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Kristine Tompkins will continue her work to establish protected areas in Chile and Argentina.
(Photo: Conservacion Patagonica)
Kristine Tompkins will continue her work to establish protected areas in Chile and Argentina.
Kristine Tompkins will continue her work to establish protected areas in Chile and Argentina. (Photo: Conservacion Patagonica)

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What’s Life Like After Doug Tompkins?

Kristine and Doug Tompkins lived a life of adventure and risk uncommon to most couples. They also helped to protect millions of acres of land in Chile and Argentina. Following her husband's death, Kristine now faces the daunting challenge of creating six new national parks without him.

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Last Sunday, the world鈥檚 most influential conservationists bid Doug Tompkins farewell at the Herbst Pavilion, a cavernous, light-filled space that extends 500 feet over San Francisco Bay. Tompkins was a co-founder of The North Face and Esprit who went on, with his wife, Kristine, to protect more land than any private individuals in history. He died on December 8 from hypothermia after a kayaking accident on Lago General Carrera, a large glacial lake that straddles Chile and Argentina in central Patagonia.

Juan Pablo Orrego, a Chilean activist who worked closely with Tompkins in his fight against dams, played 鈥淕racias a la Vida鈥 on his classical guitar; Gary Snyder, the poet laureate of deep ecology, read his piece 鈥淔or the Children鈥; and Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard, who was with Tompkins the day he died and adventured with him for almost 60 years, assured the 1,100 mourners, including Earth First! founder Dave Foreman and ecologist Carl Safina, that the Tompkins鈥 conservation efforts will live on.

鈥淏y his actions, Doug became the teacher we all needed, and he still is. I鈥檓 here to say for Kris and her team that, with the support of all of you, his work is going to continue,鈥 Chouinard said.

The woman who will bear out Tompkins鈥 legacy is Kristine McDivitt Tompkins, 65, Doug鈥檚 wife of 21 years, who retired from her job as CEO of Patagonia, married Doug in 1994, and moved to Chile the same year to become his partner in their conservation efforts. Over the past quarter-century, their four foundations have invested nearly $300 million to establish protected areas in Chile and Argentina in regions that Doug began exploring in his teens to ski and, later, to climb with Chouinard.

On the ground, the Tompkins . Locals labeled them as neocolonialists and a national security risk, and the governments of Chile and Argentina were hesitant to turn the Tompkins鈥 land into protected parks. Over the years, the Tompkins have slowly earned the trust of locals and government officials and have helped to create five national parks, totaling roughly two million acres. Working closely with them all, Kristine plans to execute six more. In Chile, within two years, the Tompkins鈥 foundations will donate more than a million acres that, combined with public lands, will create five new national parks and expand three existing parks for a total protected area of 10 million acres. In Argentina, the focus is on donating 333,592 acres to help create , part of a 3.2 million-acre grassland and marsh, where a staff has already begun to rewild the landscape and reintroduce species like the jaguar.

鈥淥ne of the things I think [Doug] would say today if he could would be that we get out of bed every day and do something fierce for those things that call to us, for those things that we love,鈥 Tompkins said in her tribute to her husband at the service.

The regions where the Tompkins have been working are threatened by massive hydro dams, mines, unsustainable grazing practices, habitat destruction, and aquaculture. But according to her former boss, Yvon Chouinard, Kristine is up to the task.

鈥淜ris worked for me for almost 25 years,鈥 Chouinard told me. 鈥淚 was the juvenile delinquent entrepreneur. Sometimes I鈥檇 have a crazy idea, and if it was crazy, she鈥檇 let it go. If it wasn鈥檛, she would make it happen. Nothing鈥檚 going to stop without Doug. In fact, he was coming up with too many projects, and he was also a micromanager. We used to joke that he鈥檇 even choose the type of toilet paper if he could.鈥

With the exception of her husband鈥檚 memorial service on Sunday, Kristine hasn鈥檛 stopped working. She took a brief hiatus from the Tompkins Conservation office in San Francisco on Monday before she returns to her home in Chile to tell us how she plans to move forward.

Kristine Tompkins plans to create six more national parks, including one from holdings in Chile's Chacabuco Valley (pictured).
Kristine Tompkins plans to create six more national parks, including one from land holdings in Chile's Chacabuco Valley. (Linde Waidhofer)

OUTSIDE: Since Doug鈥檚 death, the presidents of both Chile (Michelle Bachelet) and Argentina (Mauricio Macri) have met with you for the first time to show support for your conservation work, and Doug was unanimously voted an honorary citizen by the Chilean National Congress. Do you think his death has created a new sense of urgency?
KRISTINE TOMPKINS: We鈥檝e always felt a sense of urgency. That鈥檚 why we have all these proposals in front of the governments. These proposals are not new, but since the accident, it just adds fuel to the fire to get them done. Of course, Doug鈥檚 death had a tremendous impact all over the place, and I would say that there鈥檚 a tremendous awareness in both governments on both sides of the border that national parks are good for the country and the donations we have before them are worthy projects.

There鈥檚 so much at stake. How do you prioritize?
in Argentina is a priority. Chile is a very large, complex donation. It鈥檚 just over a million acres and involves , , and a few other smaller additions. But absolutely the two principals are Pumal铆n and Patagonia.

It sounds as if the South American conservation community has really stood behind you. Is that true?
Yes, starting with our own team members. We have extraordinary people working in Chile and Argentina. It鈥檚 not just the Doug and Kris show. It鈥檚 very serious and talented people who have been working with us for up to 23 years.

