Rachel Walker Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/rachel-walker/ Live Bravely Thu, 12 May 2022 19:15:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cdn.outsideonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/07/favicon-194x194-1.png Rachel Walker Archives - 国产吃瓜黑料 Online /byline/rachel-walker/ 32 32 6 Ways to Raise Brave Boys /culture/active-families/raise-brave-boys/ Mon, 28 Oct 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/raise-brave-boys/ 6 Ways to Raise Brave Boys

In my dream world, a boy 鈥渏ust being a boy鈥 means a boy acting with kindness, compassion, humor, and empathy.

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6 Ways to Raise Brave Boys

Several years ago,聽I was pedaling a cargo bike uphill with my three- and five-year-old sons, who were savagely heckling聽me. 鈥淕o faster!鈥 they cried. 鈥淪peed it up, slowpoke,鈥 they laughed. Something in me snapped. I pulled over to the side of the road, made both boys get off the bike, and established a rule: they could only be radically encouraging and say things like聽鈥淕o, Mommy, go! You鈥檙e so strong!鈥 They had to practice ten times before I allowed them back on the bike.

This was not simply ego stroking. I love my boys, obviously, but the world does not need more men who think being rude or obnoxious聽is acceptable. In my dream world, a boy 鈥渏ust being a boy鈥 means聽acting with kindness, compassion, humor, and empathy. I want my boys to be brave聽but not jerks. No one likes a smug know-it-all.

Through a mix of hands-on experience, books and articles, conversations with my (brave) husband, and interviewing experts in child development, I鈥檝e come up with several tips for raising brave boys. (It鈥檚 probably important to note that my kids are now seven and nine鈥擨鈥檒l report back in ten聽years, after puberty hits, and let you know how much of this still holds true.)

Establish Responsibilities

I expect my boys to help clean the house, do their laundry, load their dishes in the dishwasher, and share with one another. I hope I would have those same expectations even if I had a daughter, but聽, I鈥檇 be more likely to pile domestic obligations on her than on them. The gender gap, it turns out, starts at home, where parents give girls more work than boys. This must change. And the only way it will is if parents delegate equal domestic responsibility to boys and girls.

Foster Kindness

Since my kids were young, I鈥檝e encouraged them to name their feelings, especially when they鈥檙e unsettled and vulnerable. When one of them says he feels 鈥渇ragile,鈥 we talk about it, and the family makes a concerted effort to treat him with extra kindness. I鈥檝e never told my kids to 鈥渕an up,鈥 and I have no plans to. If they cry, I hug them. As they鈥檝e gotten older, they treat one another and their friends similarly.

Encourage Emotional Strength

This is a big one for outdoor education. Paul Dreyer, the CEO of聽 and a longtime NOLS instructor told me, 鈥淓motional strength is being strong for others, supporting them. This can be cheering on a friend struggling to finish a climb on belay, or stepping back and letting a kid go in front of them instead of taking the first turn.鈥 This teaches kids that their involvement extends beyond the hands-on part of the activity. In other words, the world doesn鈥檛 revolve exclusively around them.

Develop Physical Strength

The modern world doesn鈥檛 care if your kids sit in front of a screen for hours every day. You should. Joy and confidence can come from being physically strong. That鈥檚 why I聽take my kids hiking, skiing, and聽mountain biking, even if they start out whining. And while you鈥檙e helping them get strong, expose kids to different options, says Dreyer. 鈥淭hat way they get a chance to experience both strength and weaknesses across multiple sports,鈥 he says.

Model Humility

I do not want to see聽more dudes holding court about how awesome they are, even if those dudes are my sweet spawn and are only seven and nine. When the boys get too braggy, I point it out so they know how they sound. I strive to send the message that love of the sport is better than shouting how great they are from the rooftops.

Talk About Fear

A lot of boys get the message that being vulnerable is tantamount to being weak. This pressure can lead to depression and anxiety, said Dreyer: 鈥淭eaching boys to think about fear and vulnerability as opportunities for growth鈥攊nstead of evidence of weakness鈥攚ill go a long way toward a more equitable world where everyone feels more satisfied and confident in who they are.鈥

Recently, my nine-year-old came home from the soccer car pool in tears, because one of the other boys made mean comments to him on the drive. He wanted to quit the car pool, possibly even the sport. After several conversations, his distress seemed rooted not just in the other kid鈥檚 immaturity聽but feeling inadequate on the team and worrying that his teammates agree with his bully. Not everyone can be a star player, I told him. And not everyone is kind. We named the problem, practiced how he could respond, and he played (and carpooled) on聽without trouble. This was a minor incident, but my hope is that small things like this will add up, develop聽trust, and help my boys聽build confidence and grow听颈苍to more empathetic, mature human beings.

Read our story on raising brave girls here.

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How to Hike with Kids? 9 Tricks from an Outdoor Mom. /culture/active-families/how-to-hike-with-kids/ Mon, 22 Apr 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/how-to-hike-with-kids/ How to Hike with Kids? 9 Tricks from an Outdoor Mom.

It's a balancing act of trickery, bribery, and the lure of adventure.

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How to Hike with Kids? 9 Tricks from an Outdoor Mom.

Ever since my first son was born, in 2010, hiking has proven to be a rich and forgiving family activity. Though I prefer to trail run and mountain bike when I鈥檓 away from my nine- and seven-year-old, neither are (currently) conducive to quality family time. By contrast, everyone can hike. We started with small jaunts once the boys could walk, which has given way to longer outings. All told, we鈥檝e spent countless hours on the trail, and I鈥檝e become a default expert on how to encourage my kids to hike.

And encouragement is necessary. Even though my boys are mostly thrilled when we鈥檙e actually out walking, more often than not, the mention of a hike elicits groans, whining, and protests. Here鈥檚 what works for me to get the kids on the trail and make it as enjoyable as possible once we鈥檙e out.

Don鈥檛 Call It Hiking

First, don鈥檛 call it 鈥渉iking.鈥 That sounds too much like 鈥渨ork鈥 or 鈥渂roccoli.鈥 Not that those things are bad. It鈥檚 just that they imply some sort of austerity. So, don鈥檛 call it anything at all. Just tell your kids to get their shoes on and to follow you. I learned this tip from my husband, Jeff, a few summers ago.聽While I was steeped in NATO-level negotiations with a recalcitrant three-year-old, he just handed over the shoes and started walking. To my amazement, the boys followed, and within minutes, were giggling and having fun.

