The 29 Best U.S. Outdoor Festivals in 2023, from Music and Sports to Food and Film

Refuge Outdoor Festival named “The 29 Best U.S. Outdoor Festivals in 2023” from Outside Magazine

Sure, you might feel a little party-pooped after the busy holiday season, but right now is the best time to drum up ways to fill your 2023 festival card. To help, we’ve pulled together our top picks for some of the most fun, varied, and can’t-miss outdoor and outdoor-oriented experiences across the United States over the next 12 months. Whether you’re an adventure junkie, a culture vulture, a music nerd, a party animal, a diehard foodie, or a parent of toddlers, we promise there’s something entertaining here for everyone.

JANUARY

Saint Paul Winter Carnival

Saint Paul, Minnesota  / January 26 to February 5

winter parade
Saint Paul Winterfest parade (Photo: Lew Vogel)

Launched in 1886, in jubilant defiance of a bunch of visiting East Coast journalists who ripped on the state capital as an uninhabitable midwestern Siberia, this frigid fete—the oldest wintertime festival in the U.S.—is a raucous celebration of the season. Ruled by an appointed King Boreas, and Aurora, Queen of the Snows, and backed by a royal court of nearly two dozen equally fantastic characters, the carnival has a vaguely Nordic, sorta Greek mythological backstory to get lost within, if that’s your thing. But really, all you need to know is that Minnesotans take their winter fun seriously and are seriously competitive. If you want to play along, lace up for an icy running series, angle for bass and walleye during an ice-fishing tournament, scour the streets in a citywide scavenger hunt, join an all-ages jigsaw-puzzle contest, and flex your follicular prowess in a burly beard competition. If spectating is more your thing, enjoy a casual stroll through Vulcan Snow Park to admire frosty sculptures on display.

snow sculptures
Stroll through the snow sculptures in Vulcan Park. (Photo: Lew Vogel)

Sundance Film Festival

Park City, Utah / January 19 to 29

park city
Park City, Utah, and the Sundance Film Fest (Photo: Jemal Countess/Courtesy Sundance Institute)

An offshoot of the Sundance Institute, the creative-arts nonprofit founded by legendary actor-director Robert Redford, this event isn’t just the largest indie film fest in the nation, but one of the most venerated, awash in Oscar bait. While offerings run the topical gamut, it has always featured plenty of adventure-oriented and environmentally conscious gems—An Inconvenient Truth premiered here in 2006, and critically acclaimed documentaries like Chasing Ice, Crip Camp, and Meru have followed suit. Offscreen, a plethora of panels, parties, and meet and greets round out the action, and nearby resorts offer a powdery alternative to hours in the theater. While this year’s event is the first in-person gathering after a pandemic-driven two-year hiatus, you can also screen entries from the comfort of home—although you’ll be a lot less likely to bump into, say, Issa Rae or Jason Momoa when you get up for popcorn.

Honorable January Mentions:

FEBRUARY

Anchorage Fur Rendezvous

Anchorage, Alaska / February 23 to March 5

Anchorage
People compete in the Running of the Reindeer, the Fur Rendezvous, Anchorage. (Photo: Lance King/Getty Images)

Known to its faithful as the Fur Rondy, or just Rondy, this tradition began in 1936 to mark the arrival of fur-trading season and give folks a way to shake off some cabin fever. While you can still eyeball (and purchase) an array of pelts during its three-day trade fair, this is your chance to interact with locals in lively ways over ten days. Find a spot to watch any stage of the multiday World Championship Sled Dog Race, get out there and try to beat Dasher and Dancer in a footrace during the Running of the Reindeer, or sidle up to see a bag-flinging throwdown at the Alaska Cornhole Championships. For something quirkier, strap on a pair of classic metal snowshoes for a chilly softball tourney, or wrangle your best wrangle your best toilet-on-skis (people are literally plopping toilets and outhouses onto a pair of skis for this race) and go for gold in the World’s Largest Outhouse Race.

Fire and Ice Winterfest

Lava Hot Springs, Idaho / February 4 to 5

rafts in winter
You’re ready for the Polar Bear Float, right? (Photo: Lava Hot Springs Chamber of Commerce)

If you’re the kind of person who enjoys chugging Fireball and getting cozy in the sauna after a day spent frolicking in the snow, make a beeline for southeastern Idaho to experience both extremes of the temperature scale. The festival’s Polar Bear Float involves donning a wacky costume, then settling in on an inflatable for a brisk quarter-mile cruise down the Portneuf River. Luckily, opportunities abound to thaw out and relax with cozier pursuits, such as wine-tasting events, a torch-light ski run, and a fire-dancing show. To experience the best of both worlds, however, brave souls strip down to their Speedos for the Running of the Bulls, a mad dash through town that ends, mercifully, with a sizzling soak at the natural hot-spring pools.

