the mythical bird.

“I’ve been gifted a lot of life I wasn’t supposed to have,” Powell said. She had 14 surgeries by the time she was 15 years old. The last one unsuccessfully attempted to lower three toes in her right foot to the ground. Rather than try again, she decided to keep on moving.

Powell’s many travels landed her in Seattle, where last year she launched the Refuge Outdoor Festival, a three-day camping experience geared toward people of color and their allies. The event centers on community building and includes workshops and arts and other outdoor activities. The second edition will be held Sept. 27-29 at the Tolt-McDonald Park and Campground, near Carnation.

This year’s festival will be capped at 300 participants. People, including Powell’s parents, are flying in from other parts of the country, prompting her to contemplate holding similar events in other regions of the country in 2020.

The festival was inspired by Powell’s experiences at Camp Janus, which she calls “Burn Camp,” a therapeutic and recreational camp in Texas for burn victims. “Burn Camp” revealed to her not only the healing power of nature, but of sharing space with people who either looked like her or shared her circumstances, whether they be racial or gender identities or surviving fire.

Powell is Black, with a cleanly shaven head and a friendly face framed by smoothed-over scars. She comes from an event-planning background. This particular event, the Refuge Festival, happens to be mission-driven, though not in a way that others might assume.

One of the dominant false narratives of the outdoors is that people of color are missing from it. Purveyors cite statistics showing whites accounting for nearly 80 percent of visitors to national parks or 93 percent of bird watchers. On the other hand, 70 percent of respondents to a survey of nonwhite voters said they participated in outdoor activities on public lands.

“We need to change the conversation because people of color do [outdoor] things,” Powell said. “We just talk about it differently. We don’t talk about being outdoors. We just go fishing. We just go do the activity.”

Nature was why Powell relocated to Seattle nine years ago, but she already was immersed in it. One of her childhood preoccupations — in addition to a fascination with fire (“I was a little pyro,” she says) — was wanderlust. In grade school, she studied maps of her native Texas, the United States and the world. She became determined: “Oh, I’m going everywhere.”

On a quest to visit all 50 states (she is up to 44), Powell checked off Oregon, then Washington, during an Amtrak trip to Chicago. In Seattle, she spied mountains, trees and water, and vowed to return. She eventually did, taking a job with AmeriCorps, a domestic community service program.

After founding her consulting business, Golden Bricks Events, Powell landed at REI as an event planner. There, she used an employee grant to take a solo backpacking trip in New England, not long after her first-ever backpacking trek, which she did with a group of women of color that summer.

Powell had driven to Stowe, Vermont, where she planned to spend the first night of her two-week journey in a hotel. While checking directions, she noticed she was being followed by a police car. She’d had her share of driving-while-Black incidents, but this one was different.

The white male officer followed her into the hotel parking lot. When Powell exited her car, he blasted his siren and ordered her back in. “What are you doing here?” he asked. She explained her trip, pointed out her pack in the trunk and pair of hiking shoes on the back seat.

“That’s unbelievable,” the officer told Powell, making a not infrequent assumption. He radioed for backup. When it arrived, Powell overheard the first officer uttering the word “unbelievable” several more times, then the second one saying, “Let her go.”

The trip was not derailed. Powell later hung out with a white family in Acadia National Park in Maine, after they helped recover the keys she’d locked in her car. She even encountered one other Black person, a man also from Texas; he too was trying to visit all 50 states. She didn’t mention her first-night incident with the police to anyone, not even him.

Already a seed in her mind, the idea of a Refuge Outdoor Festival began to germinate, she says. “I started thinking, what can I do so things like this don’t happen to people?” Powell added. “I do events.” She went back to REI, then left to start her business.

Death, her lifelong shadow, provided a final push. Powell lost 11 family members during a nearly yearlong sequence. The eighth was a cousin everyone called “Plump.” Powell had just returned from the funeral of another cousin when she received the call about Plump’s passing.

It was a sign to get serious about staging the Refuge Festival.

“Nature keeps me grounded,” Powell said. “It shows that there’s more than just the things I’m dealing with. There’s a grand expanse. … I’m a piece of the puzzle and not everything in the puzzle. It goes back to the community and engaging that community in trying to make this a better place to live for future generations.”

It’s apt that Chevon Powell does what she does to help preserve the future. After all, she wasn’t even supposed to have one.