Choose an Interesting Trail

Walking a flat聽dirt road is boring. Walking a narrow聽winding trail is intriguing. It鈥檚 even better if your trail has a lot of trees or boulders along the way that a kid can climb on. Water is awesome. Hiking near rivers or lakes or alongside an ocean gives kids a target at which to throw rocks. They can gather sticks and pretend to fish (or actually bring rods and fish for real), dip their toes, fill their sun hats with water to cool off their hot heads, and splash around. Let the natural environment interest the kids. Look for animal tracks and bones, and point out interesting plants and birds.

Slow Down

You might care about getting to Point B, which may be a summit or a view point聽that鈥檚 exactly 2.3 miles from Point A. Most kids don鈥檛 care, so try to let go of your power walking and enjoy the trail instead. And while you鈥檙e slowing down, chill out. On the trail, I set aside my massive aversion to violent play and let the boys pretend that sticks are guns and swords. (They still aren鈥檛 allowed to hit or shoot at a human!) The lumps and shadows off the trail are menaces to be vanquished. Sometimes I help the kids in their battles, but usually I just let them run ahead to 鈥渟hoot鈥 things and applaud them when they deliver us from danger.

Set Goals

Most kids like having achieved a summit, especially as they age. Here in Colorado, my boys are angling to bag a fourteener聽this summer. I鈥檓 using this desire as leverage: everything we do that鈥檚 remotely exercise-related is in service of our fourteener goal. So far, it鈥檚 motivating the boys to ride bikes, run, and walk more than usual.

Give Them Responsibilities

When your kids get a little older, entrust them with pocketknives of their own. Be clear about the rules, and teach them how to use the knife. Once they earn your trust, let them whittle wood,聽cut the salami, or simply carry the knife on a lanyard around their neck on camping trips. When it鈥檚 time to start a fire, ask them to gather kindling. If you have a dog, bring the dog and let your kid hold its leash for a while. Anything you can do to help a kid feel responsible and trustworthy while hiking (and otherwise) is positive for their development and their stoke level.

Don鈥檛 Skimp on the Snacks

I try to find the right balance between healthy and tasty fuel. Fresh fruit is a good natural incentive. Clementines pack well, as do apples. But there鈥檚 always some chocolate and candy in my pack. We call these 鈥淪cooby Snacks,鈥 and they鈥檙e doled out on a limited basis. We eat fueling carbs like fruit,聽trail mix, or granola bars first, then some protein if I can convince the kids they want beef jerky or hard-boiled eggs,聽and then candy as a reward. Take as many water stops as the kids want, and then a few more. A dehydrated or hungry kid is a grumpy kid.

Invite Friends

Peer pressure goes a long way, so bring friends. Smile at other people on the trail. If you鈥檙e lucky, they鈥檒l smile at your kids and give them high-fives. Once, during a family vacation to Scotland, my young sons hiked 3,000 vertical feet up Goatfell Peak on Arran Island with the encouragement of enthusiastic passing Scots who cheered them with聽鈥淲ay to go, ye wee lads!鈥

Take Their Worries Seriously

We鈥檝e all seen a kid acting like their foot fell off when they don鈥檛 even have small cut, but bring a first-aid kit and indulge their concerns about blisters and pains anyway. Sometimes there鈥檚 nothing to doctor, but the placebo effect of a Band-Aid cannot be overstated. And sometimes there聽is聽an actual blister. For those, keep moleskin and a spare pair of kid socks in your pack.

Repeat as Often as Possible

A hike in the woods is a balm to the soul. You know that, but it isn鈥檛 the kind of thing you can explain to a kid. You just have to do it over and over until they understand it intrinsically, without even knowing they鈥檝e absorbed the lesson. Do that, and your kids will have hiking to return to their entire lives. If you鈥檙e lucky, as they get older and more competent and adventurous, they鈥檒l bring you along.

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Children Should Play 国产吃瓜黑料 Alone鈥擧ere’s How /culture/active-families/children-playing-outside-alone-tips/ Mon, 22 Apr 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/children-playing-outside-alone-tips/ Children Should Play 国产吃瓜黑料 Alone鈥擧ere's How

Tips from a raft guide on how to let your kid roam free without worrying... at least not too much.

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Children Should Play 国产吃瓜黑料 Alone鈥擧ere's How

The most pivotal experience of my adolescence was spending three days alone on an island off the coast of Maine with a tarp, a bag of trail mix, a sleeping bag, an apple, a sleeping pad, and plenty of water. My solo,聽at age 15,聽was part of a 21-day sea-kayaking and sailing course. I journaled, contemplated boredom, did many jumping jacks, and emerged with a sense of accomplishment and self-reliance that paved my way for a lifetime of outdoor adventure.

So naturally, I want to give my sons, who are nine and seven, similar opportunities to spend time alone outside, solve problems, and experience the world in its massiveness. But it鈥檚 one thing to be an Outward Bound student; it鈥檚 something else to be the responsible parent deciding how much independence to grant kids outside聽and when. I reached out to Truckee, California, resident聽, a raft guide turned doctor and the mother of four, for advice. She abides by four basic steps: teach, plan, supervise, and let go.

Teach

Before letting them run wild,聽teach your kids basic safety rules, like what to avoid (open water or busy streets), how to assess their own skills, and what to do if they get into trouble. This is a lifelong process that is best begun in toddlerhood, says Anderson. 鈥淚 used to send my kids on 鈥榚xpedition missions鈥 as toddlers and preschoolers,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e鈥檇 be out on a trail, and I would send them off into the woods on an objective.鈥

The mission could be gathering pine cones or rocks or counting birds. The point is to give the kids a task that they can do outside of your immediate purview. As your聽kids get older, teach them how to navigate so you can trust that they鈥檒l be able to ride their bike or walk to a designated spot. Show your child聽what you鈥檙e doing and why. On the ski hill, let them pick the slopes. If you鈥檙e camping, let them set up the tent. Hiking? Let them pick the route.

Plan

Come up with an oh-shit plan聽just for the adults.聽Assess the potential danger of any given scenario, and identify how you would get out of it. (Broken arm at the crag? Map directions to the nearest doctor. Have a kid with food allergies? Stash the EpiPen in your pack.)聽Don鈥檛 tell the kids the plan, says Anderson鈥攖his one is a backup. 鈥淭he kids should feel as if they鈥檙e totally on their own in the wild, and you should have a general sense of where they are and what鈥檚 going on,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hey run wild and free, and I鈥檝e identified potential problem spots and made a calculated risk as to what I鈥檓 comfortable with and what I鈥檓 not comfortable with.鈥

Another important part of the plan is communicating with your kids, says Anderson. 鈥淓xplain, 鈥楬ere is the situation, and I want you to make good choices. This and that should be on your radar. Here鈥檚 what you need to do.鈥 And then get confirmation that they understand,鈥 she says.