Honorable February Mentions:

MARCH

Flash Foxy Climbing Festival

Bishop, California / March 17 to 19

women at climbing fest
Flash Foxy is a women’s climbing and bouldering event in Bishop, California. (Photo: Vikki Glinskii/Flash Foxy/@heyflashfoxy)

What was created in 2016 as a small gathering for female rockhounds has evolved into a celebration of community and climbing that now includes genderqueer, gender nonconforming, and nonbinary people. The main draw of this festival is, of course, the excellent climbing scattered around the eastern Sierra’s jaw-droppingly scenic Payahuunadu region (also known as the Owens Valley), with clinics and workshops offered for all levels of experience. The event maintains deep ties to the local Bishop Paiute community and area businesses and organizes beneficial stewardship projects such as crag clean-ups.

While Bishop is renowned for its bouldering, you can route climb here, too. This Intro to Trad class looks pretty fun. (Photo: Jenn Flemming/Flash Foxy/@heyflashfoxy)

National Cherry Blossom Festival

Washington, D.C. / March 20 to April 16

cherry blossoms
The National Cherry Blossom Festival (Photo: National Cherry Blossom Festival)

Banish the winter blahs with a trip here to witness the vibrant emergence of spring, as nearly 4,000 cherry-blossom trees around our nation’s capital hit their pretty peak in a massive explosion of pink and white blooms. A 2.1-mile loop around the Tidal Basin reservoir puts you right in the floral action, but peel yourself away to revel in the sights and sounds of the PetalPalooza arts and music shindig, admire a different kind of colorful display at the Washington Monument’s Blossom Kite Festival, and check out various cultural happenings around town that celebrate the long history of goodwill between the U.S. and Japan. In fact, the seeds of this whole petal-peeping gala were planted way back in 1909, when Yukio Ozaki, mayor of Tokyo, gifted 2,000 trees to Washington, D.C., to honor the countries’ growing friendship.

Check out the Petalpalooza music and arts festival. (Photo: National Cherry Blossom Festival)

Sedona Mountain Bike Festival

Sedona, Arizona / March 3 to 5

mountain biking
Clear out the winter cobwebs at the Sedona Mountain Bike Festival. (Photo: Corie Spruill)

Not that you need an excuse to pull out your mountain bike, but there’s no better place to bid adieu to the dreary gray of a long winter than the sun-soaked red rock of Sedona. A loaded schedule of group rides at this event presents the perfect opportunity to explore the nearly 250 miles of world-class singletrack laced throughout the nearby Coconino National Forest, with many trails launching straight from town. At night, kick back with your new dirt-covered besties in a craft-beer garden, settle in for a film screening, or boogie down at a concert. Ride hard, party hard.

Honorable March Mentions:

APRIL

Gathering of Nations Powwow

Albuquerque, New Mexico / April 27 to 29

traditional native dance
Gathering of Nations Powwow (Photo: Will Huston 2022 Courtesy of Gathering of Nations Limited)

Once a small, hyperlocal celebration of culture, the Gathering of Nations has grown to become the largest powwow in North America, drawing upward of 700 tribes from the United States and Canada. While the traditional drummers, singers, and dancers are all Indigenous, everyone is welcome to enjoy festivities that include contemporary music, an extensive arts and crafts market, a Horse and Rider Regalia parade, and the Miss Indian World pageant, which is less a contest than a means of preserving and elevating Native heritage. Come here hungry—the food court brims with tasty bites, including favorite dishes like mutton stew and fry-bread tacos.

High Water Festival

North Charleston, South Carolina / April 15 to 16

music fest and ocean
High Water from up high (Photo: Grant Hodgeon/High Water)

Held at the bucolic Riverfront Park on the banks of the Cooper River, and helmed by the Carolinian alt-country duo Shovels and Rope, this intimate indie-music festival is now in its fifth year. The lineup is small but mighty, with an emphasis on rootsy, homegrown sounds and regional acts. This year’s marquee names include Wilco, Angel Olsen, Big Boi, Orville Peck, and Lucius. Low Country cuisine shares top billing; if you’re feeling adventurous, sign up for an oyster-education class and learn how to shuck and slurp the briny mollusks.

oyster festival
Oyster-education class, High Water Festival (Photo: Roger Ho/High Water)

Vermont Maple Festival

Saint Albans, Vermont / April 28 to 30

Looking for something sweet, sticky, and traditional as heck? Tap (ahem) into the all-ages fun at this 50-plus-year-old celebration of “the official flavor of Vermont.” The good stuff takes center stage, of course, with cooking and maple-syrup contests, and plenty of opportunities to indulge in divine confections. This is also an active event, where you can lace up for the 8.5-mile Sap Run, stroll through a maple-themed art show, enjoy kid-friendly entertainment at Taylor Park, and tour a family-run sugarhouse that boils up liquid magic from nearly 30,000 local trees.

