Ocean Teaching Us To Love Nature

por Michael Brito

Michael Brito grew up in Southern California, where the long stretches of sandy beaches inspired his love and connection to the outdoors. As a high school student, he would stake out bonfire pits with friends and watch the waves at the beach. Like generations before, he connected with his community around a fire. The fire’s warmth, crashing waves, and the painted sunset pulled him away from everything. Brito found a connection to the earth on those long beach days.

Brito attended UC Davis initially as a Political Sciences major. While he felt the need to pursue a career connecting people for the common good, he struggled to figure out how he could do so while finding an occupation that sparked a fire in him. After two years of struggles as an undergrad, Brito found his community among students studying Marine Sciences. Being part of this community allowed him to look closer at the coastal marine life they were observing. Very quickly, he created an even deeper connection with the ocean.

This community of students inspired Brito to switch his degree and pour all his remaining time into studying and asking ecological questions about coastal oceans. Becoming familiar with the neighboring marine life or how marine algae produces more oxygen than all the world’s forests sparked that fire Brito had been searching for. He became aware of how the world’s oceans are suffering from climate change yet protecting us by absorbing the carbon dioxide humans have been pumping into the atmosphere. Deeply moved, Brito was mobilized and became an advocate for ocean conservation. After college, he worked on the first ever captive rearing program for the critically endangered Sunflower sea star, Pycnopodia helianthoides. While this was important work, he felt he could make a more lasting impact on conservation by engaging with coastal communities.

Brito stumbled upon the Mendocino Coast on a road trip and was left in awe by the beautiful coastline. He immediately found a job in Fort Bragg with Pacific Environmental Education Center (PEEC), teaching fourth to eighth graders about the Mendocino coast’s natural history. He now works with the Noyo Center for Marine Science, supporting the mission of promoting conservation through the education of the local community. Brito hopes to work with the Noyo Center for Marine Science to reach Mendocino county’s Latinx communities and give them guided access to outdoor spaces.

Brito believes fostering an outdoors that welcomes diverse groups of people is essential because everyone must be given a chance to connect to the earth and green spaces. When Western thought-centric ideas dominate a space, they can exclude other ways of thinking and discourage others from being part of it. As a person of color, he understands that there is an egregious lack of leaders of color. Having navigated through white-dominated spaces, Brito believes that we must continue to engage local underrepresented communities so that everyone can one day be part of solving current issues such as climate change. The solution starts with creating opportunities for Latinx and people of color to get outside and have an enriching community.

The most significant barrier Brito anticipates as the major roadblock for people to get outside is the difficulty for low-income families of color to afford to spend time outdoors. This problem has only been made worse by the lack of accessible public transportation. As Brito continues his work, he hopes that more community members want to contribute to Latino Outdoor’s mission to get all people outside.


Michael Brito is a 24-year-old who recently joined the Latino Outdoors North Coast Chapter as an Outings Leader. He’s worked as a teacher naturalist for P.E.E.C. and gained a deep appreciation for the Mendocino Coast. Michael enjoys reading books about marine life and exploring the local tide pools. He looks forward to creating a more inclusive, diverse, and welcoming space for all in the outdoors.


With the Wind as My Best Friend

por Susana Renaud

The love of outdoors began for me when my mamí would say to us eight kids, “vayanse para fuera ah jugar” and off we would all go on our own way and, wouldn’t be seen again until it was time to eat. I would spend hours outside under mesquite trees with the wind as my best friend. I was always happiest outside. I grew up in a large Tejano/Mexicano familia in Tejas. I was the fourth of eight children growing up on a farm with animales that I would befriend, and later regret that I had, when they showed up on the dinner table. All of my early childhood and adolescence was spent either in the country or in small Pueblitos.

When I became a young adult at the age of nineteen I escaped to Austin, Tejas and that’s where more of my outdoor exploration began. I met friends who had grown up traveling, sailing, windsurfing, hiking, backpacking, skiing, and cycling around the world. The most I had ever done is ride my banana bike around my Pueblito. So, I was in awe and ready to go! I bought my first adult bicycle and it became my mode of transportation. After my shift of waitressing, I would ride my bike to Barton Springs, sunbathe and swim, then run around Austin Lake. I lived in Austin for eight years and I hiked so many of the surrounding trails and hung out in beautiful places like the Pedernales River and Lake Travis where I learned how to windsurf (well, tried anyway).

I moved to Berkeley, Ca. in 1989. I was twenty-eight years old and all of that outdoor exploration and play prepared me to do what I love to do the most, Backpack. My first trip up to the mountains was to Mt. Shasta for a week. The experience was breathtaking. Clear mountain air, cool water, brilliant skies that provided an opening to another world. I got to know my limitations. I always packed with other women, older and not Latinas. In fact, I never went outdoors with other mujeres or Latinos. I never ever saw any. I was the only India amongst a group of güeritos. I studied Yoga at the Iyengar Yoga Institute (I was again the ‘only’ Latina) and led a group of yogi friends up to Sequoia & Kings Canyon National Park, we did yoga there in the buff. I kept riding my bike for transportation and going up to the mountains. I would go with different groups of women, again, never did I meet any mujeres who I could go up with. But I kept going, I was and am still in love and in awe with the outdoors. I became a Yoga teacher, finished my undergraduate degree in Integrative Health, met some wonderful older Xicanas who became my mentors, interned at the National Latina Health Organization where I became involved in program development for youth and connected with some amazing mujeres who I also took up to the mountains

I then returned to Graduate school receiving my Masters in Feminist Psychology, worked in the Latinx/Chicanx community in Oakland and San Francisco for sixteen years before being recruited by a large health and maintenance organization in Oakland. Fell in love a bazillion times, trekking outdoors with my loves and alone. And now, I always begin my outdoor experience with a blessing. With the wind as my best friend.


Susana Renaud is a 62 y.o. two spirit, Xicanx. She is a teacher and an instructor of Yoga and Mindfulness Meditation and wholistic wellness. Susana loves the outdoors and is always exploring and trekking to new places and enjoys meeting new people during travel. Susana’s newest adventure is birdwatching and looks forward to partnering with Latino Outdoors to invite other Queer folx outdoors! Follow Susana on IG at @qtbipocwomenoutdoorover60.


Sana Sana

por Maritza Oropeza Kritz

I walk amongst the trees 
Brisk breeze flowing through my hair 
I look up at my ancestors 
Protectors of the land 
Whispers of cries 
What have we done to the land?

I follow their cries to the mountains
Gazing at our beloved earth
I see her yearning of thirst 
Empty forest and black clouds 
On the brink of collapse 
Lands bare and seas empty 
Senseless wars against nature 
Man’s envy has overcome his humanity 
Days are numbered 
As we drift closer to extinction 
What have we done to the land? 

Nourish our earth for she will always forgive
Our shelter of wonders
Do not destroy her innocence 
Our strength in numbers can heal
The earth is our teacher
The earth is our mother
The earth is our home
Without our home, we are nothing

Poem by: Maritza Oropeza Kritz