Supervise

Parents will have varying degrees聽of risk acceptance. Anderson believes it鈥檚 fine for your kids to experience natural consequences鈥攕o long as they don鈥檛 endure serious injury. If the kids are bouldering, for example, they might get themselves into a sticky situation high up on a rock and聽need a rescue. That鈥檚 an acceptable risk. Sure, they might get scared, and there might be tears, but they鈥檒l learn a lot about their limits and how to take care of themselves. They will also know they can trust you to help them out when they need it.

鈥淵ou have to be in a place where you can let your kids encounter problems and work through them,鈥 Anderson says. 鈥淭he situation has to be safe enough so you can monitor without interfering unless you need to for their safety.鈥

This problem-solving builds confidence and skills. It鈥檚 a positive-feedback loop: kids build upon knowledge and demonstrate their responsibility, and their parents become聽more and more comfortable granting them independence in the outdoors.

Let Go

鈥淜ids are a lot tougher than we think they are,鈥 Anderson says. Trust they have learned the lessons you鈥檙e imparting, and remember that their skill building is an iterative process. It can be harrowing to watch your offspring ski down a slope solo聽for the first time, with plans to meet for lunch, but instead of giving in to anxiety, reframe the situation in your mind. You are giving your kid the opportunity to be independent and deal with what comes their聽way, even if that means getting lost and tracking down a ski patroller to help them return to their familiar meeting spot.

鈥淚f you don鈥檛 let them make choices by themselves, kids don鈥檛 get the chance to learn and to depend on themselves,鈥 Anderson says. 鈥淭he outdoors is a great classroom, and getting the chance to experience it on their own will make kids stronger鈥攅motionally and physically.鈥

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Let Your Kids Get Dirty /culture/active-families/let-kids-get-dirty/ Mon, 22 Apr 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/let-kids-get-dirty/ Let Your Kids Get Dirty

What good is there in letting them loose on the nearest mud puddle? Let me count the ways.

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Let Your Kids Get Dirty

Two days after the mid-March moved through my hometown of Boulder, Colorado, the clouds lifted, the sun glared in the sky, and all of the kids at my sons鈥 elementary school wore shorts. The heat melted the snow and transformed the school grounds into a massive mud hole. With no after-school activities, I let my boys loose鈥攁long with about a dozen friends鈥攁nd within minutes, they were unrecognizable.

Mud clumped in their hair and filled their shoes. Their clothes turned an ugly brown. They used the earth to paint lines and dots on their foreheads and cheeks.

I loved it. Another mom wrung her hands before leaning into me conspiratorially and saying she had a basketball in her car.

鈥淎nd?鈥 I asked.

鈥淲e could distract them from the mud.鈥

As if anything could distract a kid from rolling around in cool聽muddy mud. Put simply: Kids love to get dirty. They splash in puddles and roll around in dry dirt, or they shuffle their feet聽so they look like a walking, talking version of Pigpen from 鈥淧eanuts.鈥 In my nine years as a parent聽I have learned that, given the chance, kids will get dirty鈥攊f their parents let them.

I almost always let them.

When a kid gets dirty out in the world, it鈥檚 almost entirely on their聽terms. They聽become聽the boss of their聽body.

There are few things kids can control in their own lives. From the minute they鈥檙e born (and even before that), they鈥檙e monitored and regulated and socialized. It happens before you even know it: pediatricians charting an infant鈥檚 weight and length within hours of their birth聽and then continuing to do so throughout childhood. Preschool teachers holding conferences with parents where they discuss, in all seriousness, a four-year-old鈥檚 aptitude when it comes to painting or sharing. Team sports, music lessons, drama classes, and more starting in kindergarten and ratcheting up in intensity all the way through high school. Rules and homework and discipline.

I鈥檓 glad for these social mores鈥擨 don鈥檛 want to raise kids who are assholes. But I also want to encourage independence and聽help my kids experience that ineffable feeling of an untroubled mind and body acting in unison.

It鈥檚 not always easy. Dirt helps.

When a kid gets dirty out in the world, it鈥檚 almost entirely on their聽terms. They聽become聽the boss of their聽body. Their聽imagination goes into overdrive, and they聽experience聽the independence and thrill of flaunting social expectations that say they聽ought not get filthy.

Playing in the dirt is also good for kids鈥 . Ours is a mostly sanitized society and has become much more so since the industrial revolution. With the majority of citizens living in cities and suburbs, as opposed to farms, kids are less exposed to microbes and other healthy bacteria. that lack of such exposure can contribute to the onset of chronic inflammatory disorders and allergies. In the dirt (with the obvious exception of dirt that is known to be polluted), kids excavate microbes and other bacteria that bolster their systems.

Save for the possibility of ruining some clothes (but you didn鈥檛 send them off in their most precious duds, did you?) or getting cold when the mud dries and the sun goes behind the clouds, there鈥檚 very little risk to letting kids get dirty. The rewards, by contrast, are high.

At the end of my boys鈥 muddy day in March, they were covered head to toe. They had an exuberance to them, and they bellowed in glee as we walked home. That night聽they showered, cleaned the bathtub, and then showered again. They ate heartily at dinner and cheerfully helped tidy聽up afterward. Both boys went to bed early and fell asleep without fuss. Whether there鈥檚 a smudge or an entire layer of muck on that joyful youngin鈥, my only bit of advice is to roll with it. Better to have a happy kid and dirty towels than a clean, sanitized one whining that there鈥檚 nothing to do.

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10th Mountain Division Huts You Need to Visit /adventure-travel/destinations/10th-mountain-division-huts-colorado/ Thu, 07 Mar 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/10th-mountain-division-huts-colorado/ 10th Mountain Division Huts You Need to Visit

The best alpine huts in Colorado

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10th Mountain Division Huts You Need to Visit

Choosing a favorite among the 34聽backcountry聽cabins聽managed by the of Colorado is kind of like asking a parent to pick their favorite child.聽Each hut in the system is named in honor a聽famed World War II unit聽that specialized听颈苍 mountain and arctic warfare, was built by the nonprofit organization for public use, and offers something unique. Some are big and easily accessible. Others are tiny and remote. But no matter which you聽choose, you鈥檒l be rewarded with stunning views of mountain peaks or pristine forests. I鈥檝e been going on hut trips in the Centennial State since 2000聽and have a few recommendations.