Honorable April Mentions:

MAY

Dominion Energy Riverrock

Richmond, Virginia / May 19 to 21

The western U.S. steals a lot of the outdoor-rec thunder, but this massive music-and-adventure sports bash serves it up hot in the Mid-Atlantic. Spread across various parks and trail systems along the roiling James River, Riverrock cranks up the fun with a stacked schedule of trail races, climbing contests, mountain-bike competitions, and fishing tourneys. You can also peruse art installations, take in an indie-rock-heavy concert lineup, watch doggos catch some vert at the Subaru Ultimate Air Dogs event, give back through stewardship events, stretch out with some yoga, or try your hand at activities including kayaking and slacklining.

Mountainfilm

Telluride, Colorado / May 25 to 29

Telluride
The annual, venerable Mountainfilm, Telluride, kicks off summer. (Photo: Alison Osius)

If there’s one word that appears more times than you can count on the Mountainfilm website, it’s “inspiring.” But honestly, that’s an apt descriptor. Once focused squarely on mountain-based adventure storytelling, the festival has grown into a much broader showcase for indie films from around the world that uplift spirits and spark thought and action. While screenings pop up around the country, it’s worth showing up in person for the flagship event to bask in the (sorry) inspiring company alone. Past speakers have ranged from environmental activist Julia Butterfly Hill to groundbreaking climber Lynn Hill, acclaimed climate author Bill McKibben, and Arctic photographer Subhankar Banerjee.

New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival

New Orleans, Lousiana / April 28 to May 7

Don’t let the name fool you—you don’t need to own a single Miles Davis record to enjoy this sonic buffet. It might sound like sacrilege, but even though the lineup usually includes a pretty stellar top billing (last year The Who, Willie Nelson, and Lionel Ritchie headlined), the true heart of this musical bacchanal beats on its smaller stages and in tents, where local legends and knockout upstarts abound. Sway to the good vibes at the gospel tent, get down at the larger stages to regional icons like Big Freedia and the Preservation Hall Jazz Band, and if you’re feeling frisky, wander over to the Fais Do Do area and let someone sporting a crawfish-patterned outfit guide you on the dance floor. Between sets, fuel up on a smorgasbord of southern delights that might just be the best grub on offer at any music festival in the States.

Honorable May Mentions:

JUNE

GoPro Mountain Games

Vail, Colorado / June 8 to 11

dog jumping over pool
The DockDogs Outdoor Big Air competition is always a favorite at the GoPro Mountain Games, Vail, Colorado. (Photo: Cyrus McCrimmon/Denver Post/Getty)

For most folks, the word Vail is probably synonymous with epic powder days or back bowls, but the Mountain Games prove that playtime in the Rockies shines just as brightly in the summer sun. Pros and amateurs alike compete in almost a dozen different disciplines—mountain biking, climbing, paddle sports, trail running, fly-fishing, and even disc golf—angling to nab a share of the $130,000 kitty. But the fun isn’t limited to humans; adventure pups can test their mettle in trail runs, swimming events, a DockDogs Big Air competition, and a slew of canine-friendly parties. In the evenings, the Mountains of Music concert series draws rootsy headliners; last year’s picks included Gov’t Mule, Grace Potter, and the Wailers.

Waynestock Outdoor Adventure and Music Festival

Fayetteville, West Virginia / June 8 to 11

band outdoor stage
The Waynestock fest at the New River Gorge is for outdoor adventure during the day, music at night. Here, The Roof, a band from Pittsburgh, appears on the outdoor stage. (Photo: Mandy Ritter)

This down-home affair, which kicked off in the late 1990s as nothing more than a bunch of friends (including, you guessed it, a guy named Wayne) enjoying an annual rafting trip, is now a celebrated jamboree, a mash-up of a backyard Bonnaroo and an adventure-sports summer camp. A ticket snags you a spot at a communal campsite, where festivities involve nightly bonfires, local brews, and an assortment of regional bands that tend toward the jammier side of things. During the day, choose your own adventure, with options on or near the New River Gorge. Set off on your own or sign up with local guides to tackle the area’s famed whitewater, rip through the forest along endless singletrack, or rope up to ascend one of the estimated 3,000 routes lining the steep sandstone cliffs. They don’t call it the Endless Wall for nothing.