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Celebrating Juneteenth and the Outdoors – Ventures

Celebrating Juneteenth and the Outdoors – Ventures

Juneteenth, also known as “Emancipation Day” or “Freedom Day,” is an African-American holiday that commemorates the day when enslaved Black Americans were emancipated on June 19th, 1865, in the former Confederate States of America. Although Juneteenth is not a federally recognized holiday, Ventures wants to celebrate this critical moment in American history and honor the liberation of people whose rights were stolen. A unique way that our community can acknowledge this holiday is by embracing the outdoors at the upcoming events that are hosted by Chevon Powell’s Golden Bricks Events.

Born and raised in Texas, Chevon has always loved the outdoors ever since she was a child and would fish with her grandmother and go to summer camp. “The outdoors has always been a part of my life,” said Chevon. Chevon joined Ventures’ community of entrepreneurs two years ago, with over twenty years of experience in the event industry. She has been a trusted consultant for organizations and was recognized by the South Seattle Emerald as a source of fostering a healing community for people of color.

This year, she won the fan-favorite prize at InnoVentures, Ventures’ pitch competition and fundraiser. Chevon created the first Refuge Outdoor Festival in 2018 to elevate people of color and their experiences outdoors. Chevon stated, “When people are interacting with the outdoors, they are healthier as an individual and as a community.”

Chevon’s appreciation for the outdoors had never faltered, even when she was pulled over by the police in Vermont on a solo backpacking trip along the Appalachian Trail. “It was a terrifying experience. They looked at me and didn’t perceive me to be a part of the outdoors.” Chevon’s story is intertwined with many others who have experienced similar encounters. This prompted her to launch her business, Golden Bricks Events, to change the narrative around how others view people of color interacting with the outdoors. “It’s not nature that’s discriminatory.” Through her consulting and event business model, she challenges other organizations and businesses to think through a community-centered inclusive lens.

Representation matters. That is a statement that Chevon lives by when showcasing her work through the Refuge Outdoor Festival. The mission of her business is to create experiences that meet the needs of people of color who want to enjoy the outdoors in a safe environment. The Refuge Outdoor Festival is usually a two-day camping event geared toward people of color that is centered on outdoor recreation, community conversations, art, and music.

This year, it is set to be an online event on September 18th – 20th. Although the opportunity for a large public gathering is limited, it will not stop the event from being held virtually. It will still feature local artists and community members who support creating a safe space for people of color.

Chevon’s dream is to work herself out of business so that everybody can feel included in outdoor activities and hobbies. However, as a Black business owner, there are a different set of challenges that come with managing a small business⁠—as is still evident by racial discrimination in financial institutions. Chevon mentioned “being a solo entrepreneur has always been challenging, so it’s good to have support and guidance from organizations like Ventures” that are aware of the widespread economic inequalities in this country.

Growing up, Chevon knew the importance of celebrating Juneteenth as a holiday in her community. “We should all be aware of this very important day,” Chevon stated. As a child in Texas, Juneteenth was not a holiday that she and her family could take off from school and work. However, it was a day that her family encouraged her to commemorate to remember what Black Americans and allies strived to achieve after years of being devalued as humans by the transatlantic slave trade. It is an opportunity to remind Americans of the past, and to amplify equitable access to opportunities and success for African Americans.

You can follow Chevon’s work on Instagram and Facebook to receive notifications about upcoming events and opportunities. 

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Refuge Outdoor Festival returns for a second year | Snoqualmie Valley Record

Refuge Outdoor Festival returns for a second year | Snoqualmie Valley Record

The Refuge Outdoor Festival is returning for a second year to Tolt-MacDonald Park in Carnation, Sept. 27-29. The festival is a three-day camping experience geared toward people of color, outdoor recreation and community building.

Refuge was launched by Chevon Powell, a Texas native who moved to Seattle nine years ago. Powell said she created the festival after she had an incident with a police officer in Vermont. After being followed, stopped and questioned by the police officer, Powell said she saw that as an opportunity to create an experience where people could come together and build community.

“As an event planner by trade, I thought I could use my skills to change what people see around people of color being outside,” she said. “I wanted to bring community together so that we can all be in a safe space outside and enjoy a weekend together… it’s like a family reunion.”