The Sisters Cabin

(Courtesy 10th Mountain Division Hut Association)

Location: Arapahoe National Forest
贰濒别惫补迟颈辞苍:听11,445 feet
Closest Town:聽Breckenridge
颁辞蝉迟:听$50 per person per night

奥丑别苍听迟丑别 聽started taking reservations in January, it became the first new hut to open on聽public land in Colorado in more than two decades. The 2,200-square-foot space聽sleeps up to 14 and聽has indoor composting toilets, a wood-fired sauna, epic ski terrain nearby, and unrivaled views of the Tenmile Range and Blue River Valley. But what really makes this place stand out is its style: the cabin聽features enormous picture windows and a modern,聽functional layout.聽Plus,聽the indoor composting toilets mean you can relieve yourself at midnight without having to brave the elements.

Fowler Hilliard

(Courtesy 10th Mountain Division Hut Association)

Location: White River National Forest
Elevation: 11,500 feet
Closest Town:聽Minturn
颁辞蝉迟:听$33 per person per night

One of the few huts with both summer and winter access, this beautiful stone and wood structure聽looks more like a chalet on its ridgeline perch聽than a rustic backcountry hut. With timberline views of some of Colorado鈥檚 highest peaks in the Elk Range聽and phenomenal skiing in the bowl right out the front door, it鈥檚 the rare hut where you can click in and make turns without any extra effort, meaning it鈥檚聽, whether you want to be skinning laps or reading inside by the fire.

Shrine Mountain Inn

(Courtesy 10th Mountain Division Hut Association)

Location: White River National Forest
贰濒别惫补迟颈辞苍:听11,209 feet
Closest Town:聽Vail
颁辞蝉迟:听$45 per person per night,聽plus $6 Vail Pass parking fee

Boasting the most creature comforts, 聽has running hot and cold water,聽flushing toilets, a shower and tub, and electricity. Located less than three miles from I-70, it also聽features聽one of the least rigorous approaches聽of all the huts.聽Comprised of three separate accomodations鈥擩ay鈥檚, Chuck鈥檚, and Walter鈥檚鈥攖he easy access and abundance of space make it a great first-time聽or family trip.

Benedict Huts: Fritz and Fabi鈥檚

(Courtesy 10th Mountain Division Hut Association)

Location: White River National Forest
贰濒别惫补迟颈辞苍:听10,970 feet
Closest Town:聽Aspen
Cost: $33 per person per night

Of all the reasons to recommend 鈥攖heir beautiful location, modern architectural style, cozy living rooms, amazing skiing鈥攊t鈥檚 the聽view of the Elk聽Mountains from the outhouse that shines brightest. But since you鈥檙e going to do more than sit on the crapper, understand this: these shelters聽are peaceful, set in an aspen grove, and have a sentimental legacy, having been named after聽Fritz and Fabi Benedict, Aspenites who helped start .

Friends Hut

Location: Gunnison National Forest
贰濒别惫补迟颈辞苍:听11,370 feet
Closest Towns:聽Crested Butte and Aspen
颁辞蝉迟:听$22.50 per person per night

Nestled in the forest about a thousand聽feet below Pearl Pass, the dividing line between Aspen and Crested Butte in the Elk Mountains, this 聽is well worth the slog it takes to get there. After skinning聽almost 11 miles uphill from the Crested Butte side聽or braving聽the seven-mile approach聽over exposed avalanche terrain from Aspen, you won鈥檛聽want to leave聽the intimate, eight-person abode, and聽not just because you鈥檒l be tired from the approach. Friends Hut is the adult聽backcountry equivalent of a child鈥檚 treehouse鈥攊t鈥檚 welcoming, accessible only to those willing to work for it, and offers a refuge from the bigger, crazier world.

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Gear Review: Reima Outerwear for Kids /culture/active-families/gear-review-reima-outerwear-kids/ Wed, 16 Jan 2019 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/gear-review-reima-outerwear-kids/ Gear Review: Reima Outerwear for Kids

Our resident six- and eight-year-olds reviewed this Finnish company's line.

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Gear Review: Reima Outerwear for Kids

As a parent who regularly exposes her offspring to wind, rain, snow, and sun, I鈥檝e done my best to clothe them appropriately, despite my oldest son鈥檚 preference for wearing sport shorts and a T-shirt鈥攅ven in a blizzard.聽But聽I had yet to find gear that kept my聽kids protected from getting too cold, wet, or sweaty until we tried Reima.聽I had long admired , a Finland-based company that makes kid-specific outerwear and clothes. I thought of it as the more rugged version of other cool European kid brands like Boden or Jacadi Paris, complete with bright, bold colors that call to mind images of Finnish storefronts in a fishing village painted red, blue, yellow, and green. So when I heard Reima was making headway into American markets, I reached out to see if it聽wanted some Colorado kid testers, and my boys spent the early-winter months skiing and playing outside in聽Reima wear.

About the Testers

Me, Rachel Walker, Age 43:聽I want my kids鈥 clothes durable, high-performing, and recognizable. I鈥檓 less concerned about fashion and more concerned with being able to pick them out of a crowd or a crowded ski slope.

Henry, Age 8: Built like an ox, Henry looks more like a 12-year-old ski racer than a geeky third-grader. He runs聽hot (when we ski, he lets me warm my hands on his bare stomach) and couldn鈥檛 care less about how things look. He can be sloppy, so the fewer bells and whistles (in his opinion), the better.

Silas, Age 6: A spitfire聽redhead who rarely stands still, Silas is a lean, muscular聽kid who is both聽particular and precise.聽Once he decides against something, there鈥檚 little changing his mind.

Northern Fleece Jacket ($75)

(Courtesy Reima)

Forget everything I said about functionality. I fell in love with this for its looks.

Henry鈥檚 Take: It鈥檚 nice on windier days, but when I鈥檓 forced to wear this sweater on sunny days, it gets way too hot. I do love the pockets, because they鈥檙e big enough for a ball, my bike lock, and a few Pok茅mon cards.