river rafting
Someone gets tossed! Daytime river rafting is a Waynestock staple, as are hiking, biking, and climbing at this many-years-long grassroots event. (Photo: Chris Rider Photography)

Honorable June Mentions:

JULY

Lumberjack World Championships

Hayward, Wisconsin / July 20 to 22

lumberjacks
The Lumberjack World Championships in Hayward, Wisconsin: lumberjacks and lumberjills compete in sawing, chopping, speed climbing, log rolling, boom-running and more. (Photo: Joel Lerner/Xinhua/Getty)

Each summer, flannel-clad masses flock to a tiny lumber town in the Wisconsin Northwoods to get their Paul Bunyan on at this celebration of all things timber. It’s high profile enough that major TV networks often stream the action, as the Olympics of the Forest draws an international field of ax-wielding competitors vying for a share of a roughly $50,000 pot in woodsy tests of agility, precision, and brute strength. There’s chopping and sawing, of course, but the biggest treat for spectators might be watching folks speed-race up 90-foot-tall cedar poles or attempt to outlast their nemeses in a wet and wild log-rolling competition.

Newport Folk Festival

Newport, Rhode Island / July 28 to 30

music fest
Newport folk festival welcomes the Ballroom Thieves. (Photo: Adam Kissick)

Held at the idyllic harborside Fort Adams State Park, this historic concert series pays homage to the countless forms of American folk music. That doesn’t mean you’re in for pure plucking; after all, this is the festival where Bob Dylan plugged in to go electric for the first time, much to the annoyance of purists. The original iteration featured icons like Pete Seeger, Odetta, and a then teenaged Joan Baez in her debut performance. Some of the legends still pop up today—and part of the fun is that they’re not always announced in advance. Last year’s event featured a surprise festival-closing appearance by Joni Mitchell in her first performance in over two decades. Grab tickets early; they often sell out before the lineup is revealed.

Honorable July Mentions:

AUGUST

Maine Lobster Festival

Rockland, Maine / August 2 to 6

woman eating lobster
Giving her all: Lisa Bailey-Carroll at the LobsterFest lobster-eating contest. We’d rather try to run across the floating crates. (Photo: John Patriquin/Portland Press Herald/Getty)

There might be no better place in the world to stuff your face with an ocean’s worth of crustaceans than this blowout on the North Atlantic seaboard. Put down stakes at the seductively named Main Eating Tent, where thousands of pounds of fresh Maine lobster are served every which way—boiled in butter, swirled into a bisque, stuffed into gooey mac and cheese, spread across a toasted roll, and more. If you’re feeling creative, live out your best Iron Chef fantasies as part of the amateur seafood-cooking contest. Then take a break at the Marine Experience Tent, where you can handle and learn about local sea critters, or cheer for your favorites at a pageant where competitors vie for the coveted title of Sea Goddess. Shake off the lobster overload by signing up for the festival’s fun-run series, or try your luck at the International Great Crate Race, where participants attempt to blast across a line of wobbly floating boxes without tipping into the drink.

Refuge Outdoor Festival

Carnation, Washington / August 18 to 20

firemaking
Fire-making workshop at the Refuge (Photo: Golden Bricks Events/Refuge Outdoor Festival)

Held at Tolt MacDonald Park in the mountain-ringed, river-cut Snoqualmie Valley east of Seattle, this three-day campout celebrates the diverse experiences of Black, Indigenous, and other people of color in the outdoors, although it’s open to all. The events on tap honor the myriad ways we find connection in nature, with a schedule that carves out equal space for those who crave adrenaline or those who would rather seek a quieter experience. Tons of traditional recreation activities are on offer, including mountain biking, hiking, fishing, stargazing, and birding, but attendees can also get their groove on at a silent disco or join an array of workshops on outdoor skills, poetry, and spirituality. Just like with any campout, however, the secret sauce is the community formed around the campfire each night.

yoga outdoors
Morning yoga at the Refuge (Photo: Golden Bricks Events/Refuge Outdoor Festival)

Honorable August Mentions:

SEPTEMBER

Afropunk Festival

Brooklyn, New York / TBD

Santigold performs at Afropunk Brooklyn, Commodore Barry Park, Brooklyn, New York. (Photo: Cynthia Edorh/Getty)

Inspired by a 2003 documentary film of the same name that explored Black punk-rock culture, this arts-and-music festival transcends boundaries to celebrate Blackness in all its forms. While you’ll still spot plenty of guitars on stage, the eclectic lineup has formerly included genre-busting performers like Erykah Badu, the Roots, H.E.R., Doechii, and Janelle Monae. Between sets, indulge in a massage, stretch out in a yoga class, join a meditation practice, shop in a massive craft market, take a drum lesson, or just post up with a drink and admire the mind-blowing fashions on parade.