The festival is planned to be a safe place that brings together people of all ages and recreation levels to explore and celebrate diversity, nature and life. The festival includes daily outdoor recreation activities including hiking and fishing, community conversations, nightly conversations, workshops, yoga, meditation, music, dancing and art. Workshops and an ice cream social will kick off the event on Friday. A Snoqualmie Tribe recognition will also be read. Saturday is packed with workshops, outdoor activities, music and silent disco to end the night. Sunday will include a service project and conversation.

“There’s a notion that people of color don’t do the [outdoors],” Powell said. “There’s a lot of negative stereotypes and perspectives in people of color… I wanted to create a space where we could have those conversations around diversity, equity and inclusion in the outdoors specifically.”

This year, the festival is expecting about 200 people. Powell said community members are welcomed to drop by for a full day or stay the full weekend. Refuge is an intergenerational event and all are welcome — people of color and allies.

Full access passes are $110, youth passes are $45, children under 8 are free. Ticket information is available online at bit.ly/ROFest2019. Detailed festival lodging information can be found on the festival website, www.refugeoutdoorfestival.com.

“There is a low number of [people of color] in the outdoor industry. We don’t necessarily get the opportunity as people of color and this is the opportunity to learn from people that look like us, and I think that is important,” Powell said. “Refuge is creating that space where you can find those things and learn from people that might look like you.”

Refuge was created by Golden Bricks Events — Powell’s consulting business — which has a record of developing events and festivals that encompass outdoor recreation, community and diversity.

Golden Brick Events builds experiences showcasing the voices and faces of people of color and marginalized communities, bringing people together in the outdoors and serving the needs of a diverse and inclusive community.

Editor’s note: A previous version of this article stated that the Snoqualmie Tribe would perform a land recognition on Friday night. The Snoqualmie Tribe will not perform a land recognition. Refuge Outdoor Festival will read a land recognition provided by the Snoqualmie Tribe.

The Refuge Outdoor Festival is creating a space to explore and celebrate diversity, nature and life. Photo courtesy of Tennishia Williams

The Refuge Outdoor Festival is creating a space to explore and celebrate diversity, nature and life. Photo courtesy of Tennishia Williams

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'Celebration of Black Folks & Outdoors' - Birds Connect Seattle

‘Celebration of Black Folks & Outdoors’ – Birds Connect Seattle

The rain would not stay away, but spirits were not dampened at the series-opening Sundaes Outside event at Be’er Sheva Park on Sunday, May 15.

The “celebration of Black Folks and the Outdoors,” across from Rainier Beach High School in south Seattle, featured live performances, a marketplace, and outdoor recreation workshops — as well as ice cream, of course.

Rainier Beach residents see and touch urban examples from Seattle Audubon’s specimen collection.

Seattle Audubon partnered for the free series with Golden Bricks Events, the producer of the popular Refuge Outdoor Festival, a three-day outdoor recreation experience geared to Black, Indigenous, and People of Color and their allies.

Chevon Powell, founder of Golden Brick Events.

Seattle Audubon, with assistance from the Seward Park Audubon Center, led walks to an osprey nest located in the heart of the Rainier Beach neighborhood, showed off bird skins and organizational programs, and conducted a raffle for a gently used pair of binoculars in the marketplace.

Smiles amidst the rain at the Rainier Beach Osprey nest site.

Seattle Audubon will next support Golden Bricks’ summer edition of Refuge Day, at the Seward Park amphitheater on Saturday, June 4, 1–5 p.m. Seattle Audubon has been a sponsor of the Refuge Outdoor Festival since its inception.

Grace Rajendran’s artistic chalkboard sign for the raffle.

Grace Rajendran, Seattle Audubon board member, and Wendy Walker, Seattle Audubon’s community engagement manager, show off an Osprey in the Sundaes Outside marketplace.

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Embrace adventure with Refuge Outdoor Festival: Fifth-annual Refuge Outdoor Festival, Aug. 12-14, expands BIPOC community access to outdoor recreation at King County’s Tolt-MacDonald Park – King County, Washington

Story

A camping experience geared toward Black, Indigenous, People of Color (BIPOC) returns to King County’s Tolt-MacDonald Park this summer. The annual Refuge Outdoor Festival, a unique outdoor recreation and community-building experience, takes place Aug. 12-14.