Establishing Pumal铆n Park in Chile remains a top priority for Kristine Tompkins.
Establishing Pumal铆n National Park remains a top priority for Kristine Tompkins. (AP Images)

Kristine and Doug split their time between homes in Re帽ihue in Pumal铆n Park, which protects 715,000 acres of temperate rainforests, and Rincon del Socorro, a former cattle ranch on the edge of the Iber谩 marshlands in Argentina, the second-largest wetland in the world after Brazil鈥檚 Pantanal. Kristine traveled more often to the States than Doug in her role as the primary fundraiser for their foundations. His role in their work was head designer and visionary.

Because you lived so聽remotely and had to cover a lot of territory flying in Doug鈥檚 small Husky plane, did you have a contingency plan in place in case something happened to one of you?
We certainly talked about it a lot. Yeah. And we鈥檙e there right now. We were really clear on what we needed to finish, and we knew what would need to happen if both of us died together, which was always a real possibility since we flew all the time.

Did you think of what would happen if Doug died first?
Of course. You would be nuts not to. I don鈥檛 know how you would avoid that.

Has your plan changed at all since Doug鈥檚 death?
No. On the conservation side, it鈥檚 full steam ahead on everything we鈥檝e had going for almost 25 years.

Will you ask anyone else to step in now to help with his role?
No. I have a board and a lot of like-minded conservationists who we partner with. I think people are more than ever at the ready to step up and help in whatever way that manifests itself.

(Conservacion Patagonica)

Kristine and Doug embraced a life of adventure, from where they chose to live to pursuits like winter sailing in Patagonia. Doug also traveled extensively with Yvon Chouinard to climb, ski, hike, and kayak in Yosemite, Bhutan, Antarctica, and Patagonia. Chouinard told me that neither he nor Doug was prepared for a day of kayaking in 40-degree water on December 8. Chouinard said he was wearing his fishing waders and jacket, and Doug was wearing pleated chino pants, a Brooks Brothers shirt, a light wool sweater, and a light rain jacket. It was part of their bond of friendship to 鈥渁lways leave the door half-open for disaster.鈥

Do you harbor resentment or anger toward Doug or Yvon for their choice to go out that day relatively unprepared?
No. Resentment hadn鈥檛 occurred to me. They were gone three days before the accident, so we just sent them off on the edge of the lake like any other trip. This was an easy trip. This was not a complicated thing. It just grew to be complicated.

You had your own adventures with Doug. As you mentioned in your memorial tribute to him, you once 鈥渕utinied鈥 while the two of you were on a boat. What happened that day?
Doug liked to go out in the middle of winter on our boat with our boat captain. We would sail around, and it was very difficult sailing. We finally got to a place called Puyuhuapi, where I got off, said 鈥淚鈥檓 done,鈥 and hitchhiked back to Pumal铆n.

The Tompkins' foundations plan ;to donate more than a million acres in Chile within the next two years. (Linde Waidhofer)

When I interviewed Doug last October in Frutillar, Chile, two months before he died, he was enough of a realist to say the world could end as early as 2033. He didn鈥檛 beat around the bush about his bleak view. But he and Kristine have protected more land than any other individuals in history. 鈥淚f the ship is going to go down,鈥 Tompkins said, 鈥渓et鈥檚 go down with our head held high. Let鈥檚 do the right thing.鈥

How do you think Doug balanced his realism with his vision?
Visionaries, I think, are based in realism, because visionaries don鈥檛 become famous for being visionaries unless they are generally proven to be correct. Real visionaries are rooted in hard, cold facts and seeing trends. He was brilliant at looking at circumstances today and being able to extrapolate where that would take us down the road. I don鈥檛 know that you would classify him as an optimist. I would classify him as a realist. He wasn鈥檛 big on false hope.

What will you miss the most about him?
If you knew Doug, you鈥檇 know there鈥檚 a lot to miss. Daily, just his presence is tremendously missed. On the work side, his designs. His presence everywhere will be tremendously missed, but it won鈥檛 impede moving forward and getting things done.

Where will you live now?
Nothing changes there. It鈥檚 funny, some people have asked me if I鈥檓 moving back to the United States. And I think, 鈥淲here have you been?鈥 I just came up to the States [for the service and to be with her family]. I鈥檝e only been in Pumal铆n. I鈥檝e only been in the park, and of course that鈥檚 where I鈥檓 the most comfortable and feel closer to what鈥檚 meaningful to Doug and to me. But here, I have our grandchildren, so this is a very important time for me [to be] here in the States.

You鈥檝e lost a husband and a partner in one of the greatest conservation efforts of the 21st century. How does one grieve both of those at the same time?
Some of it is overlaid, but the personal loss is immense. That I just don鈥檛 talk about. That鈥檚 a whole other road and is extremely painful. The work I have no doubts about. This is also very new. It鈥檚 been only been six weeks. You have to calculate that in.

How would you like Doug to be remembered?
Doug lived 100 lives in one, but there is a very solid thread to who he was all the way through it. I hope he鈥檚 remembered as someone who really sought beauty in his life, whether it was the line skiing down some glacier to architecture to fine art, to the parks where we create our homes鈥攅verything. And I would hope that he鈥檒l be remembered as someone who was a fighter for those things that he loved and for those creatures who have no voice of their own and for being a deep thinker. He was not interested in shallow thinking. He always wanted to understand the root causes of the eco-social crisis, and he was extremely disciplined鈥攅xtremely. He was kind of a renaissance man. He was a wild guy. He was happy and fearless.

Lead Photo: Conservacion Patagonica