You Belong Here
What does it take to feel welcome on public lands? Five answers

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Do you feel at home in nature? What does belonging in nature look like for you?

Those may sound like odd questions, but access to green space and outdoor experience vary widely, depending on where you live, your economic status, your race, culture, health or family background.

Connecting people to nature is a priority for the 101 urban national wildlife refuges and more than 30 U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service partnerships in cities across the country. The message is not just: Come visit. It鈥檚 also: We鈥檙e listening. What do you value in nature? What makes you feel welcome? What have been your experiences?

Why? Because there is no one way to experience nature. Because ensuring access to nature benefits everyone even as it grows the ranks of tomorrow鈥檚 conservation stewards.

To spark a broader conversation about inclusion in the outdoors, we asked five people to share their thoughts and stories.

Five Perspectives

  • Jeannette Guess,

    former vice president of the Friends of Heinz Refuge in Philadelphia

  • Georgena Moran,

    disability rights activist in Portland, Oregon

  • Oscar Hernandez,

    Latinx family liaison for Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge

  • Dwane Binns,

    manager, San Diego National Wildlife Refuge

  • Julietta Conzuelo,

    former intern at Valle de Oro National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

Jeannette Guess (foreground), vice president of the Friends of Heinz Refuge in Philadelphia, poses with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Aurelia Skipwith (right) and staff at John Heinz Refuge.

"They never told me I could go here"

Jeannette Guess, the affable former vice president of the Friends of Heinz Refuge in Philadelphia, is, by her own account, a nature lover, a people person and a community activist. The community is Eastwick, a predominantly African American neighborhood that is also the gateway to John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge at Tinicum. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 get to the visitor center without going through Eastwick,鈥� says Guess.

Which is why she finds it ironic that the refuge and the community had so little interaction until recently. 鈥淲hen I moved to Eastwick in 2006, I saw signs for John Heinz National Wildlife Refuge. I asked my neighbor, 鈥榃hat is that?鈥� My neighbor said, 鈥極h don鈥檛 go in there. There鈥檚 wild animals in there. You don鈥檛 want to go in there.鈥� 

She went anyway 鈥� 鈥淚鈥檓 a retired police officer, so I鈥檓 not afraid鈥� 鈥� and soon became an enthusiast and volunteer.

鈥淚 never knew how grateful I would be to be able to walk into a place like Heinz Refuge. It鈥檚 my place of tranquility. Being by the creek, hearing the birds chirping and the frogs, I never experienced that before and it really brought calm to me. It鈥檚 an amazing experience.鈥� 

She regrets not having known about it sooner. 鈥淕rowing up in a predominantly black North Philly neighborhood and going to the public school system, they never told us we could visit Heinz Refuge. The refuge never reached out to the public school system to say that black schools were invited. We didn鈥檛 know anything about it.鈥� 

Also missing, she says, was 鈥渢he educational piece to tell people that there鈥檚 nothing there that鈥檚 going to harm you. 鈥� if you don鈥檛 know that [there鈥檚 nothing to fear from the wildlife at this refuge], why would you go there? It wasn鈥檛 welcoming. It really wasn鈥檛.鈥�

She鈥檚 proud the refuge has worked to change its image in the community.

鈥漀ow more people of color come to the refuge. The refuge has also established community gardens. That鈥檚 a big plus. They have community meetings at the refuge. And programs in the schools. So now people know, 鈥榊es, you are welcoming us.鈥� That鈥檚 a good thing because there鈥檚 so many people that want to know more about nature.

鈥淵ou鈥檝e got to get the kids while they鈥檙e young. Tell them it鈥檚 okay to be part of nature. It鈥檚 okay to go fishing at the refuge. It鈥檚 okay to hike in the refuge and come take pictures and use your binoculars and be part of programs at the refuge. You can tell them, 鈥楤ring your parents. Bring your aunties and uncles. Let them know they can come to the refuge.

鈥淲hen I went to the refuge for the first time, I didn鈥檛 encounter any employees or volunteers who looked like me. That was quite intimidating.

鈥淚 have brown-skinned children, and I want them to see other kids that look like them. I want there to be a variety of children from all types of cultures. That wasn鈥檛 the case when I first got here, but slowly it鈥檚 truly changed.鈥�
 

Georgena Moran, disability rights activist in Portland, Oregon, seated in motor-powered wheelchair that she drives with her chin.