Now in its fifth season, the festival is expected to attract more than 500 attendees for a weekend filled with adventure and community building in the great outdoors.

The festival is a safe space for participants with varying levels of outdoor experience. More than 20 outdoor-focused workshops and activities are planned and will be led by experts and community partners who make the information and experiences accessible for all. Participants can also enjoy community conversations, nightly concerts, art exhibits, an outdoor vendor market, silent disco, and a variety of other entertainment options.

For those staying overnight, an assortment of onsite camping options will be available ranging from primitive sites to glamping accommodations.

“We are excited to have Refuge Fest back at Tolt-MacDonald Campground and to bring the community together again,” said Chevon Powell, festival organizer and founder and managing director of Golden Bricks Events (GBE). “Refuge is not your typical festival or camping experience. We encourage our community to do as much or as little as they’d like, as long as they take a moment of refuge from all the things going on in the world.”

Tickets and detailed festival information are available at refugeoutdoorfestival.com. Full-access festival passes are priced on a sliding scale and limited scholarship tickets are available.

Acknowledging that many participants may not have all the necessary equipment, access to a gear bank and camp kitchen reservations will be provided in partnership with REI and the Washington Trails Association. As with every GBE event, participants can be assured that inclusivity for all remains the focus of the weekend’s adventures.

Chris Liu, a volunteer with GBE community partner Outdoor Asian, said participating in the 2021 Refuge Outdoor Festival was life changing.

“Oshun Swim School’s workshop at Refuge inspired me to continue on my journey of reconnecting with water and I’ve been taking lessons with Seattle Parks and Rec these past few months,” Liu said.

Refuge Day is a slightly smaller event where participants can prepare for the upcoming Refuge Outdoor Festival by learning the ins and outs of outdoor gear while creating space for comradery and meaningful connections with other festivalgoers. That event is set for Aug. 5 at the REI Seattle flagship store.

Relevant links

About Golden Bricks Events

Golden Bricks is an event production company addressing diversity, equity, and inclusion by creating special events and festivals that showcase the voices and faces of Black, Indigenous, and People of color in the outdoors. Its mission is to create experiences that meet the needs of a diverse and inclusive audience. Our communications kit and more information are available at goldenbricksevents.com.

FOR MORE INFORMATION, CONTACT:

Jeanette Clement
Community Manager, Communications & Brand Partners | Golden Bricks Events
jeanette@goldenbricksevents.com

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Calling All People of Color: Let's Get Outdoors

Calling All People of Color: Let’s Get Outdoors

Calling all families of color! It’s time to get out and explore the outdoors. The Pacific Northwest is full of amazing natural wonders. Families in our area are lucky to be able to experience three national parks in Washington state, as well as over 140 terrific state parks.

Yet people of color are often underrepresented in the outdoors. Although the U.S. Census estimates that people of color make up roughly 41 percent of the U.S., a 2018 Outdoor Recreation Participation survey, conducted by the Outdoor Foundation, shows that just 25 percent of participants in outdoor recreation activities are people of color.

Similarly, only 28 percent of campers in the United States are people of color, according to a 2019 North American Camping Report, sponsored by Kampgrounds of America.

Refuge Outdoor Festival 

Local families of color can look forward to the upcoming Refuge Outdoor Festival, taking place Friday–Sunday, Sept. 27–29, at King County’s Tolt-Macdonald Park.

Designed for people of color, this all-ages festival brings together participants to enjoy music, activities and discussions about representation in the outdoors. All people of color and allies are welcome.

“The festival is really centered around creating an inclusive space for groups that have traditionally been marginalized in the outdoor community,” said festival organizer Chevon Powell.

Tickets are still available for the 2019 Refuge Outdoor Festival. A weekend pass costs $110 per adult or $45 per youth (under age 8 are free). For an additional $20 per tent, grab some field space for camping. Bring your own gear. Upgraded camping options are also available: car-camping spots, camper-van spots or RV spots for $125–$150, or you can rent out a yurt for $300.

More outdoor opportunities for families of color

For families of color looking for more outdoor options, groups such as Outdoor Afro, Outdoor Asian and Latino Outdoors actively work to encourage people of color to experience the outdoors. Various groups organize hikes, campouts and outdoor training throughout the year. Check out these programs and how to get involved.

