¡Con Latino Outdoors Desde 2017! Reflections on Nearly a Decade with LO.

Por Jorge Ramos

As Jorge’s time on the Latino Outdoors Board comes to a close, we want to extend a heartfelt thank you. 

Gracias por todo tu apoyo, tiempo y colaboración durante todos estos años. Whether it was enthusiastically supporting our fundraisers, thoughtfully contributing to LO’s strategic direction, or happily connecting with our volunteers and community members during outings, your leadership, generosity, and vision have helped Latino Outdoors in ways that will reverberate for years to come.

Since joining the LO community in 2017 and serving on the National Advisory Board since 2019, Jorge has helped guide our organization through tremendous growth while always keeping comunidad at the center. He has left a lasting mark on our community.

Congratulations on an incredible term of service, Jorge. While we will miss you on the LO Board, we’re so happy that you’re planning to stay involved as a compañero and champion for Latino Outdoors. Once part of the LO familia, always part of the familia

¡Nos vemos en los senderos! 

-Latino Outdoors


As I finish my term on the Latino Outdoors (LO) National Advisory Board this summer of 2026, after serving since September 2019, I find myself overwhelmed with gratitude y con mucho orgullo for everything we have built together. I am not going anywhere. I am still in the Bay Area and you will continue to find me outdoors. Como dice LO: once part of the LO familia, always part of the familia.

Starting in DC!

My story with LO began in 2017 when I started attending LO events with the Washington, DC/DMV chapter. I was working as a carbon scientist with an NGO (non-governmental organization), but on weekends I was searching for something else. There were enough networking events in DC, but where were the Latinos who would enjoy being outdoors, hiking, sharing food? I remember meeting Albert Arevalo at an event and then helping clean banks of the Potomac River with the LO chapter and future friends. On those weekend outings outside of working hours, I was Jorge, the norteño kid from Juarez, chatting in Spanish, English, Spanglish about the music I liked, laughing, and building comunidad with others. For the next years, we shared tamales, empanadas with Patricio, dinners at home with Jesse, listened to Chavela Vargas with Alejandro, and more.

I did not know it at the time, but that community taught me the foundation for my future as an advisory board member of LO and shaped my career path. One of the most important parts of conservation happens when we center community and create space for everyone to see themselves caring for each other, including nature.

Invitation to Join the National Advisory Board

In September 2019, just four months after moving to California and starting at Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve (‘Ootchamin ‘Ooyakma) of Stanford University, I was asked by Richard Rojas, the chair of the board at the time, to join LO’s National Advisory Board. Since then, we’ve guided the organization through the pandemic, tremendous growth in programming and staff, celebrated our 10-year anniversary in 2023, and in 2025 developed our 2025-2030 Strategic Plan refresher ensuring that Vamos Outdoors, Crecemos Outdoors, and Yo Cuento Outdoors remain strong and responsive to the LO community.

Meeting Bryan, Jennifer, and Esmeralda

When I think about what LO in California meant to me as I started my service, I immediately think of Bryan Rodriguez, Jennifer Adams, and Esmeralda Cabrera. When I moved to California and started my new job in fall 2019, they made me feel at home in a place that was new and unfamiliar. I particularly remember the hike where we got snowed in at Mt. Umunhum in November 2019 and we had chocolate caliente, tamales, and pan dulce up there. After that, Bryan and Esmeralda opened their homes to me, welcoming me to their dinner tables where we shared meals, stories, laughter, and music. In those moments, I found my little Mexico in the Bay Area and the warmth of la comunidad.

Bryan, Esmeralda, and Jennifer introduced me to more people, and I got to explore more of the Bay Area with Aurora Cortés leading many of the hikes. I invited all of them to Jasper Ridge for a hike where we were all amazed by the seeds of the Mountain mahogany (Cercocarpus betuloides). With Aurora, we organized an event in March 2022 that focused on building a network of outdoor careers. In one day, we hosted more than 50 people from SACNAS, Genentech, USFWS, UC Berkeley, SJSU, and Stanford at Jasper Ridge, connecting young professionals with career pathways in conservation.

I kept organizing these activities, always keeping in mind the volunteers and how to expand their networks as they were seeking careers in the outdoors, while also pushing outdoor employers to recognize that young diverse people were here and ready to apply for jobs. I did this as an advisory board member and I will continue doing this.

This is what LO really is: a community that practices hospitalidad, that understands welcoming someone means inviting them into your community. Bryan, Jennifer, and Esmeralda saw someone who was new and they extended their comunidad in the most personal way, helping me build a life in the Bay Area. When people ask me about LO, I tell them this story first.

