On a Wednesday evening earlier this year听at , a San Francisco climbing gym, James Dong and Max Morales stood at a table by the front door to greet arriving climbers. Each newcomer was offered a blue and yellow sticker adorned with a geometric logo and the words 鈥淭he Brown Ascenders.鈥 By 7 P.M., a circle of black and brown climbers had assembled in one听corner.
鈥淩aise your hand if you鈥檝e been to a Brown Ascenders meetup before,鈥 Morales said. About a dozen hands went up. Some people were there to try rock听climbing for the first time. Others had been attending for years, since the group first formed to create a听community for听climbers who are black, indigenous, and other people of color (BIPOC).
The Brown Ascenders, which formed in 2017 and registered as a nonprofit in 2019, is one of many groups across the country bringing climbers of color together. (Additional听organizations include 听and ,听both working听to increase representation and inclusion in the sport听and collaborating听to host the popular each year.) The movement is not unique to rock climbing: the groups and , for example, focus on increasing the visibility of BIPOC individuals in other outdoor recreation spaces. The Brown Ascenders is pushing the movement one step further. With its听new nonprofit status, the organization is taking听on bigger projects听and trying to听make it easier for climbers everywhere to feel at home in their local gym or at their local crag.
The Brown Ascenders began when Summer Winston, a professor at Santa Rosa Junior College, in California,听attended Color the Crag in 2017. Winston (who prefers听they/their pronouns when being referred to) had听been climbing for a couple of years before the festival听but had never come across听a climbing community that consisted听mostly of people of color. 鈥淚 never knew I needed that space,鈥 Winston says. 鈥淭he energy was amazing. At the end of that first festival, we were leaving, and听I said, 鈥業 want to bring this back to the Bay.鈥欌
Winston returned home from the climbing festival on a Sunday. By Tuesday, they had a name, a logo, and an Instagram page听for what would become the Brown Ascenders. They soon met with a local gym to negotiate a special deal for members: climbers got free day passes for Brown Ascenders meetups, and gyms waived their initiation fees. Climbing is an expensive sport, Winston points out, so removing some of the cost can give people a reason to try something new.
Since then, Winston and the group have听hosted more than 40 meetups in five cities and two states. And they鈥檝e brought on community organizers, like Morales and Dong, to plan the meetups for their home gyms.

On the crowded floor of Dogpatch Boulders, the听Brown Ascenders were having a blast, with climbers working the same boulders and cheering each other on.
Aubrie Johnson, 30, watched quizzically as four of her friends collapsed on the crash pads, giggling. Johnson has lived in San Francisco鈥檚 Potrero Hill neighborhood鈥攏ot far from Dogpatch鈥攆or more than 15 years. She has been climbing since 2016听but says she would have quit if she hadn鈥檛 found the climbing community the Brown Ascenders offers. The gym reflects听the gentrifying population of the city, she says,听and previously, she found it hard to meet people she clicked with.
Abioula Akanni, 26, recently moved to the Bay Area from New Orleans. He met Winston at Color the Crag听and has听helped organize the Dogpatch meetups ever since. 鈥淭his is my jam,鈥澨鼳kanni says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 something I care about. It鈥檚 about getting black and brown people together to climb and build community. Summer had a great vision.鈥
Winston says听communities like the Brown Ascenders make it easier for people to try the sport听and stick with it. When听Winston听started climbing in a gym in Texas, they say听it took more than six months before they saw another black person in the gym. 鈥淚t felt good to see someone else walk in that space that looked like me,鈥 Winston says. 鈥淚 feel like that happens a lot to other folks, that鈥檚 not a unique story.鈥
While BIPOC climbers often deal with both large and small racist incidents in climbing gyms, Winston notes that even if people aren鈥檛 being explicitly racist at such a place, it can be uncomfortable if you鈥檙e the only nonwhite person in the room.
Winston wants people to understand the importance of comfort and a sense of belonging in outdoor recreational activities. 鈥淚f it feels uncomfortable to go into that space, there鈥檚 no incentive,鈥 Winston says. Having a supportive climbing community, they believe,听鈥渕akes the difference between people coming back and never trying it again.鈥

In the summer of 2019, after the Brown Ascenders had hosted climbing hangouts for a year and a half, Winston started听thinking about expanding the group鈥檚 work. It felt great to be bonding at the climbing gym, but Winston wasn鈥檛 convinced they were creating lasting change. So in听November, the Brown Ascenders became a nonprofit听and began planning to take on a wider range of projects. Winston has a long list of ideas about the future, including equity and inclusion training for gyms, kid鈥檚 camps, and outdoor clinics. But they are also rooting the new programming in data and community feedback. They plan to conduct a research project in gyms across the Bay Area in 2020 (which has been postponed due to COVID-19) that asks climbers of all colors what an inclusive space would look like to them.
鈥淚 can go to a gym as one person and say, 鈥楬ey, like, these are ideas I have for things that you can do to make this space more accessible.鈥 But I鈥檓 one person,鈥 Winston says. 鈥淚f I go with 4,000 survey results and say, 鈥楬ey, this is what 4,000 members of our community are asking for,鈥 it gives me, like, a foot to stand on.鈥
Since starting the Brown Ascenders, Winston has experienced moments of doubt. They鈥檝e been accused, mostly by white climbers, of causing divides in the climbing world. And even before the Brown Ascenders launched, some BIPOC climbers were skeptical that organizing a group was necessary, telling Winston they thought the Bay Area climbing scene was in much better shape than other parts of the country.
鈥淪ometimes I get in my head, and I鈥檓 like, Are we really doing something good? Is this really important?鈥欌 Winston says.
But participants鈥 enthusiasm at the meetups always reminds Winston听that听the group is changing the game听by creating a welcoming听experience in an outdoor sport where people of color still can鈥檛 always take those things for granted.
鈥淎t the end of the night, people say,听鈥楾his was so amazing. It felt so good and fun to just be here and, like, feel encouraged by everyone,鈥欌 Winston says. 鈥淧eople will leave me听little notes just saying, 鈥楾hank you for hosting this.鈥 That means the world to me.鈥