Wild Youth Program
WILD Youth Program excursion to Diablo Lake. Photo courtesy of WILD Youth Program

WILD Youth Program

Created in 1997, the WILD Youth Program partners with Asian-Pacific Islander youth through cooking classes, outdoor leadership development training, gardening classes and intergenerational activities within the Asian-Pacific Islander community.

“A lot of youth may not have the opportunities to really embrace the outdoors,” says WILD program manager Vincent Kwan. “With our program, we try our best to diversify the community within the outdoors.”

Cascade Bicycle Club’s Major Taylor Project

An initiative of the Cascade Bicycle Club, the Major Taylor Project encourages youth from underrepresented communities in 18 middle schools and high schools across south Seattle to explore the Pacific Northwest. 

“The great part about the project is that we get to take the kids to places they haven’t been to by bike or even [been] in general,” says Major Taylor project manager, Richard Brown. 

The Major Taylor Project reaches youth through bicycles clubs, organized bike rides and their Build-a-Bike program.

Bikeworks youth ride families of color in the outdoors
Youth ride with Bike Works. Photo courtesy Bike Works

Bike Works youth programs

Another organization that encourages bicycling among youth of color is Seattle-based Bike Works. The program director for Bike Works’ youth programs Tina Bechler understands the importance of exposing youth of color to the outdoors. 

“There are a lot of really amazing places to get to by bicycle,” Bechler says. “I think it’s a huge opportunity for young people to see that in half-an-hour, they can go somewhere really beautiful that’s surrounded by nature.”

Bike Works trains youth to repair bikes. They also organize bike clubs for girls, endurance riding clubs and mountain biking clubs throughout the year, as well as bike touring camps in the summer.

Climbers of Color

In thinking about ways to diversify the outdoors, it’s important to also look at the leadership within the outdoor community. Climbers of Color organizes mountaineering leadership workshops throughout the year that are aimed at people of color.  

Team members Max Lam and Nicco Minutoli emphasize that the group’s main aim is to train leaders in the outdoors through their workshops. 

“We’re focused on giving people the tools to run their own outdoor camps and activities,” Minutoli explains.

For older youth with a deep interest in mountaineering and the skills necessary to take on a leadership role, Climbers of Color workshops can pave the way to that path.

Editor’s note: This article was originally published in 2018 and udpated for 2019.

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Diversity in the Outdoors: A Conversation with Chevon Powell (Online) | Wenatchee Outdoors

Hosted by the North Cascades Institute

Class Tuition: $15

The outdoor scene presents an opportunity for all people to connect with our shared earthly home. However, the conservation and recreation fields in the U.S. have been disproportionately shaped by white, able-bodied figures and the trail has not been a welcoming place for diverse people.

While Black, Indigenous, and people of color (BIPOC) have always been out on the trail despite this history, we’re now seeing a welcome increase in participation, as well as overlapping conversations about social justice and outdoor recreation. More people of diverse identities are getting out, having fun, and adding to the richness of outdoor culture. Discussions about diversity in the outdoors help to grow a diverse and just outdoor scene.

Please join us in welcoming Chevon Powell to our virtual platform. Chevon is the founder of Golden Bricks Events (GBE) and Refuge Outdoor Festival—an annual outdoor recreation camping experience geared toward Black, Indigenous, People of Color. She is an experienced event professional and community advocate for outdoor access and environmental justice.

Chevon will be sharing with us her story of exploring natural and social landscapes, as well as facilitating a reflective conversation in small groups.

This online program offers an opportunity to participate in a thought-provoking and inspiring conversation around building diversity in the outdoors.

For more information or to register click here.

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Q&A with Refuge Outdoor Festival Founder Chevon Powell – Mountains To Sound Greenway Trust

In August 2021, despite a heatwave and wildfire smoke, around 100 BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, People of Color) campers of all ages came out to spend a long weekend at Refuge Outdoor Festival at Squire Creek Park near Darrington. Participants  took workshops, participated in a silent disco, attended a partners market, and most importantly, had the opportunity to build community and connect in person.

Refuge Outdoor Festival is a three-day camping experience that is geared for BIPOC and centered around “building community through outdoor recreation, conversations, music, and art.” Chevon Powell, the founder of Golden Bricks Events, the company behind Refuge Outdoor Festival, started Refuge four years ago out of a desire to see more people of color outside recreating and creating community.