National Campouts and Meeting Toda la Familia

The adventures continued. In August 2021, I floated the Sacramento River with the LO community and our founder José González. It was my first time floating a river in California, what an adventure that was! That same year, I attended the national campout at Jedediah Smith Redwoods State Park in Northern California, surrounded by those ancient redwood giants and so many national volunteers, the familia that keeps LO alive. On that same trip, we visited the Redwood Rising project, a project with multiple co-benefits. The laughter and sense of belonging reinforced what I had learned with LO: this movement is about creating a support network, in our terms, a familia. I still remember that it was from this campout that volunteers asked us, the advisory board, to add a volunteer voice to the board. We listened and welcomed André Sanchez.

Bridging LO with Jasper Ridge and Greater Networks

When I became Executive Director at Jasper Ridge in October 2022, though I was busier than usual, I kept bringing everything I had learned from LO with me. At Jasper Ridge, we serve more than 5,000 educational visits each year, and every program I develop reflects similar values to LO. I developed a resources page for students that intentionally included links to LO, OutdoorAfro, ESA SEEDS, SACNAS, and other organizations supporting students from underrepresented backgrounds. I wanted to make sure that students knew that academic research and culture don’t have to be two separate choices or pathways.

One of the most meaningful moments came at the 2021 ESA virtual Annual Meeting when Bryan, Jennifer, Esmeralda, and I co-presented on bridging community organizations and academic institutions. Three incredible LO volunteers shared the stage with an academic from Stanford, demonstrating that community knowledge and academic knowledge are interconnected. I also invited them to present at Jasper Ridge’s community lecture series.

Throughout my tenure, I’ve lifted up LO in every space I enter, from national organizations like ESA, SEEDS, SACNAS, and OBFS to regional programs at UC campuses, the NSF SOAR Network, Save the Redwoods League, and community networks throughout the Bay Area. I’ve shared how LO creates welcoming spaces and provides pathways for students to see themselves in outdoor careers. I always emphasize that the mentorship that matters most often happens outside the classroom: on trails, around campfires, floating rivers, and around those picnic tables full of delicious food. That’s where transformation happens.

2026 National Campout: More Familia and New Momentum

In 2026, I attended the national LO campout at Bandelier National Monument in New Mexico with all of the LO familia. It was so refreshing to meet so many new volunteers since my last national campout. Sometimes we joke that you invite one Latino and they show up with all of their primos and primas. Well, this time it was not a joke, it was true and it was an amazing gathering! Being in the landscape with so much Indigenous and Pueblo knowledge, engaging respectfully through local Tribes, and weaving that knowledge with various activities around ecology, conservation, and advocacy led by the volunteers, reminded me once again why building collective voice with them matters. These national campouts are truly the best fiestas, celebrations of who we are and where we come from, with so much momentum building for the activities this year. Similar to 2021, I noticed the passion and momentum that the LO community has for a new initiative focused on advocacy. Keep your eyes open, LO is showing up in more ways in the outdoor space!

Gracias!

My term is ending, and I am grateful for the opportunity to make space for new voices that will strengthen this movement. If you feel called to serve, I encourage you to consider joining as a participant, volunteer, supporter, or advisory board member. Being involved with LO is deeply rewarding, and LO needs everyone’s perspective, passion, and commitment. You will continue seeing me with LO!

To every volunteer, board member, and staff person, gracias. To Albert, Jesse, Alejandro, Bryan, Jennifer, Esmeralda, Vero, Carlos, Miguel, Aurora, and every volunteer who welcomed me into your comunidad. To José, our founder, and Luis, our Executive Director, you created something that changed many lives. To Richard, Claudia, the current board, and every supporter of LO, gracias!

Nearly a decade ago, I showed up as a volunteer in DC, and LO welcomed me. A few years later, I arrived in the Bay Area alone, and LO welcomed me. I will continue to bring up LO in every conservation space and open doors for volunteers at Jasper Ridge and beyond. To anyone considering getting involved: Do it! ¡Sí se puede! You might find your comunidad, like I found my little Mexico. To the LO familia, keep going and I wish you all the best for more campouts, trails, and picnic tables full of pan dulce!

Gracias por todo, Latino Outdoors. Como dice el Chicharito: “Imaginemos cosas chingonas carajo.”


Dr. Jorge Ramos is Executive Director of Jasper Ridge Biological Preserve (‘Ootchamin ‘Ooyakma) at Stanford University. Originally from Juárez, México, he served on Latino Outdoors’ National Advisory Board (2019-2026) after volunteering since 2017. An ESA Eugene P. Odum Award recipient and California Academy of Sciences Fellow, Jorge champions research, education and conservation-centered stewardship in outdoor spaces.