"Easy access is critical 鈥� especially now"

Georgena Moran defines herself by what she can do, not what she can鈥檛. 鈥淚鈥檓 an adventurer, an avid outdoor explorer,鈥� she says. She鈥檚 also the founder of Access Recreation, a Portland, Oregon-based organization that promotes outdoor access for people with disabilities. People like herself. Because her limbs are paralyzed, she navigates trails using a power chair she drives with her chin.

鈥淚 want to be in nature more than anything especially these days, with the Covid-19 factor and people restricted at home, especially people with disabilities.鈥�

鈥淚 hike. I go out there. My interest isn鈥檛 a paved trail. I like things that show nature in its fullness, like natural surface trails. I like going places I鈥檝e never been. My greatest obstacle is getting information [on whether I can use a trail with a wheelchair.]鈥� 

Moran often hikes with her wife, Sharon Mitchell, or her mother-in-law, Anna McClinton. Two of her favorite destinations are Tualatin River National Wildlife Refuge outside Portland and Steigerwald Lake National Wildlife Refuge outside nearby Vancouver, Washington.

鈥淭ualatin River Refuge was the first refuge I visited. What I loved about it was they had wildlife blinds that were accessible. But they didn鈥檛 say that on their website. I wouldn鈥檛 have known that if I hadn鈥檛 gone on a tour.鈥�

What she asks is that land managers put more information on their websites so she can decide what鈥檚 do-able.

鈥淭hey鈥檒l talk about cool things that would entice me to see the beauty, but one thing they don鈥檛 talk about is the surface of a hiking trail. Don鈥檛 assume I just want a paved trail. Show me some of the things I might be interested in: the grade, the cross-slope. Are there benches along the trail? Is there an accessible restroom? And what does 鈥榓ccessible restroom鈥� mean? Because me, I can鈥檛 use a stall. Does a picnic area have an accessible picnic bench? 

鈥淚 absolutely belong in nature. Nature is where I feel like I can be at my best 鈥� But I don鈥檛 want to drive a great distance and be frustrated for some obscure reason, you know, like a culvert at the head of a trail that I can't traverse.

Living with a disability, says Moran, 鈥渄emands you be creative. 鈥� Recently I designed a fisherman鈥檚 float that I was lifted into. I put two motors on it that I could manipulate with a chin drive. I was able to go out into ocean, play with my friends with all their little floats.鈥�

Access Recreation has reviewed 36 trails and parks in the greater Portland-Vancouver region. 

It鈥檚 had some success, says Moran, despite technology delays. In many cases, fixes are relatively cheap and quick.

Often, she says, 鈥渙nce agency staff got our input, they could immediately address some of the issues.鈥� Many involved 鈥渢ransitions 鈥� say, going from a natural surface to a wooden bridge. All it would take is a little maintenance. A lot of times, they would come out that same day and fix it. They just weren't aware that a two-inch transition was an issue. Or maybe they haven鈥檛 been out there for a while to know that it was necessary.鈥�

You don鈥檛 have to hire her group to evaluate your website鈥檚 trail descriptions, she says. 鈥淵ou can do it yourself. Just add more pictures with a description. That would be a tremendous help so people can decide if a trail meets their needs before they go.鈥�

Oscar Hernandez, Latinx family liaison for Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge, and dog Pirata.

"Getting out with others like me is more welcoming"

As a first-generation Mexican-American growing up in the suburbs of Minneapolis, Oscar Hernandez lacked the privileges of some of his classmates. 鈥淭hey would talk about visiting the cabin for the weekend or going on vacation to these beaches in Miami or going to Buck Hill to snowboard for the day. I didn鈥檛 have any of that.鈥�  

He learned to love nature anyhow. Now, as Latinx family liaison for Minnesota Valley National Wildlife Refuge, he wants to help others love it, too. 

鈥淎s a kid growing up, my dad would take me fishing sometimes. I remember going out with my little blue kiddy fishing rod, fishing for bluegill. I don鈥檛 remember catching very many fish, but I think the idea of fishing for a live animal 鈥� that was really exciting for me.鈥�  

Hernandez鈥檚 first visit to a national wildlife refuge national wildlife refuge
A national wildlife refuge is typically a contiguous area of land and water managed by the鈥疷.S. Fish and Wildlife Service鈥� for the conservation and, where appropriate, restoration of fish, wildlife and plant resources and their habitats for the benefit of present and future generations of Americans.

Learn more about national wildlife refuge
was in May 2018 鈥� when he began his internship at Minnesota Valley Refuge. What he saw astonished him.

鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 believe there was this giant area for people to enjoy outdoors and it was free. And it was so close to where I live 鈥� closer than the Mall of America, and I went to the Mall of America all the time. I would catch the bus there, hang out there with friends. I never knew the refuge was minutes from there. I thought that was a real shame, because if I didn鈥檛 know, I figured other people didn鈥檛 know either. 

鈥淚 honestly fell in love with the place. It has so much to offer. There's such a wide variety of habitats. I just thought it was it was amazing to see that, and to have that in a city.鈥�

Hernandez says he had outdoor experiences growing up. 鈥淭hey just weren't the traditional experiences that others may have had 鈥� I never went kayaking. I went on a canoe once. I've been camping a few times, but not as much as other people.

鈥淚 think that not seeing us do these traditional experiences like hiking or kayaking has led to the misconception that Latinos don鈥檛 care for the outdoors or the environment. That couldn鈥檛 be farther from the truth. We are out here going to the lake in the summer for our carne asada [cookout] with our families. We are out here throwing little kids鈥� birthday parties at the park. We are out here experiencing nature in a different way than what is traditionally thought of as going outdoors.鈥�

These days, he generally shares his nature outings with his dog, Pirata, or friends.

鈥淯sually when I go outside, I feel more comfortable in a group of people who understand me, because I don鈥檛 have the most experience in nature. When I go out with strangers, they can recognize bird calls or animal prints in the mud. I can鈥檛 do that. I鈥檓 learning. But getting out in a group with other people who speak like me, it鈥檚 more welcoming.鈥�

He doesn鈥檛 mean to speak for others, though.

鈥淟atinos come from so many different countries, and they鈥檙e in so many different parts of the United States that each community can be really different. So, I have some thoughts that others may not necessarily agree with. Just because I have my own experience, it doesn't mean that I鈥檓 representative of every Latino in the U.S. or even Minnesota.鈥�

Dwane Binns, manager of San Diego National Wildlife Refuge, with an elk he hunted at Baca National Wildlife Refuge in Colorado.

"We need to consider how others engage with nature"

Dwane Binns, who in March 2020 became manager of San Diego National Wildlife Refuge, straddles two worlds: the big-city world of his roots in Queens, New York, and the more rural world of the avid hunter, camper, angler and nature lover he has become.

A biologist and the son of biracial parents 鈥� his father is from Jamaica; his mother from Guyana 鈥� he鈥檚 a conceptual and analytical thinker, inclined to examine his and others鈥� behavior for patterns and meaning.

鈥淲hat I like to do in nature is hunt,鈥� he says. 鈥淗unting is taking part in a historical practice about how we engage with nature, inserting humans back in the food web that we鈥檝e been removed from鈥� by the commercialization of the food system.

One of his favorite destinations is the San Luis Valley in Colorado 鈥� including Monte VistaAlamosa and Baca National Wildlife Refuges. The valley 鈥渉as abundant opportunities to engage in outdoor recreation in a more historical fashion 鈥� by which I mean hunting.鈥� 

Dwane Binns, manager of San Diego National Wildlife Refuge, with a moth resting on his beard.

As an urban black man, he is well aware that he doesn鈥檛 fit the stereotype of a hunter and outdoorsman. His outdoor experience came relatively late in life, and much of the outdoor skill he learned, he had to teach himself.

鈥淲hen I was growing up, there was no real land that a family member had that I could go and experience nature in that was anything remotely representative of what I go to engage with now.鈥�  Also missing: a mentor who 鈥渨ill teach you how to go about using the land in a sustainable and efficient and successful fashion.鈥�   

鈥淢y only experience was a city lifestyle, which a lot of people of color are relegated to. I think that is pretty common across different ethnic and racial backgrounds when you're in the city.鈥� 

鈥淚 would say 85 percent of the families in New York City, because of their lack of exposure to nature, they don't have the information to engage in it and reap the benefits that a sustainable and nurturing engagement with nature can provide.鈥�

San Diego, he鈥檚 finding, 鈥渋s not very dissimilar from the mindset of New York City, in terms of access to resources.鈥� He envisions being a bridge 鈥渢o help people understand from a cultural perspective how nature can enrich their lives 鈥� They don鈥檛 understand what they are missing. They don鈥檛 have anybody that engages with them, even though the refuge is just 30 minutes outside of the city.鈥�

For Binns, nature is not just a place to recreate; it鈥檚 also a retreat.

Sometimes, he says, 鈥淚 try to go to more secluded areas where I can just sit down and be a presence within a forest 鈥� just to observe how life around me is interacting with other life in a natural landscape. And kind of getting back to the roots of 鈥� if we didn't have all this development, what would nature provide for us?鈥� 

He鈥檇 like to see conservationists expand their ideas about how people engage with nature.

