• A Path for the Next Generation with Chelsea Murphy
    Feb 3 2023

    As a kid, Chelsea Murphy felt she didn’t belong outside. Now the Leavenworth-based founder of She Colors Nature is making sure her daughters do.

    The outdoors in America have a long history as an unwelcome place for Black men and women and children of all ages. Decades of violence and intimidation have made activities like hiking and camping, which have become rituals for many families, more complicated for many Black families.

    This didn't stop the parents of Chelsea Murphy from taking her on camping trips when she was growing up in Tacoma. But Murphy still did not feel an affinity for the outdoors until much later in life, when she moved to the mountain town of Leavenworth after starting her own family.

    There, surrounded by snow-capped peaks and evergreens, Murphy not only fell in love with the outdoors, but was inspired to spread that love to her daughters and other women and girls of color through her She Colors Nature community.

    For this final episode of the first season of the Out & Back podcast, host Alison Mariella Désir travels to the mountain town, where she goes for a hike with Murphy and discusses the origins and aims of She Colors Nature and the future she envisions for her daughters.

    Before listening, we suggest you watch the episode about Chelsea Murphy here.

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    Credits

    Host: Alison Mariella Désir

    Producer: Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers

    Executive producer: Mark Baumgarten

    Audio production: Bryce Adolphson, Sarah Hall

    Audio support: Resti Bagcal, Seth Halleran, Sara Bernard

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    40 Min.
  • Rewriting the Narrative with Denice Rochelle
    Jan 27 2023

    The founder of the Bronze Chapter has thrived in the outdoors all her life. She wants other people of color in the PNW to feel the same way.

    Denice Rochelle doesn't just want to see more people like herself adventuring outdoors. She wants to see more people like herself leading those adventures.

    When she created the Bronze Chapter, Rochelle wanted the nonprofit to create opportunities where people of color could come together and explore new spaces and new challenges. It did that and more.

    For this episode of the Out & Back podcast, host Alison Mariella Désir talks with Rochelle about the solo adventure that gave rise to her organization and how it has grown to host clinics and certification courses that help people of color become leaders in the outdoors.

    Rochelle shares her hope that through her efforts, more BIPOC will become stewards of the land who are deeply invested in addressing issues of environmental justice and climate change.

    Before listening, we suggest you watch the episode about Denice Rochelle here.

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    Credits

    Host: Alison Mariella Désir

    Producer: Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers

    Executive producer: Mark Baumgarten

    Audio production: Bryce Adolphson, Sarah Hall

    Audio support: Resti Bagcal, Seth Halleran, Sara Bernard

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    37 Min.
  • The Freedom of Fly Fishing with Giancarlo Lawrence
    Jan 20 2023

    The angler known as The Black Stonefly was raised in the city. But now he's on a mission to get more Black people into the outdoors.

    Fly fishing changed Giancarlo Lawrence’s life. He says it has healed him and inspired him to become more self-sufficient. And, he says, he believes it can do the same thing for Black people like him, who are currently underrepresented in the sport.

    Growing up between the suburban and urban areas of the South Puget Sound region, Lawrence had little exposure to the outdoors growing up. Now his love of fly fishing has led him to more outdoor pursuits – such as mushroom foraging, gardening and hunting – and a role as an advocate for a life that is more connected to nature.

    For this episode of the Out & Back podcast, host Alison Mariella Désir talks with Lawrence about his journey to the outdoors, his passion for cooking and his vision of liberation and self-sufficiency for Black people.

    Then he gives Désir her first fly fishing lesson, leading the city-loving host to consider a different life.

    Before listening, we suggest you watch the episode about Giancarlo Lawrence here.

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    Credits

    Host: Alison Mariella Désir

    Producer: Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers

    Executive producer: Mark Baumgarten

    Audio production: Bryce Adolphson, Sarah Hall

    Audio support: Resti Bagcal, Seth Halleran, Sara Bernard

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    34 Min.
  • Running on Coffee with Ian Williams and Amir Armstrong
    Jan 13 2023

    The Deadstock Run Club is giving people of color in Portland a place to come together, connect and get moving.

    As home to one of our most storied track and field destinations, one of the most celebrated runners in American history and arguably the greatest sneaker brand in the world, Oregon is a natural place to start a running club.

    That Ian Williams and Amir Armstrong started the Deadstock Run Club out of a coffeeshop in Portland’s Old Town Chinatown neighborhood, then, might not seem too surprising. That is until you consider another, much more disturbing aspect of Oregon history: its hostility toward people of color, in particular Black people.

    For instance, in the 19th century, the state passed three Black exclusion laws. These were later rescinded, but even during the 20th century Klan demonstrations and cross burnings were common throughout the state.

    For this episode of the Out & Back podcast, host Alison Mariella Désir visits the coffee shop where it all started to talk with Williams and Armstrong about how a love of sneakers and coffee fueled a community that is giving people of color a place to gather and get active.