In the last year and a half, Chevon has pivoted and redesigned her programming from a very in-person focused event to a virtual one, calling it a “camp-in.” With some COVID restrictions changing in Washington, the most recent Refuge Festival was held in-person for the first time since 2019.

We recently had a chance to connect with Chevon after a whirlwind of a year. Read our conversation below to learn more about the upcoming virtual event for Refuge, what the future looks like for the festival, and more!

What was your favorite part about the most recent Refuge Fest?

We had someone named Pablo just show up at our table and they came over and said, “hey, can I help y’all?” and we said sure! Pablo took over, they became the raffle MC and were truly the best raffle caller. At our closing circle their word was “happy.” To have a young kid in the woods just out their doing their thing, it brought a lot of joy. Pablo was doing the most out there.

What can people expect at the upcoming virtual Refuge event September 17-19? Highlights?

This one is going to be really cool. I think you know just the way the world is working now, that advocacy has become a hot topic in the community. And making sure that when we talk about outdoor recreation we are also talking about advocacy. We have workshops on how to build a digital toolkit around advocacy, another workshop around social justice resourcing. And we also have a workshop with someone talking about low tides that we went out and filmed at Alki a few weeks ago. We have an artist out of Philly who will be performing on Saturday and they’re dropping the videos for their EPs via Refuge. So that’s really cool.

And the DJ battle is so much fun! It’s fun to bounce between rooms and hang out with different folks. That’ll be a lot of fun.

I assume that you’re not leading all of these, right?

Oh no, definitely not! The beautiful thing is that we did a call to the community and between our sponsors and partners I think we have about 15 [really cool] workshops plus over the weekend. We’ll be behind the scenes making sure that the community is safe—safety is a big thing. I’ll get to watch the recordings afterwards, everything we recorded I went back last year and watched again.

And you’re expecting people from across the country, right?

Yes! Last year we had folks from across about 20 states which was just the most bizarre and random thing—everywhere from Wyoming to Kentucky. Last year I crashed the Black affinity space and there were three Black women from North Carolina talking about linking up afterward. They were saying, “you go hiking? I want to go hiking with you! We’re only two hours away from each other, let’s make it happen.” So I’ll probably crash things like that.

You have a goal of getting 10,000 people of color outside. How has that been going?

We kind of paused it with COVID, and we’re trying to reassess and figure out how to get a better count especially since we aren’t always there with people. With people engaging with us last year and the previous years we are at over 3,000 POC. We’re excited that our outreach continues to grow and that’s also the struggle [as a small organization].

Just the presence of Refuge has inspired people to get outside. Last year, right before we were heading into lockdown, I was in a pitch competition for a local organization called InnoVentures. After I gave my pitch, the MC who was also in the room, she said, “Chevon you don’t know me but I know you.” She went into saying how for the last few years she’s followed Refuge and she started crying and said it’s inspired her to get outside with her kids, she said hasn’t been able to make it to our events, but just seeing that we’re around and the way that we speak about the outdoors is for everyone has been super inspiring and had touched her pretty deeply.

How can other organizations assist Refuge?

We are always looking for partner organizations. We are starting to consider what it looks like to partner with organizations to do smaller one-offs for communities and a really targeted experience. We’re looking at that for next year and continuing to build our relationships and partnerships so that our reach does get to all people so that we can get them outside.

Not everyone is afforded the luxury to get outside, but are we creating opportunities for them to be able to connect with nature? That’s going to be our thing moving forward and that’s why this year alone we had thirty video projects. Even though we couldn’t get outside together or get outside with the folks we’ve touched across the country, we can create content and we can have you experience the outdoors from your living room.

Do you need volunteers? If people can’t volunteer their time, can they volunteer their money?

Yes, our donation link is always live! And we do have an open call for volunteers ongoing. Because yes, we have the virtual programming that we need support for, but then we are also growing as an organization. Like sometimes I don’t have the monetary resources to for example, redo the website, but if someone wants to volunteer to support that happening, that’s great.

For virtual, we are looking for about ten more volunteers and that’s just helping with chat. Having folks moderate the chat is a way to make our community feel safe.

Is there a future of Refuge outside of Washington?