Aloha Festivals

Oahu, Hawaii / TBD

Forget winter break—the best time to visit Hawaii is in September, when the archipelago vibrates with aloha spirit during a monthlong, statewide celebration of culture and heritage. While dozens of events happen around the islands, the three signature happenings take place in Honolulu. The Royal Court Investiture kicks things off in old-school style with a coronation that pays homage to Hawaiian nobility of yore. Choose a lei, browse traditional crafts, and snack on tasty grindz (street food, in Hawaii) at Waikiki Hoolaulea, a massive block party that shuts down the beach’s main drag. Head back later for the Floral Parade, where in a centuries-old practice, P’au riders pass by on horseback, their long skirts billowing in a blaze of color.

The Floral Parade, Aloha Festivals (Photo: Courtesy Aloha Festivals)

Ohana Festival

Dana Point, California / September 29 to October 1

You might not be able to hear them over the music, but the crashing waves of the Pacific serve as backdrop for this three-day celebration of sun and sound, held at SoCal’s Doheny State Beach. The lineup is usually pretty heavy on indie and alt-rock—which should come as no surprise, since it’s curated by Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder.. Considering that last year’s headliners included Stevie Nicks, Jack White, and Pink, however, the offerings are eclectic enough to give most festival-goers a reason to head-bob. Train your ears on something a little different at the Storytellers Cove stage, where conservation-minded adventurers, artists, and athletes share inspiring tales; past speakers have included freediver Kimi Werner and pro surfer Greg Long. At the end of the day, your ticket dollars go to an array of local and national nonprofits working toward environmental and social justice.

Honorable September Mentions:

OCTOBER

Dirtybird Campout

Modesto, California / TBD

The Dirtybird Campout is wild. (Photo: Don Idio/Divisuals)

If you always wanted to attend summer camp as a kid—and don’t mind doing it a few decades later—here’s your chance. This rowdy bacchanalia, with every action set to a backdrop of thumping music, is something like what you’d get if you crossed Wet Hot American Summer with an EDM festival. Campers are faced with a wide array of ways to pass the time, from traditional camp activities (see: capture the flag, kayaking, archery, making friendship bracelets) to those that are a bit more inventive, such as twerking classes, drag shows, lap-dancing contests, and an opportunity to wake and bake with your favorite counselors at the Ganja Garden.

camp for grownups
Welcome to Camp Dirtybird. Buckle up. (Photo: Ivan Meneses/ai.visuals)

Hardly Strictly Bluegrass Festival

San Francisco, California / TBD

Funded by a banjo-loving venture capitalist who just wanted to bring a little finger-plucked joy to Bay Area music lovers, this might just be the best darn absolutely free, completely noncommercial concert event in the world. While acclaimed folk stars like Emmylou Harris, Gillian Welch, and Buddy Miller have graced its stages, the “hardly” in the fest’s name alludes to the fact that the genres aren’t limited to just bluegrass. Grab some friends, spread out a blanket, and settle in for a series of sonic delights. Past artists have included Henry Rollins, Big Freedia, Elvis Costello, and M. Ward.

Salmon Days

Issaquah, Washington / October 7 to 8

They say you can’t go home again, but try telling that to the thousands of Chinook, coho, and sockeye salmon that swim back upriver each year to spawn in the cool waters of Issaquah Creek, east of Seattle. The whole town turns out to revel in their return with a family-friendly roster of events that include a welcome parade, fish hatchery tours, fun runs, a DockDogs competition, and an aquatic-themed sidewalk chalk contest. If you can stomach the thought of noshing on these hometown heroes, the local Kiwanis Club also hosts a barbecue of alder-grilled salmon.