Silas鈥檚 Take: The best thing about this sweater is the zipper. It zips up and down easily. Also, it鈥檚 not scratchy, and the hood is big enough to fit over my bike helmet. (Mom鈥檚 note: no, it鈥檚 not.)


Brisk Reimatec聽Jacket ($170)

(Courtesy Reima)

Hunting-jacket orange immediately appealed to me, as did the of this piece. I thought the kids would love the removable fleece liner and appreciate the combo for warm, early-season ski days. Plus, the hood is expansive and fits over both their ski and bike helmets.

Henry鈥檚 Take: This jacket is going to get me in trouble. Every time I take it apart I鈥檓 afraid I鈥檓 going to lose one of the pieces. Still, it鈥檚 great for sunny to light, breezy days.

Silas鈥檚 Take: Reima should have something stronger to snap the liner to the outer shell. It鈥檚 really frustrating that I can鈥檛 take it apart and put it back together easily. This wasn鈥檛 my favorite jacket, but it鈥檚 a good jacket to have when your mom is going to make you wear one.


Regor Reimatech聽Winter Jacket ($180)

(Courtesy Reima)

The mother of all ski jackets, has been keeping the boys warm ever since our downhill season started聽around Thanksgiving. The seams are sealed and the waterproofing works. It鈥檚 warm, comes in colorful, eye-popping patterns, and offers a relaxed fit.

Henry鈥檚 Take: I love the wind guard on the collar, because I zip it up for chairlift rides and it helps keep me warm when the wind blows. On the downhills, sometimes I unzip the jacket all the way so I don鈥檛 get hot. I wish the pockets were bigger so I could actually fit snacks and a walkie-talkie in them.

Silas鈥檚 Take: It has a powder skirt that鈥檚 amazing, because聽when I fall on runs, it blocks snow going down my pants. I wish all my jackets had a powder skirt.


Takeoff Reimatech聽Winter Pants ($110)

(Courtesy Reima)

Did I mention Henry is big for his age? While a lot of active eight-year-old boys are whippet thin, he鈥檚 not, and that鈥檚 made finding athletic bottoms occasionally challenging. are insulated just enough to keep him neutral to warm but not so much that he overheats. They are loose in the waist and legs but not too baggy. And the suspenders are easy to manage.

Henry鈥檚 Take: These are much more comfortable than other ski pants I鈥檝e had, and the lining feels nice and soft. The suspenders slip too much聽and then fall off my shoulders, and that鈥檚 not the best. If I could, I鈥檇 fix that. Otherwise, no complaints!

Silas鈥檚 Take: My mom said these pants would be too big for me.


Trick Jeans ($75)

(Courtesy Reima)

Everything I said about finding ski pants to fit Henry鈥檚 solid, muscular frame also applies to jeans. check every box. Plus, they鈥檙e supersoft, and they look great. Better yet, so far nothing he鈥檚 done can rip them, not even sliding around on the soccer field, falling off his bike, crawling across the blacktop on his knees (his choice, not mine), or scrambling on big rocks.

Henry鈥檚 Take: These are really nice and flexible. And the inside is so soft, like聽as soft as the ear on my new stuffed dog.

Silas鈥檚 Take: I don鈥檛 like jeans. I won鈥檛 wear them. I don鈥檛 care if Mom thinks they make me look cute.


Lhotse Thermal Underwear ($85)

(Courtesy Reima)

This is the product that sent me to the measuring tape, frantically trying to figure out if I could fit into kid鈥檚 sizing. Alas聽I can鈥檛, which means these artful, durable, (50/50) are out of my reach. That鈥檚 a shame, because the Lhotse elevates long johns to pajama-level cute, wool-level warm, and don鈥檛-need-to-wash-them-for-days odorless.

Henry鈥檚 Take: They鈥檙e so soft. They don鈥檛 scratch me at all. And they feel wild because of the mountains and trees on them. I stay warm but don鈥檛 get too hot in them.

Silas鈥檚 Take: They don鈥檛 stink or itch, and the design always makes me want to go skiing. I have about seven pairs of long underwear, but I only really wear these.

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How Outdoor Programs Are Empowering Transgender Youth /culture/active-families/how-outdoor-programs-are-empowering-transgender-youth/ Sat, 24 Nov 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/how-outdoor-programs-are-empowering-transgender-youth/ How Outdoor Programs Are Empowering Transgender Youth

Camps and wilderness expeditions offer a refuge from today鈥檚 political battles and prejudice and give trans kids the tools they need to face future challenges.

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How Outdoor Programs Are Empowering Transgender Youth

In mid-October, the American Academy of Pediatricians (APP) released its first ever for caretakers of transgender children and teenagers. The guide calls for adults to adopt a gender-affirming,聽nonjudgmental approach that helps trans kids feel safe in a society that often marginalizes or stigmatizes those seen as different. Even though transgender kids will face many challenges in life,聽the policy states, like all children, they can grow into happy and healthy adults when supported and loved throughout their development. Roughly one week later, the Trump administration announced it was considering as a biological, immutable condition determined by genitalia at birth, a move that could eliminate the term transgender聽and, trans rights activists say, lead to discrimination based on sex. This isn鈥檛 the first effort by聽the administration聽to undermine transgender rights. In early 2017, the Trump administration rescinded Education Department guidelines recommending that students be allowed to use facilities and pronouns consistent with their gender identity.

For trans adults, this is infuriating and, for some, a call to activism. For trans youth, this open hostility and attack on their rights could have dire impacts on their mental health and development into adulthood.

But not if Perry Cohen can help it. Cohen, founder of the , a nonprofit outdoor-education organization founded in 2014 for transgender kids that鈥檚 staffed almost entirely by transgender counselors, is creating a space where trans children can develop an indefatigable sense of themselves, a confidence that they are strong and they matter. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know a single trans or nonbinary child or adult who doesn鈥檛 feel the [political] attack directly,鈥 says Cohen, who is also聽transgender. 鈥淣ow we can be fired, or not hired, for being trans. We know that our government is trying to invalidate our identities.鈥

For transgender youth, this open hostility and attack on transgender rights could have dire impacts on their mental health and development into adulthood.