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    Credits

    Host/producer: Sara Bernard

    Featured reporter: Margo Vansynghel

    Executive producer: Mark Baumgarten

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    35 Min.
  • Activism on the Run with Rosalie Fish
    Jan 6 2023

    First drawn to the sport for health benefits, athlete Rosalie Fish hit her stride advocating for missing and murdered Indigenous women and two-spirit people.

    Rosalie Fish is best known for the red handprint often painted on her face. First a runner in high school and now a collegiate athlete at the University of Washington, Fish runs with the handprint to bring visibility to the issue of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Two-Spirit people.

    It is a cause that is centuries old and very near to her as a member of the Cowlitz Tribe who grew up on the Muckleshoot reservation.

    For this episode of the Out & Back podcast, she talks to host Alison Mariella Désir about how she turned her love of running into activism.

    She also takes Désir along for one of her other favorite outdoor activities, a canoe paddle on Elliott Bay with her Muckleshoot family.

    Before listening, we suggest you watch the episode about Rosalie Fish here.

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    Credits

    Host: Alison Mariella Désir

    Producer: Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers

    Executive producer: Mark Baumgarten

    Audio production: Bryce Adolphson, Sarah Hall

    Audio support: Resti Bagcal, Seth Halleran

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    39 Min.
  • Everyone Outside with Jas Maisonet
    Dec 30 2022

    QPOC Hikers started as a place for people to bond over the outdoors. It’s become so much more.

    The outdoors transformed Jas Maisonet’s life. But when they went looking for people to join them on outdoor adventures, they ran into a problem. As a non-binary person of color, they had trouble meeting people outside of happy hour meet-ups.

    To meet more queer people interested in the outdoors, Maisonet started QPOC Hikers in 2019. Now they arrange outdoor events year round, from birding, to hiking, to snowshoeing.

    For this episode of the Out & Back podcast, host Alison Mariella Desir talks to Maisonet about their personal history and growing organization. Desir also heads out for a day of bouldering, her first ever, with Maisonet as guide.

    Along the way Desir learned that QPOC Hikers is about much more than hiking. The organization provides queer people of color with a place to share stories and inspiration.

    Before listening, we suggest you watch the episode about QPOC Hikers here.

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    Credits

    Host: Alison Mariella Désir

    Producer: Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers

    Executive producer: Mark Baumgarten

    Audio production: Bryce Adolphson, Sarah Hall

    Audio support: Resti Bagcal, Seth Halleran

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    36 Min.
  • Farming as Healing with the Black Farmers Collective
    Dec 23 2022

    Agriculture is a fraught industry for descendants of enslaved people. Yes Farm is working to move beyond that trauma.

    The relationship between Black people and agriculture in the United States has long been dominated by one obvious and ominous image: Black Americans working the land as enslaved people.

    But a different image is being formed at Yes Farm in Seattle’s Yesler Terrace neighborhood. There, between a construction site and the freeway, the Black Farmers Collective is working to change Black people’s relationship with land and farming.

    For this episode of the Out & Back podcast, host Alison Mariella Désir tours the farm and speaks with director Ray Williams and farm manager Hannah Wilson about their efforts to promote self-determination and liberation through farming.

    Growing food is hard work, they tell us, but it is a skill and a rare opportunity to know exactly where your food comes from.

    Before listening, we suggest you watch the episode about Yes Farm here.

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    Credits

    Host: Alison Mariella Désir

    Producer: Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers

    Executive producer: Mark Baumgarten

    Audio production: Bryce Adolphson, Sarah Hall

    Audio support: Resti Bagcal, Seth Halleran

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    38 Min.
  • Riding for Equity with Peace Peloton’s Doc Wilson
    Dec 16 2022

    Peace Peloton started in Seattle as a single protest ride in 2020. Now it fights for social justice nationwide.

    Reginald “Doc” Wilson loves his bike. So in the wake of George Floyd’s murder by Minneapolis police in May 2020, his bike became a tool to reclaim space and fight for social justice under the name Peace Peloton.

    Since the first ride on June 6, 2020, his organization’s rides, markets and barbecues have welcomed cyclists of all skills while seeking to bring economic justice to local businesses that, as he says, happen to be Black.

    For this episode of the Out & Back podcast, Alison Mariella Désir and Doc Wilson visit Boon Boona Coffee, Central Cafe and Juice Bar, and Metier Brewery – all Black-owned businesses – on their way to Lake Washington.

    Along the way, you’ll learn the story of Peace Peloton as Alison becomes a more confident cyclist.

    Before listening, we suggest you watch the episode about Peace Peloton here.

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    Credits

    Host: Alison Mariella Désir

    Producer: Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers

    Executive producer: Mark Baumgarten

    Audio production: Bryce Adolphson, Sarah Hall

    Audio support: Resti Bagcal, Seth Halleran

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    32 Min.