Honorable October Mentions:

NOVEMBER

Blk Out Retreat and Boulderfest

Chattanooga, Tennessee / TBD

The many smiles of the BLK Out Boulder Fest (Photo: Kalyn Jacobs)

Tiffany Blount founded the Black Girls Boulder climbing club as a way to create community and draw more Black women into the sport; the Blk Out Retreat and Boulderfest builds on that promise. Open to all, but centered on Black climbers of all genders, the beginner-friendly event takes place in and around the Crash Pad, an adventure-oriented hostel in downtown Chattanooga. Attendees can hop a shuttle to the Wauhatchie Boulders for guided climbing, attend outdoor-film screenings, share in a group dinner, pitch in with stewardship projects, and join conversations and workshops to build skills and open horizons.

men bouldering
Expert bouldering at the all-abilities-friendly Blk Out Retreat and Boulderfest, Chattanooga. Beginners are welcome. Left to right: Mario Morante, Chris Lespinasse, Kai Lightner, and Tyler Liggins. (Photo: Kalyn Jacobs)

Florida Seafood Festival

Apalachicola, Florida / November 3 to 4

Billed as the state’s oldest maritime event, this festival of the fruits de mer takes place on the Gulf of Mexico, in a town that touts itself as the Oyster Capital of the Southeast. That’s good news for bivalve lovers, who descend in droves to shuck and slurp. Beyond that, choose from a range of gustatory delights like fried shrimp, crab cakes, steaming paella, and boiled crawfish. Take a break from stuffing your maw at a host of family-friendly events, including a parade, a blessing of the local fleet, the Redfish Run 5K, and Blue Crab Races, where the crustaceans make a mad dash for glory.

Honorable November Mentions:

DECEMBER

Indio International Tamale Festival

Indio, California / December TBD

It’s best to arrive at this sprawling street fair, billed as the largest tamale festival in the world, with an empty stomach. Unlike food events where celebrity chefs draw big crowds, the stars here are everyday people, with street vendors and home cooks alike slinging thousands of sweet, savory, and salsa-smothered masa creations. It’ll be tough to pry yourself away from their steamy wares, but a host of distractions provide (almost) equal temptation. Enjoy dozens of performers on stages scattered around town, cheer on masked luchadores competing in traditional Mexican wrestling matches, and try not to lose your lunch while whooping it up on an array of carnival rides. Stick around for the Mercadito de Noche, a night market that sparkles with holiday light displays.

Ullr Fest

Breckenridge, Colorado / TBD

Bre
Now that’s a really long shotski, in Breckenridge, Colorado. (Photo: Louie Traub/Courtesy Breckenridge Tourism Office)

Your local weather anchor might read the forecast, but only the mighty Norse god Ullr knows the score. Each year the wintry faithful don Viking helmets and raise a glass to praise his glory in hopes of a ski season for the record books. While the mythology might seem a little suspect, the partying is solid, especially when you consider the event organizers’ 2022 quest to draw over 1,300 people to partake in the world’s longest shotski. There are also comedy shows, an ice-skating extravaganza, and a parade, where inventive float builders have a chance at a $1,000 prize. Remember, though—this whole thing is about honoring the mighty Ullr; be sure to toss a Christmas tree on the fest’s ritual bonfire to appease him so that your calendar may be stacked with endless powder days.

Sledding down Main Street, Breck. There are a parade, giant bonfire, costumes, and—oh yes—skiing and snowboarding. (Photo: Breckenridge Tourism Office)

Honorable December Mentions:


Shawnté Salabert is a SoCal-based outdoor and travel writer who generally prefers listening to sweet birdsong instead of thumping bass while out in nature. That said, she’s been a music festival nerd since the tender age of five, when she caught her first concert (Huey Lewis and the News) at Milwaukee’s 55-years-strong Summerfest.

woman hiker smiling
The author in her other natural world (Photo: Courtesy Shawnté Salabert)

 

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Learn outdoor safety tips and participate in activities at this event

Learn outdoor safety tips and participate in activities at this event

CARNATION, Wash. — Refuge Outdoor Festival has an event coming up Aug. 12-14 in Carnation, Washington. 

“It’s a three-day camping experience geared toward black indigenous people of color to connect in the outdoors and build community,” explained Chevon Powell, the founder of Refuge Outdoor Festival.

In its fifth year, the festival will include a movie premiere, silent disco, workshops, outdoor activities, and more.

“The community has really taken a hold of it. We have people that travel in from across the country,” Powell shared. “People have said that its really life-changing for them.”

The fifth Refuge Outdoor Festival is happening at Tolt-MacDonald Park and Campground in Carnation, WA from Friday, Aug. 12 at 3 p.m. to Sunday, Aug. 14 at noon. Register for the event here.

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Hundreds expected at BIPOC-friendly festival in King County

Hundreds expected at BIPOC-friendly festival in King County

The Refuge Outdoor Festival aims to show that outdoor recreation is for everyone, no matter your background or how you identify.