Cohen鈥檚 Venture Out Project and other organizations like聽聽for trans and gender-variant youth聽are relying on traditional outdoor education and summer camp models to deliver an invigorating, affirming experience to trans kids.聽Both Cohen and聽Nick Teich, CEO and founder of Camp Aranu鈥檛iq,聽had formative outdoor聽experiences in childhood that endowed them with confidence and, ultimately, contributed to each embracing his individual identity. Cohen and Teich each have transitioned to the gender they identify with. Driven by a desire to help others, they have become leaders in the outdoor education and summer camp spaces.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really important for adults who care for transgender kids to give hope and positivity in the climate we are in right now,鈥 says聽Teich. 鈥淲hat we鈥檙e seeing now is an administration that says聽鈥榃e don鈥檛 believe you,鈥 鈥楪et real,鈥 and 鈥楾his is not who you are.鈥 鈥

鈥淭ransgender kids are consumed with thoughts about who is going to ask them about their identity or judge them,鈥 adds聽Teich. 鈥淲e provide a place that is all about free play and the outdoors, where they don鈥檛 have to worry about the next person who is going to ask if they are a boy or a girl.鈥

Founded in 2009, Camp Aranu鈥檛iq is a typical lake-based聽New England summer camp that offers activities like canoeing, archery, and rock climbing. Kids have bunkmates in rustic cabins. Campers and counselors are called by their preferred names and pronouns, they eat at communal tables, and they have no access to screens or devices.

The Venture Out Project facilitates backpacking and wilderness trips in New England and the Pacific Northwest for trans youth ages 13 to 19. The organization also coordinates day-hike meetups and a multi-day camping weekend for kids and allies, including family members and caregivers. Participants discover a supportive, physically challenging environment, and for many kids, it鈥檚 the first time in their lives that they鈥檙e with a trans community in real life. (Many transgender youth find support and friends online, says Cohen.) The combination of excelling at something hard in the outdoors, like summiting a peak or camping in a tent for the first time, with the empathetic students and staff creates an uplifting dynamic that typically manifests in increased confidence and self-acceptance, Cohen says. Although the program doesn鈥檛 explicitly explore what it means to be transgender (both Teich and Cohen emphasized that their programs are not about counseling), participants inevitably share their experiences and find comradery, advice, and the opportunity to help others like them.

鈥淚t鈥檚 really powerful to have instructors who have lived through these experiences and understand what it鈥檚 like to be misgendered,鈥 says Cohen. 鈥淢any trans youth and adults have never been around trans folks for any extended period of time. They may have a strong online community, but to actually be in the presence of people like them is different.鈥

Although the program doesn鈥檛 explicitly explore what it means to be transgender, participants inevitably share their experiences and find comradery, advice, and the opportunity to help others like them.

In these programs, children are not separated鈥攊nto sleeping groups, cabins, or otherwise鈥攂y gender. They all receive the same messaging from the adults in charge. For example, at the Venture Out Project, all backpackers learn what to do if you 鈥渟quat when you pee, or if you happen to bleed during a trip,鈥 says Cohen. 鈥淚t鈥檚 simple: if you experience this bodily function, here鈥檚 what to do.鈥

The programs聽create聽community and strength, something transgender youth need to endure the challenges they face. According to the AAP policy statement, transgender youth face obstacles 鈥渋n nearly every social context, from聽lack of understanding to outright rejection, isolation, discrimination, and victimization.鈥 One survey of nearly 28,000 transgender respondents found that among those who were out or perceived to be transgender between kindergarten and eighth grade, 54 percent were verbally harassed, 24 percent were physically assaulted, 13 percent were sexually assaulted, and 17 percent left school because of maltreatment. Education and advocacy from the medical community on the importance of safe schools for youth who identify as transgender can have a significant and positive effect.

鈥淓very day, trans and nonbinary people wake up to have our very existence up for debate,鈥 says Cohen. 鈥淓ven kids can鈥檛 escape it. Venture Out is in no way an escape. We are an incubator. With all that is going on and聽the constant assault of news and information, everyone needs a place to share stories, talk about issues, and build strength to go back into the fight.鈥

Both Aranu鈥檛iq and the Venture Out Project offer scholarships to make camp accessible to a diverse population of kids. And more queer- and trans-specific camps are opening every year; check out a working list of them聽.

The experience of attending camp or a wilderness expedition could prove transformative, say both Teich and Cohen. Results of a 2017 survey聽of Camp Aranu鈥檛iq鈥檚 participants show that 92 percent felt more confident after attending Aranu鈥檛iq, and 97 percent felt that they were part of a community afterward.

That echoes the feedback Cohen has gotten at the Venture Out Project. This summer he received a letter from a participant that said, 鈥淔or the first time, I love myself not in spite of being trans, but because I鈥檓 trans.鈥

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Why You Should Let Your Kids Do Extreme Sports /culture/active-families/kids-extreme-sports/ Mon, 15 Oct 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/kids-extreme-sports/ Why You Should Let Your Kids Do Extreme Sports

Experts say intense outdoor activities can help children increase focus and develop a better awareness of their surroundings.

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Why You Should Let Your Kids Do Extreme Sports

Walk around the base of any downhill-mountain-bike park, and the people pedaling look like extras from the movie Batman: full-face helmets, body armor, and bikes that could withstand a typhoon. They throw themselves off steep drops and bomb down narrow trails. The totality of downhill mountain biking鈥攖he uniform, the speed, the daring鈥攅ntranced my two sons,聽eight-year-old Henry and six-year-old Silas, this summer. We spend a lot of time in Colorado鈥檚 Winter Park, and the resort鈥檚 is always abuzz with downhillers. Over and over the kids begged to try it. Our regular old bike rides, the kind where you have to pedal uphill instead of taking a chairlift, the kind聽where聽you wear shorts and a shirt instead of a back protector and full-face helmet, were now apparently too tame for聽Henry and Silas.

I thought otherwise. It wasn鈥檛 the potential physical danger that gave me pause. I simply questioned the wisdom of exposing young kids to extreme sports. I couldn鈥檛 see the smarts听颈苍 taking a formative childhood pastime like bike riding and making it into a gear-intensive, expensive, adult(ish) thing.

There was also the issue of discovery. I still remember taking my first mountain-bike trip,聽to Fruita, Colorado, in 1998, when I was 23 and experiencing the profound independence and freedom that comes with exploring a new place on a fast bike with young, wild friends and nary an adult in sight. Why would I rob my kids of that formative experience by slotting them into a sport too early? But most of all, I just couldn鈥檛 shake the cynical suspicion that extreme sports for kids鈥攖here鈥檚 youth kitesurfing, rock climbing, freeride skiing, spearfishing, and Spartan Races, to name a few鈥攚ere developed entirely to manipulate Gen-X and Millennial parents鈥 ,聽so we鈥檇 crack open our wallets and pay for lessons and gear. Lessons? When I learned how to ride a bike, there were no lessons鈥攗nless you count face-planting on the asphalt, my banana-seat Schwinn overturned beside me, as a sort of clinic.

