Family and employee-owned, Klean Kanteen has grown from sponsoring our Armstrong Scholars program to becoming an even greater partner in environmental stewardship through interorganizational involvement - including generous sponsorship of our 50th anniversary. Their beloved nonprofit outreach manager Caroleigh Pierce tells the story of the “scrappy” company, why she has “the best job in the world” and what special NatureBridge event brought tears to her eyes.
When Isabel Esparza was nine years old, she said goodbye to her family, greeted a crew of friendly flight attendants and flew half-way across the country to Michigan — alone. It was one of many trips for the former NatureBridge educator that was driven by her mother’s adventurous spirit. Isabel shares how that infectious spirit influenced her career path and the way she dreams of raising her own children. She also reflects on how an equity thought experiment she would propose — “Imagine a scientist” — helped students at our Mid-Atlantic campus see themselves represented in environmental education.
Miho has dedicated her life’s work to increasing visibility and access to environmental education, careers, public lands and outdoor adventure for those whom our system has failed to provide these opportunities. Miho’s journey with NatureBridge began in 2000 as an Environmental Science Educator at our Golden Gate National Recreation Area campus, on the traditional territory of Coast Miwok, Ohlone and Graton Rancheria.
When she was a child on the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe’s reservation, Cameron Macias would listen to her grandmother tell tales of 100-pound salmon swimming up the Elwha River. Read on for our interview with Cameron, a NatureBridge alum and graduate research assistant at the University of Idaho studying wildlife on the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe reservation.
Tracy Thompson has been an advocate and partner of NatureBridge for nearly 30 years. Read about the importance of her photograph from the late wilderness photographer Galen Rowell and why she's gifting it to NatureBridge.
NatureBridge Olympic board member Dottie Metcalf-Lindenburger is a role model for not just girls in science, but all young people. As an Earth scientist, environmental consultant, former NASA astronaut and high school science and astronomy teacher, Dottie has continuously demonstrated how to overcome systemic obstacles and reach for the stars—literally.
At 76, Ingrid is NatureBridge’s oldest—and arguably most iconic—environmental science educator. As we celebrate Women's History Month, we're highlighting Ingrid's contributions to both the San Francisco and NatureBridge communities in which she serves.
Last fall, NatureBridge's Amy Osborne ventured to McMurdo Station in Antarctica to conduct field research with PolarTREC on Dr. Amy Moran's project. In this reflective essay, Amy writes of the journey that trip took her on and the importance of the celebration of women in science and the outdoors.