CARNATION, Wash — Geared up and ready for her first ever solo backpacking trip, Chevon Powell was excited.

But instead of focusing on the journey ahead at a park in Vermont, Powell, a Black woman, said she was pulled over by police as soon as she was on site.

“The police said it was unbelievable that I was in the outdoors,” Powell told KING. “It was one of the scariest moments of my life.”

Powell said she knows there is a lack of diversity in outdoor recreation.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau’s most recent National Survey of Fishing, hunting and Wildlife-Associated Recreation, only 5% of the more than 23 million participants who travel to enjoy the outdoors across the country are African American, Asian or another race.

>> Download KING 5+, our new Roku and Amazon Fire apps, to watch live coverage 24/7

Powell could have let this incident change her view of the outdoors and her passion to explore.

“I took that and knowing my skills, I said, ‘let me do something to create a safer space for people that look like me to be connected to the outdoors,'” Powell said. 

Powell, who splits her time between Seattle and Houston, said this was how Refuge Outdoor Festival started five years ago. It’s a weekend-long outdoors event complete with camping, hiking, biking and a silent disco. It welcomes everyone with a welcoming invitation to members of the BIPOC and LGBTQ+ communities.

The festival takes place at King County’s Tolt-MacDonald Park Aug. 12-14

“A lot of people you know, more people than you would expect, have had situations like this, especially BIPOC community or queer trans folks have experienced this in the outdoors or just in life,” Powell explained. “We’ve all gone through these different situations.”

Powell said Refuge gives everyone the chance to connect with the outdoors and make new friends in a safe and welcoming manner.

“It’s a full weekend of activities,” Powell said. “It’s all centered on outdoor recreation community building. We have over 30 workshops. We have Saturday musical performances and a silent disco.”

The event gathered 125 people in its inaugural year in 2018 and even gathered some virtual attendees and a limited in-person crowd last year due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This year, Powell said Refuge is expecting more than 300 people.

“We’re creating the opportunity for people to pick up skills and learn how to safely recreate and feel comfortable going to state and national parks,” Powell said.

There is still time to register for a day or the full weekend event. For more information, click here.

WATCH: KING 5’s top stories playlist on YouTube

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Fifth Annual Refuge Outdoor Festival Brings Healing and Connection for BIPOC Outdoors | South Seattle Emerald

by Amanda Ong


The fifth annual Refuge Outdoor Festival will be hosted in Tolt MacDonald Park from Friday, Aug. 12, through Sunday, Aug. 14. The festival is hosted by Golden Bricks Events, which also hosts events like Sundaes Outside. Refuge is a camping experience that centers around BIPOC but is open to anyone interested in the outdoors, whether that means people with years of experience mountain biking, or someone who simply enjoys their local park. The event still has tickets available through the Refuge Outdoor Festival website leading up to its opening on Aug. 12. 

“Refuge Outdoor Festival is the first event that we created,” Chevon Powell, founder of Golden Bricks Events and Refuge, told the South Seattle Emerald. “And it was really to center BIPOC community and allies in the outdoors, building community through outdoor recreation, music, and a weekend together to take refuge from all of the everyday things, because the outdoors can be so powerful.”

This is the fifth year Golden Bricks is hosting the event and its third year in person, after the event was held virtually during the pandemic for two years. But Refuge is back in full force this year, bringing in some new elements, like partnering with Rain Or Shine Community Market for a big partner market on the second day of the festival, and featuring over 25 workshops and activities throughout the festival. This year, it will even host a screening of Expedition Reclamation, a film featuring 14 BIPOC women who redefine the idea of “outdoorsy.” It will also feature music as well as a silent disco where attendees can use headphones to jam out to music together, giving them options to do what they feel most comfortable with in the outdoors. 

For Powell, starting Refuge was a way to center and uplift BIPOC in the world of the outdoors, which has a reputation for being predominantly white, with many barriers to access for BIPOC. Ironically, Powell said that all people have been sustained for generations by having some connection to the outdoors, but many younger BIPOC may be alienated from that connection because of racial and socioeconomic barriers. Golden Bricks and Refuge work first to alleviate some of those barriers, and then to center and uplift BIPOC in the outdoors. 

“A lot of our work is behind the scenes and making sure that folks have the resources and the knowledge, the transportation, the gear,” Powell said. “So we work with our partners to make sure that no matter what level of outdoor engagement you’re at, you can be fully supported to come and take refuge. Because we all know that nature and being connected to the outdoors, be it outdoor recreation, be it working in the garden, has so many health benefits.”