Meanwhile, the boys relentlessly repeated their argument: downhill mountain biking looked fun, and they wanted to try it.

I reached out to , journalist and author of ,聽who spawned the term 鈥渘ature-deficit disorder.鈥 Specifically, he believes that kids should spend a lot more unstructured time in nature so that they develop into curious, capable humans. Surely he would think downhill mountain biking, or any extreme sport for that matter, didn鈥檛 count as quality nature time for kids, since there鈥檚 a lot of structure and stuff involved. To my surprise, Louv said he was 鈥渇ine with the Millennial or Gen-X approach to extreme outdoor sports, with a few words of caution.鈥 Specifically, Louv said that the best nature experiences聽for young children are those that are personal, tactile, and slow, like getting muddy, climbing a tree, or watching fish jumping for flies at聽a lake. Although extreme sports aren鈥檛 slow, he said, they can be personal and extremely stimulating. 鈥淵oung people are more likely to be attracted to riskier outdoor adventures,鈥 he said. They can still commune with nature, even if they鈥檙e going fast and are wearing body armor. In fact, the risk inherent in extreme sports聽might make some kids 鈥渕ore aware of their surroundings,鈥 Louv said.

That increased awareness聽could well spread to other aspects of their lives, like school and home. This is a good thing, according to Angela Hanscom, a New Hampshire-based pediatric occupational therapist and founder of , a nature-based kids camp. 鈥淥ne of the most significant impacts of nature-deficit disorder is a decrease in attention span,鈥 she said. This inattention has been linked to a lack of movement. Kids who are sedentary and staring at screens are not stimulating their balance or organizing their senses, she said. 鈥淭hose kids tend to have trouble controlling emotions, are more easily frustrated, and struggle with hyperactivity,鈥 Hanscom added.

Go ahead and take a downhill-mountain-bike lesson, Hanscom聽and Louv both advised. Just don鈥檛 make that鈥攐r any other specific sport鈥攜our kids鈥 sole outdoor activity.

Time spent playing in nature聽helps young kids develop their neurological systems, and they inherently seek out the stimulation they need. For instance, when kids spin聽until they're聽dizzy and fall down, that helps them organize their senses and develop their balance and brains.

Time in nature also helps kids navigate fear, and extreme sports might provide even more opportunities for that than, say, a nature walk. 鈥淲hen kids are able to try things that scare them, and realize they can overcome the challenges, that鈥檚 very important for their development,鈥 Hanscom said.

Go ahead and take a downhill-mountain-bike lesson, she and Louv both advised. Just don鈥檛 make that鈥攐r any other specific sport鈥攜our kids鈥 sole outdoor activity. Louv and Hanscom聽also agreed on another point: there is no reason to have kids specialize听颈苍 any sport too early. Avoiding specialization聽safeguards against overuse injuries, and it also teaches kids the importance of being open to new experiences. As for my reluctance to听颈苍troduce聽the聽kids to聽something I didn鈥檛 do until my twenties for聽fear that I鈥檇 be robbing them of the thrill of discovery? Nonsense, said Hanscom.

鈥淚t鈥檚 OK聽to give your child amazing experiences at an early age, and it鈥檚 formative for the brain,鈥 she said. 鈥淏esides, you don鈥檛 know what鈥檚 going to be meaningful to them later on, and they might discover something completely different when they鈥檙e 16.鈥 Translation: Mom, you鈥檙e not as influential as you think you are, and you鈥檙e definitely overthinking this.

At least that was my conclusion one gorgeous summer morning as I brought up the rear on my family鈥檚 group at . Our fanny-pack-toting instructor explained the importance of soft elbows and balanced feet on the pedals, and the boys descended a relatively rowdy trail that was steeper and looser than anything I鈥檇 taken them on before. Suited up,聽we looked like a mini motorcycle gang. All told聽we rode five miles and dropped almost 3,000 vertical feet. Silas loved it and charged the entire day. Henry聽was more visibly nervous and walked his bike down the sections that scared him. I was nearly knocked over by the unexpected joy I felt at sharing this shred with my boys.

As our family descended the mountain, I thought of something Louv told me.聽Scientists who study human perception no longer assume we have only five senses: taste, touch, smell, sight, and hearing. The number now ranges from a conservative ten聽to as many as 30. Yet most of us鈥攌ids and adults alike鈥攅xist in a predominantly digital environment that asks us to spend enormous energy blocking out many of these senses聽so we can focus narrowly on the screen in front of our聽eyes.

鈥淭hat鈥檚 the very definition of being less alive,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd what parent wants their child to be less alive?鈥

About a month later, we were camping with a group of friends outside Aspen, Colorado, when the boys and their friends decided to build a steep downhill trail. Never mind that it was only ten feet long and dead-ended into a massive log. That trail was 鈥渢otally rad鈥 and occupied the kids鈥 attention for almost two days straight. They worked with their hands and worked together. And then they all hopped on their bikes to give it a go.

As I watched them bounce into the forest and squeal in delight, their vibrancy was palpable. The blood coursed through their veins and their little brains exploded with possibility as all of their interests intertwined鈥攇etting dirty, having fun on bikes, playing with rocks, being with friends. Every sense was stimulated, and then some, and as the kids flocked to the trail like icebound penguins to the sea, we all felt completely, alertly, happily alive. It was extreme听颈苍 the best possible way.

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Giulia Delladio Is Taking Over La Sportiva /outdoor-gear/climbing-gear/meet-woman-taking-over-la-sportiva/ Mon, 23 Jul 2018 00:00:00 +0000 /uncategorized/meet-woman-taking-over-la-sportiva/ Giulia Delladio Is Taking Over La Sportiva

At 33, Giulia Delladio is in line to take over as president and CEO of La Sportiva when her father retires.

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Giulia Delladio Is Taking Over La Sportiva

Giulia Delladio is remarkably calm. It鈥檚 a Wednesday evening in May 2018 in Trento, Italy. In an hour, more than 3,000 people will converge outside the MUSE Museum of Science to celebrate the 90th anniversary of La Sportiva, the Italian outdoor footwear and apparel company. Right now, there are about 350 VIPs hobnobbing at a cocktail party, among them Reinhold Messner, mountaineers Tamara Lunger and Simone Moro, ultrarunning phenom Anton Krupicka, and climber Adam Ondra. Giulia, the woman poised to take the helm of , looks relaxed and radiant in a silk dress and black heels, a glass of sparkling water in her hand.

