国产吃瓜黑料

GET MORE WITH OUTSIDE+

Enjoy 35% off GOES, your essential outdoor guide

UPGRADE TODAY

Image
国产吃瓜黑料 Business Journal

Fresh Faces of the Outdoor Industry

Our industry is changing鈥攁nd you don't have to look much further than these four

Published: 
Image

New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .

Meet the future of the outdoor industry. These four are already pushing the boundaries of representation, inclusivity, creativity, and gear, and we can’t wait to see what they accomplish next.

green tinted headshot of black woman in glasses, Latasha Dunston
Latasha Dunston is currently based in Denver. (Photo: Louisa Albanese)

1. Art

Latasha Dunston, 26, freelance illustrator听

Baltimore-born artist Dunston trained in scientific and preparatory medicine illustration in college. But when the Denver resident discovered en plein air painting鈥攖he full-on French Impressionist kind鈥攊t was an epiphany. 鈥淚 didn鈥檛 know it was a thing people actually did,鈥 she said. She built her own mobile setup and started to take it on hikes, leaving the four walls of her studio behind.

But it wasn鈥檛 until a trip to Lodged Out, an off-the-grid retreat in Leavenworth, Washington, that her style and voice came together: as a black woman, she realized that people of color are underrepresented in the outdoors. Whether she鈥檚 illustrating herself as the subject or making sure that her hand is represented in a photo of her paintings, she鈥檚 injecting her distinctiveness into the work she creates. 鈥淚 want to showcase myself and the people like me who spend time on trails,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e are a reflection of nature, and nature is a reflection of us.鈥

Yellow tinted headshot of Steven Reinhold
Steven Reinhold is the creator of #TrashTag. (Photo: Courtesy)

2. Activism

Steven Reinhold, 34, founder of #TrashTag听

In 2015, while Reinhold was on a road trip, a receipt flew out of his car window鈥攁nd he was haunted by the accidental littering. His penance? A vow to pick up 100 pieces of trash. The #TrashTag project was born鈥攁 social movement to inspire the masses to clean up.

It didn鈥檛 stop there. As an ambassador of UCO Gear, Reinhold brought his promise to the company, and they upped the ante by pledging to pick up 10,000 pieces by the next year. Then it caught on globally: an Arizona man shared a cleanup photo and asked 鈥渂ored teens鈥 to take before-and-after pics of a public area they鈥檇 cleaned, and the hashtag鈥攁lso known as the #TrashTagChallenge鈥攈it the big time. 鈥淎ll of a sudden,鈥 Reinhold said, 鈥渋t started spreading like wildfire.鈥

As of May, #TrashTag has been mentioned 92.5K times on Instagram鈥攁nd counting. 鈥淚t鈥檚 evolved from just picking up trash to a vehicle to talk about environmental issues,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really cool that one flyaway receipt can have such a ripple effect.鈥

Blue tinted headshot of Rocco Kayiatos
Rocco Kayiatos is a hip-hop musician, founder of a trans male publication, and founder of a camp for trans guys. (Photo: Courtesy)

3. Safe Spaces

Rocco Kayiatos, 39, founder and director of Camp Lost Boys听

As a transgender man, Kayiatos has put his identity front and center for a while: he鈥檚 a hip-hop musician (stage name: Katastrophe) and he co-founded the first print publication dedicated to trans male culture, Original Plumbing. In 2017, he met two guys who鈥檇 gone on a retreat for trans men but didn鈥檛 find the transcendence they were seeking. So they built it: a rugged, summer camp鈥搕ype weekend retreat called Camp Lost Boys. It鈥檚 the type of adventure that trans guys didn鈥檛 get to have as kids鈥攐r, if they did, didn鈥檛 experience as boys. (And most adult camps aren鈥檛 queer or trans friendly, says Kayiatos.)

Though campers participate in the usual鈥攁rchery, hiking, fireside chats鈥攖hey also detach from a false sense of connection via social media and reengage with real people outdoors, forming deep bonds between themselves and the land. For some, said Kayiatos, attending Lost Boys is a 鈥渓ast ditch effort to save themselves. They undergo a profound shift through the brotherhood they find in nature.鈥

Red tinted headshot of Justine Barone
Justine Barone is looking for more retailers to pitch her business venture, Gearo. (Photo: Courtesy)

4. Gear

Justine Barone, 33, co-founder and CEO of Gearo听

One day last year, Barone and her husband, Andrew, wanted to get outside for an adventure; they googled paddleboard rental in Denver and had to call scads of shops for pricing, availability, and product details. Ultimately, they gave up in frustration. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when we realized the outdoor gear industry hadn鈥檛 transitioned to the 21st century,鈥 she said.

After a few conversations with retailers, it became obvious to Barone that there was no platform to adequately manage rental transactions鈥攕o she launched Gearo to fill that void. Its goal is twofold: equip small rental shops with tools and software to manage their inventory, and provide adventure seekers with a single place to view bookable rentals. 鈥淩etailers can increase foot traffic and revenue because about 50 percent of all bookings are done online right now,鈥 she said. Through Gearo, 鈥淚 just want to take rentals to a whole new level,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e giving shops the ability to run like a Fortune 500 company.鈥

Filed to:

Popular on 国产吃瓜黑料 Online