The festival aims to bring people into the outdoors in any way that is comfortable or best for them — there is no pressure to become a regular mountaineer, but simply to nurture the connection you do have with the outdoors and with the community you find in it.

“What does it look like for us to have our connections with nature? It looks like taking a walk around the block, it looks like adventure travel,” Powell said. “It can look like a variety of things, and I try not to define what that is for other people. For me, refuge in the outdoors has been and will continue to be about healing. We have a lot of healing to do personally and as a community, and as a world, and nature actually helps guide me in those ways.”

Some of Refuge’s past attendees have been as young as 3 months old and as old as 72 years old, and have included entire multigenerational households and families. In light of its attendees’ diverse knowledge levels, every festival starts with a basic course on coexisting with wildlife, so people with less outdoor experience can gain some of the information they need to get comfortable. Most of their activities are done in groups as well, so people with less outdoor experience can pair up with people with more outdoor experience for more challenging activities. 

“Many people come to Refuge because they say, ‘I thought I was the only BIPOC person outside,’” Powell said. “And to see the robustness of this community is just really heartwarming. And that’s why people’s levels of engagement may look different. But we’re here for the same purpose — that we want to be outside, that we want to connect. We want to build community. And frankly, we want to have a good time together for a weekend.” 

Powell’s passion for bringing people together in the outdoors and helping BIPOC feel connected to the outdoors comes from her own experience, starting quite young. Powell grew up going to a camp for burn survivors, hiking and enjoying nature. But she found there was a stigma that spending time outdoors was simply not something Black folks do, and kept quiet about her passions — until she had a police incident while in the outdoors that made her realize she couldn’t be quiet anymore and continue to feel like she was not seen or welcomed in the outdoors. 

“I had a police incident, and that’s where this all stemmed from for me in wanting to build a safer community outdoors, because for various Communities of Color, the outdoors has not been safe,” Powell said. “I just want to see a better world, I want to see a more inclusive and more caring world. And I think that outdoor recreation can assist in that in building a different way of being. We are all longing and searching for community, and I think that this is just the vehicle that I use to help build community and connection.”

Powell sought to build a community that she wasn’t seeing in the outdoors. And at Refuge, programming is not just intended to help attendees find community, but also to encourage them to keep that community even after the festival is over. Refuge ends each year with a closing circle so attendees can reconnect and affirm the connections they made and the new resources they found over the weekend before they go back to urban life. Personal health has been shown to improve with outdoor recreation, but along with that, building communities and connections with other people in our areas is also vital to our community health, and keeps us safe. 

“I hope that people take away a sense of belonging, a sense of connection,” Powell said. “I hope they take away a sense of, ‘I can go back [to the city] and be amazing, but I know that nature is always there for me, and I’m here for nature.’ Because we also want to make sure that people understand we have to care for nature just as much as we want to enjoy it.”

Refuge Outdoor Festival will be held from Aug. 12 to Aug. 14 at Tolt MacDonald Park, 31020 NE 40th St., Carnation. Purchase tickets to the festival through the Refuge Outdoor Festival website. For accessibility questions about the festival, see the Refuge Outdoor Festival FAQ page. To volunteer at Refuge Outdoor Festival, fill out the Volunteer Invitation form. For other questions or interest in vending or performing, email Info@refugeoutdoorfestival.com.


Amanda Ong (she/her) is a Chinese American writer from California. She is currently a master’s candidate at the University of Washington Museology program and graduated from Columbia University in 2020 with degrees in creative writing and ethnicity and race studies.

📸 Featured Image: Refuge Outdoor Festival is back after two years of virtual programming, creating a space for BIPOC connection and healing outdoors. Pictured: Refuge Outdoor Fest at Tolt MacDonald Park in 2019. (Photo courtesy of Golden Bricks Productions.)

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How to rid the woods of racism

For many people, getting outside can be a chance to relax and unwind. For people of color, it can also mean having to deal with racism.

People of color and their allies gathered outside Seattle last weekend at a festival aimed at changing that.

At the Tolt-Macdonald Park in Carnation, a deejee played music while attendees of the second annual Refuge Outdoors Festival line up for pancakes.

Chevon Powell founded the festival after an incident when a policeman pulled her over in Vermont and wouldn’t believe she was there to go hiking.

She said she wanted to create a safe space and also build community.

“It’s not just a fun weekend. It’s about learning the skills, sharing the skills. People can get connected in the local area so that they can continue to do outdoor activities and so they can feel comfortable doing those beyond this weekend,” Powell said.

Powell has plans to grow the festival.

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'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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