Latino Outdoors Leadership Campout 2016

Malibu Creek State Park
April 1st – April 3rd

Latino Outdoors hosted it’s first Leadership Campout, Sembrando Semillas, this spring. Thirty-five outdoor leaders from across the country, and a few family members, came together to learn, teach, build community, and share space together in a beautiful natural setting. Below is a narrative from one of the attendees as well as a photo gallery from the weekend.

 

A Chicano’s Experience Outdoors

By Efraín Delgado

I traveled down California in a black, rented, soccer team van with six people I had only ever previously met through emails. We were on our way to the first ever Latino Outdoors Leadership Campout, which was being hosted at Malibu Creek State Park.

With the van’s windows down we drove into the parking lot just outside of our campsite with La Chona by Los Tucanes de Tijuana playing. The fatigue in our bodies was replaced with nostalgia and excitement as the fast-paced accordion, the slightly funky bass line, and the flashback-inducing chorus shook the cheap plastic interior of the van. For a nature loving Chicano this was a rare moment where two parts of my identity were able to transcend the border that regularly divides them.

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At the campout I saw people wearing huaraches, people’s skin tones matched my own, and I heard conversations conducted in colloquial Spanglish. We shared stories of being the lone person of color in our professional settings while we mulled ideas on how to reconnect the Latinx community to the outdoors. José González, the Founder of Latino Outdoors, wore a faded black shirt with Tierra y Libertad, a slogan from the Mexican Revolution that translates to Land and Liberty, printed across the front in an old English font.

Latino Outdoors provided validation of my Chicano identity.

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A Chicano’s Experience Outdoors

By Efraín Delgado

I traveled down California in a black, rented, soccer team van with six people I had only ever previously met through emails. We were on our way to the first ever Latino Outdoors Leadership Campout, which was being hosted at Malibu Creek State Park.

With the van’s windows down we drove into the parking lot just outside of our campsite with La Chona by Los Tucanes de Tijuana playing. The fatigue in our bodies was replaced with nostalgia and excitement as the fast-paced accordion, the slightly funky bass line, and the flashback-inducing chorus shook the cheap plastic interior of the van. For a nature loving Chicano this was a rare moment where two parts of my identity were able to transcend the border that regularly divides them.

12718386_10209552966847891_8867522602766225789_n

       On our way to the Leadership Campout!

 

At the campout I saw people wearing huaraches, people’s skin tones matched my own, and I heard conversations conducted in colloquial Spanglish. We shared stories of being the lone person of color in our professional settings while we mulled ideas on how to reconnect the Latinx community to the outdoors. José González, the Founder of Latino Outdoors, wore a faded black shirt with Tierra y Libertad, a slogan from the Mexican Revolution that translates to Land and Liberty, printed across the front in an old English font.

Latino Outdoors provided validation of my Chicano identity.


Latino Outdoors and Denver Colorado

So far we have been on three hikes with groups of 10+ participants. Chautauqua Park, Mount Falcon Park, and O’Fallon Park have been – fun group forming events. We have partnered with Sierra Club’s – Inspiring Connections Outdoors  and I have hiked with Outdoor Afro – Boulder and really enjoyed the company !  

 

OA & LO

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Some Field notes:

Ponderosa Pine trees smell like Vanilla! You read that right, Vanilla!

Fun trail game: Branch Limbo

Smoky the bear loves Pictures!

Stope and smell the Ponderosa

Branch Limbo

Yogi bear

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chela – Colorado’s Coordinator and myself, Asnoldo the Colorado Ambassador have been making many helpful contacts at local events. We know that partnering is the best way to grow Latino Outdoors in Colorado. Like the famous quote: “If you want to go fast, go alone. If you want to go far, go together.”

Partners in the outdoors ELK LO Pic Sierra Club and LO

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Summer has just begun and the verdict is in from a recent Facebook poll. Our current participants are eager to get out there and hike to Colorado’s beautiful waterfalls and hot springs! We can’t wait to upload those beautiful pictures and take in the awe-inspiring landscapes!

I live in Westminster Colorado where I love to bike, hike, garden, explore and DIY. I am currently (1 year in) finishing a two-person 14 foot Marine Grade Plywood Canoe! To contact me for any LO-related communications, collaborations, or outing requests in my area, please send me an email: asnoldo@latinooutdoors.com