Yeah that’s something that’s really exciting! Last year we were thinking we were going to expand in 2020, but 2020 told us all different things. We are looking to stay with our current program into 2022. In 2023 we’re hoping to expand Refuge to places like California and the east coast. I always looked at it as a more in your backyard event, because Refuge’s biggest thing is making the community and building the connections and yes you can do that by flying to another place and meeting folks, but how much more impactful if it was like people who live 15 minutes or two hours from each other. It’ll be a much broader impact when it’s like that.

We have had people run into each other. In fact, one woman from Seattle ran into someone she met at Refuge in a coffee shop in Oakland! That’s dope.

How do you approach creating partnerships and relationships?

It takes a lot of work. One of the things that we’re considering when we’re looking at [Refuge] is how are we better in community? And how are we connected in those communities? Refuge in Seattle is the flagship and has a community advisory board, from people all over the country.

In other cities I have started having conversations with folks about building community advisory boards there because we want to be connected to the community and I can’t do that because I am not there. And I don’t have the capacity to build the level of community that I think Refuge needs in each community and I don’t want to, it’s important that each city has that. I can’t lead in a community that isn’t mine. I’ve found that as you’re in community you’re always learning and growing and moving in different ways because if you’re staying still you’re not doing it in community, you’re just doing a thing.

As you’ve wrapped the fourth Refuge Festival what are some lessons you’ve learned?

One of the lessons is being present. Being present in the community and they’ll tell you what they want and how they want it. I also think active listening is a big one and then learning publicly. We’ve had to learn publicly and had to apologize publicly for things that we’ve done wrong—that’s a huge lesson for me. This is a big shocker, but I am very much an introvert and when I started Refuge I wouldn’t even tell people why I was starting it, like my own individual story. I wouldn’t talk to people in public, that terrified me. I would be in the corner, even if I was with a bunch of people.

I’ve had to step into my own power more than I ever thought. When I was first called on stage at an event at REI I was in tears because I was having a panic attack. To go from that to where I am today like, “yeah, I’ll keynote, let’s do this!” is big.

It’s the big life lessons to take those steps to do it and knowing why you’re doing it. I do it for the community and I do it for the change that I want to see. It’s not all just about outdoor recreation and conservation, we’re all on this planet together so let’s come together and get it together. That’s why I do the work that I do.

Interested in learning more about Refuge or attending the upcoming virtual event? You can learn more on their site. 

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Gathering community at Refuge Outdoor Festival — Outside Voices Podcast

Gathering community at Refuge Outdoor Festival — Outside Voices Podcast

This episode of Outside Voices is brought to you by REI, your local outdoor co-op working to help you experience the power of nature. REI brings top-quality gear and apparel, expert advice, rental equipment, inspiring stories of life outside and outdoor experiences to enjoy alone or share with your friends and family. Stay tuned for a conversation with Yanira Castro and Ladan Yalzadeh, as they talk about REI’s newest initiative: Race and Place.

Music:

“Cooling” by Audiobinger from http://freemusicarchive.org
License: CC BY-NC 4.0

“Pumkin Spice” by Audiobinger from http://freemusicarchive.org
License: CC BY-NC 4.0

Photos:

From top left to top right:
[Photo of Chevon and her parents at the 2019 Refuge Festival, taken by Sarah Shimazaki after recording a conversation for Outside Voices]

[Group photo of smiling Refuge participants dressed in cold-weather gear on a grassy lawn, photo provided by Chevon and Refuge]

[Candid photo of Refuge participants during a workshop, photo provided by Chevon and Refuge]

[Candid photo of Refuge participants gathering for a workshop on storytelling and place and belonging, particularly centered on stories from Mauna Kea in Hawai’i. A Hawaiian flag hangs in the background. Photo provided by Chevon and Refuge]

From bottom left to bottom right:
[Photo of Refuge participants walking across a bridge, photo provided by Chevon and Refuge]

[Photo of Chevon wearing a yellow beanie, Refuge t-shirt and smiling for a selfie on a bridge, photo provided by Chevon and Refuge]

[Photo of smiling Refuge participants, from left to right: Esmeralda, our intern, Bam and Karen, two friends and Sarah Shimazaki in an orange beanie.]

[Photo of Chevon’s parents and their friends walking around the campsite together, photo provided by Chevon and Refuge]

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Local Hero: Chevon Powell

Local Hero: Chevon Powell

[This story originally appeared in Alpinist 73, which is now available on some newsstands and in our online store. Only a small fraction of our many long-form stories from the print edition are ever uploaded to Alpinist.com. Be sure to pick up Alpinist 73 for all the goodness!–Ed.]