鈥淲e have very much hung our hat on a North-American-centric view of engagement with natural resources. We're trained to say there's a certain way we engage with nature 鈥� like going into nature only to hike or fish.  I think we need to reevaluate and consider the ways that other cultures engage with nature. Some cultures use natural spaces to congregate or as sort of a fellowship area.鈥� What鈥檚 wrong with that? Binns asks.

鈥淲e need to ask: How do we become more inclusive? How do we get other Dwanes to be aware that the refuge is a welcoming place? That the refuge has so many tangible and intangible benefits that in a city lifestyle you may not even know you may be missing?鈥�

Julietta Conzuelo, former intern at Valle de Oro National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico.

"We鈥檝e gone away from being in nature"

After graduating high school in 2015 and enrolling in community college, Julietta Conzuelo was committed to 鈥渏ust working to get money to have a chance of buying a house, owning a nice car and everything.鈥� A job in a casino cured her of that. She found the hours brutal, the food waste disturbing.  

鈥淚 hated being in the casino, seeing so many people gamble their money away. It's very disheartening. I just wanted to be outside.鈥�   

She quit and signed on with the Texas Conservation Corps, learning about the Gulf of Mexico ecosystem and planting cordgrass to slow erosion. Next stop: the Albuquerque Rocky Mountain Youth Corps, where she joined a fire crew. And then she became an intern with Valle de Oro National Wildlife Refuge and Sandia Mountain Natural History Center near Albuquerque.

Conzuelo grew up in Albuquerque. Her Mexican-American heritage 鈥� her father鈥檚 family comes from central Mexico; her mother is from Albuquerque 鈥� colors her views about the environment.

鈥淲ith my culture, I feel that everything that we exploit from the land has a consequence 鈥� because we're a part of this bigger ecosystem. We're an embodiment of this Earth. So when people throw trash or a cigarette butt outside, we're also inflicting that pain within ourselves.

鈥淚 feel like we're all a part of nature. But with our way of life 鈥� the fast life of making enough money to support a family, and [the emphasis on] technology, I see how, as a society, we've gone away from being in nature. We feel like we don't have enough time.鈥�

As a child, she says, she had few traditional outdoor experiences. 鈥淏oth of my parents were working. They would leave us with our grandparents, and they would take us to the park and then to the river. Because the river passes through the whole city. It's a big part of New Mexico.鈥�

Valle de Oro National Wildlife Refuge did not wow her at first.

Julietta Conzuelo, former intern at Valle de Oro National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico, hikes in New Mexico.

鈥淰isiting it for the first time. I was like, Oh, this is a lot of grassy flat land, and it's very dry. And there was only one tree 鈥� Honestly, when I first saw it, I thought it was pretty dull.鈥�

Slowly, her view changed. She learned the refuge, a former dairy farm, was established only in 2012 and was working closely with the adjacent Mountain View community to chart its future. 鈥淏ecause Mountain View has no green space. It's very industrial, and so the community wanted a green space and a place to recreate and bring their families.鈥�

鈥淥nce you learn the story and meet the people, it's amazing. For me, Valle de Oro Refuge is a very, very special place, even though it may not look like it at first. I've also learned a lot about birds through being at the refuge 鈥� all the cranes and the cattle egrets and the meadowlarks. I never knew these names of birds before. Experiencing the refuge has changed my whole perspective. I never knew this existed in my hometown. I just never knew.鈥�

She likes to reach out to others who are still in the dark.   

鈥淎s an intern, I led field trips into the mountains for some students of color. Just like me when I was younger, they鈥檇 never been to the mountains. I got to speak with them in their native tongue. It was awesome.

鈥淭he students talked about how they didn't have a lot of time, how they鈥檇 never seen a squirrel before 鈥� or the different types of trees you see when you get to higher elevations. Because at the low levels, you see cactuses, some junipers. And then when you go higher, you see ponderosa pines and aspen trees. That was very new for them. 

鈥淸They appreciated] sharing their experience with another person that they felt comfortable with. Not just another educator that's strict and wants you just to sit down and write.鈥� 

Conzuelo loves spending her off-hours at the refuge. 鈥淚 go really early in the morning, and I like to bird. I like to hike with friends and family, learn about the plants, the bugs, the ecosystem, everything. Just like a little kid.鈥�

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Adults
Connecting people with nature
Disabilities
Outreach
Public access
Urban refuge
Visitor services