At 33, Giulia is six months pregnant and in line to take over as president and CEO of La Sportiva when her father, Lorenzo Delladio, retires. Though she has grown up in this company, literally living in an apartment above the original factory and 鈥減laying鈥 at writing invoices when she was just four years old, her rise represents a massive achievement. She is the rare female to climb to the top in a male-dominated industry and she鈥檚 based in Italy, a country with a traditionally patriarchal culture.

Yet Giulia Delladio sees her ascent less as a feminist triumph and more of continuum put in motion 90 years ago by her great grandfather, a cobbler who wanted to make better boots for traveling the massive mountain passes and peaks that dominate Val di Fiemme, a verdant valley at the foot of the Dolomites.

鈥淢y mother taught me to write and read at age four because I was relentless in asking to learn,鈥 says Gulia. 鈥淚t鈥檚 been the same with working for La Sportiva. I鈥檝e always wanted to do it, and my grandfather told me I inherited the family entrepreneurial spirit.鈥

There鈥檚 a saying in the family, Lavorare di pi煤!, that roughly translates into 鈥淲ork harder!鈥 It鈥檚 made sense to her for as long as she can remember. As a child, Gulia was allowed to shadow her grandfather and father in the factory and company offices as long as she made herself useful. She didn鈥檛 like kindergarten because all her classmates wanted to play; only after the teacher gave her the job of taking attendance did school become tolerable.

鈥淣arciso [the founder of La Sportiva] wanted to be outstanding among the other shoe repairmen at the time,鈥 says Gulia. 鈥淗e changed shoes so people could enjoy the mountains鈥攅ven though no one had time to enjoy the mountains then. He had a vision and could see change coming that no one else saw. I share his mindset.鈥

(Courtesy La Sportiva)

After graduating from high school at the top of her class, she attended university in Modena, where she studied economics and international marketing. Her father made her pay her own way, so summers were spent earning money as a nanny and by working at the La Sportiva company store. In her twenties, she spent two summers at La Sportiva North American headquarters in Boulder, Colorado, and nearly five years in Squamish, British Columbia, working with the climbing apparel and accessories brand, Blurr, for which La Sportiva was the European distributor.

When Giulia joined La Sportiva at its Italian headquarters about seven years ago, she quickly moved up from planning events and sales meetings to her current job as Strategic Marketing Manager. In this role, she manages everything, from guiding all product line plans鈥攆ootwear, apparel, ski boots, and accessories鈥攆or future seasons to ensuring collaboration and communication between sales and marketing, and research and development.

鈥淚 consider being a woman an opportunity,鈥 says Giulia. 鈥淚 try to bring to the company alternative interpretations or different ideas. This doesn鈥檛 mean that my feelings and my opinions are more important or more useful than those of my male colleagues, but simply that mine are a different way of looking at things.鈥

Her impact is evident in all of the company鈥檚 products, which today sport eye-popping colors with a European flair. They weren鈥檛 always so lively. La Sportiva鈥檚 brand colors are yellow and black, and that color palette dominated before Giulia began to exercise her influence鈥攐n both women鈥檚 and men鈥檚 lines.

鈥淎s she has become more integrated in the product development, Giulia has worked closely with the designers to use more color in all of the categories to bring a much more vibrant and youthful feel to the products,鈥 says Jonathan Lantz, president of La Sportiva North America.

But she鈥檚 not just focused on how products look. Giulia understands the technical aspects as well as the product developers do (she climbs, runs, bikes, and skis), has her own relationships with the company鈥檚 sponsored athletes who provide critical feedback during the product development phase, and is a diligent student of the outdoor market, comfortable analyzing trends and anticipating what people will want next season.

鈥淭he team knows I need the design to be perfect, even if that means moving a logo just a few centimeters,鈥 says Giulia. 鈥淚 weigh in on everything, from the color to really technical issues, and they listen to me.鈥

Women make up roughly half of outdoor participation in the U.S., and La Sportiva expects that sector will grow. The company spends significant time and money to develop women-specific styles and technical wear, says Giulia, and it sponsors women in every sport it鈥檚 involved in: skimo, climbing, running, and mountaineering.

That said, alpinism鈥攑ast and present鈥攕till skews male. At the 90th anniversary party, there were more men than women, a reminder of alpinism鈥檚 male-dominated roots, particularly in Italy and the rest of Europe, where most alpinists acquired their skills in the military. Sexist jabs have long been a reality for many women who work and recreate in the sports in which La Sportiva trades.

(Courtesy La Sportiva/Federico Ravassard)

Yet change is evident. More women are logging first ascents and earning the respect of their peers for athletic achievements and unimpeachable skills. Tamara Lunger, a La Sportiva-sponsored Italian ski mountaineer, earned a standing ovation at the 90th anniversary party when she recounted how she retreated from the summit of Nanga Parbat 70 meters from the top because she felt that pushing on would mean death. La Sportiva climbers Margo Hayes and Babsi Zangerl are widely recognized as some of the most accomplished climbers in climbing today. Hayes is the first woman to send a 5.15a when she crushed La Rambla in Siurana, Spain, in February 2017. And Zangerl聽sent聽her first 5.14d听颈苍 late May 2018, when she conquered Speed Int茅grale in Voralpsee, Switzerland.

Blatant misogyny is becoming intolerable in ways unthinkable even a year ago; in May this year, La Sportiva dropped climber Joe Kinder after he acknowledged using social media to bully female climbers. 鈥淒espite supporting Joe for many years and our admiration for his talent as a climber, his choices and actions on social media do not meet the standard of behavior we set for our ambassadors,鈥 said La Sportiva in a statement.

And Gulia strives to embody those standards, which include excellence, fairness, and commitment to doing the job at hand. The daughter of Lorenzo, granddaughter of Francesco, great granddaughter of Narcisco, and the soon-to-be mother of the fifth generation, she is as much a product of La Sportiva鈥檚 innovation as she is a driver of it.聽When asked what she envisions for the future, Giulia recounted something her father said the night of the anniversary party: 鈥淲ithout dreams, an idea cannot grow.鈥

Her job now, she says, is to keep dreaming big.

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