Chevon Powell, organizer of the Refuge Outdoor Festival. [Photo] Earica Brown

Chevon Powell, organizer of the Refuge Outdoor Festival. [Photo] Earica Brown

In 2015 thirty-two-year-old Chevon Powell was driving in Vermont on her way to start a two-week solo backpacking trip. Originally from Houston, she’d attended college in New England, and she was ecstatic to be back among the changing colors of a Northeast autumn. Overhead, the leaves of sugar maples created the dazzling hues of red, orange and yellow iconic of the state. Fluttering in the breeze, the trembling aspen seemed to hint at the winter ice to come. Then Powell noticed a police car was following her.

WHEN POWELL REACHED THE HOTEL where she planned to spend the first night, before heading into the mountains, the officer confronted her and demanded to know what she was doing in the area. As she explained her purpose, he declared, “That’s unbelievable.” The officer called for backup. He kept insisting that the situation was “unbelievable” to the policeman who arrived, but the second officer let Powell go. She proceeded to hike along a section of the Appalachian Trail, and in the years that followed, she has continued to advocate for a broader picture of who recreates outside.

In many of her public interviews, Powell tells this story as part of what inspired her to establish the Refuge Outdoor Festival. She organizes the festival through her long-standing company, Golden Bricks Events, as a “three-day camping experience geared toward people of color.” Since the inaugural year of 2018 at Tolt-Macdonald Park in Carnation, Washington, Powell knew she was meeting a deep need for herself and for members of her community to feel safe while enjoying the outdoors. Some participants said this was the first time they’d seen “Black people hugging and smiling” at an outdoor festival, feeling that “This is our space,” as she told me in the autumn of 2020.

The philosophy behind Refuge doesn’t assume what recreating should look like to different people–the event is diverse by design. Want to go for a hike or learn about survival skills? Great! Want to gather in a circle and create music outdoors? That’s equally valid. Bethany Lebewitz, a climber and one of the founders of Color the Crag festival, offers insight into why spaces such as Refuge are helpful in bringing people from varied backgrounds together: “The way our society is structured, there are lines and compartments everywhere that…have divided a lot of us–in reality it’s all connected.” And while Powell is not a climber herself, she supports efforts to diversify the narrative around the pursuit.

Not everybody takes up climbing to crush hard grades–the appeal can lie in simply being outdoors, connecting with nature, with a community and with one’s own body and mind.

When the pandemic arrived in 2020, Powell moved the festival online, offering workshops on conservation, disability justice, gardening, somatic healing and much more. She still avoids imposing any particular iteration of “being outdoorsy” onto attendees–so that each of them can decide for themselves. Narratives of mountaineering and outdoor adventure often remain dominated by colonial ideas of exploration and conquest. “But that’s not how all people of color experience the outdoors,” Powell says. She designs Refuge with a broader scope: “My core belief is the outdoors is for everyone and there will be something about Refuge or something else that I’m doing that resonates with a person that might get them into something they’ve never experienced before.”

With the rise of a “second wave of Black Lives Matter,” Powell observes, “more people are starting to acknowledge the systemic racism in the outdoors, and even in climbing culture.” Today, for example, there’s a grassroots-led push to replace bigoted route names at many crags. Powell doesn’t expect advocacy work to become any “easier,” she says, but she’s now hopeful that more people will understand its necessity. “For us as people of color to be connected to nature, or to be more connected to each other,” she continues, “those are the things that keep me sane and keep me wanting to create Refuge and other opportunities. So that we can live freer…and actually have real change on individuals’ lives and on the world.” In a time when we are all facing high anxiety, Powell reminds us that everyone deserves to find healing and belonging in outdoor communities and in nature. Everyone deserves to take refuge.

The author, Anaheed Saatchi. [Photo] Courtesy Anaheed Saatchi

The author, Anaheed Saatchi. [Photo] Courtesy Anaheed Saatchi

[This story originally appeared in Alpinist 73, which is now available on some newsstands and in our online store. Only a small fraction of our many long-form stories from the print edition are ever uploaded to Alpinist.com. Be sure to pick up Alpinist 73 for all the goodness!–Ed.]

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