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Adventure Profiles

Baker Lodge Work Party: October 4-6, 2024

The next Baker Lodge work party will be held on the weekend of October 4-6, 2024. Lodge work parties are a great opportunity to come together as a team of like-minded Mountaineers in one of the most beautiful settings in the Cascades. This year's tasks include brush-cutting, painting, cleaning, light carpentry, and more.     Read more…

Rebuilding the Eightmile Lake Dam: What the Plan Means for Recreation and Wilderness

The Enchantments - a treasured landscape for our community - is home to some of the most breathtaking backcountry recreation opportunities in Washington state. In the midst of all this natural beauty, though, you might stumble upon an unexpected feature: human-made dams.  Read more…

Mountaineer of the Week: Adeline Okada

Each week we bring you a personal story from one of our members. For our member profile this week we talked to... Read more…

Defending Washington's Climate Progress: Opposing Ballot Initiative 2117

As we experience worsening impacts of the climate crisis on our lands, waters, and communities, we must do more to respond to this urgent threat. The future of our organization and the planet depend on bold climate action and climate-resilient public lands and waters. Climate action and the reduction of The Mountaineers carbon footprint are prioritized in our current strategic plan and our organizational net zero vision. Read more…

Retro Rewind | Climbing Glacier Peak on Skis, 1959

In May of 1959, a party of ten Mountaineers were flown one at a time from Darrington Airstrip to a 7,800-foot camp on Glacier Peak. Local photographer Ira Spring organized and led the party of six men and three women to join the expedition, one of his many enterprising invitations to bring people together through photography and adventure. The trip took these Mountaineers six unforgettable days. Read more…

Learning About Native History and Culture: Reflections from Indian Country 101

Our shared lands and waters - the places where Mountaineers gather, learn, and recreate - are the traditional lands of the Pacific Northwest Indian Tribes. These peoples have been here since time immemorial, are still here, and continue to steward and maintain cultural and legally-protected connections to their ancestral lands. Read more…

From Checklists to Choosing Home

I am at my limit, sick to my stomach and reduced to guttural responses to my fear and fatigue. I have never climbed a mountain before, let alone one at 14,000 feet. On this late-season climb, I’ve seen my crampons spark on the rocks of the Disappointment Cleaver and twice tiptoed across ladders straddling yawning crevasses. And yet, the mountain expects more of me. I keep pushing as the rope propels me forward. Read more…

Mountaineer of the Week: Jonathan "Scott" Sorci

Each week we bring you a personal story from one of our members. For our member profile this week we talked to... Read more…

Everett Branch Open Elections 2024

The Everett Branch will be included in the larger Board Elections this fall and the positions of chair-elect, treasurer, secretary, and vice chair are included on the ballot for election/re-election. Interested in running for one of these positions? Submit your self-nomination by August 20 to join our impressive slate of candidates.  Read more…

Global Adventures | Cultural Adventures on the Amalfi Coast

Waking up to the smell of coffee and freshly baked sweet bread… what could be better? Waking up to these after hiking along the magnificent Amalfi Coast in Italy, of course! Read more…

Mountaineer of the Week: Vicki King

Each week we bring you a personal story from one of our members. For our member profile this week we talked to... Read more…

Top 10 Trip Reports - July 2024

It's safe to say Mountaineers had a good time in the high alpine this July. Read on, dear friends, for super successful summits of Mount Baker, Glacier Peak, Eldorado Peak, Mount Olympus, Bonanza Peak, Sahale Peak, and more.  Read more…

Cautionary Tales of the Watery Kind

I have a tumultuous relationship with canoes. When I was eleven, my first canoe trip turned into a raging disaster when a thunderstorm upstream caused a flash flood, overturning our canoe and stranding us on a quickly shrinking island. Years later, I refused to do the canoe-tipping test required to swim at summer camp. Even into my 30s, I was the only person in my group who could not get back into a canoe after swimming in Lake Union, dumping everyone and everything out in the process (RIP iPhone 3). Read more…

Eradicating Scotch Broom at Mt. St. Helens National Monument

At Mt. St. Helens National Volcanic Monument, Scotch broom is considered a noxious weed, displacing native species and altering natural habitats from open, light-filled systems to dense shrub land where nothing else will grow. The Olympia Mountaineers are actively organizing work parties to eradicate Scotch broom, maintaining the monument’s biodiversity and habitat health. Read more…

Mountaineer of the Week: Shuko Hashimoto

Each week we bring you a personal story from one of our members. For our member profile this week we talked to... Read more…

Outside Insights | The GoHike Experience

Exploring the great outdoors is a transformative experience that connects us with nature in profound ways. For those eager to step onto the trails but uncertain about where to begin, the GoHike: Beginning Hiking Series course offers an inviting gateway into the world of hiking. The GoHike course launched in 2021 to introduce new hikers, or those who are eager to restart, to the joys of hiking while providing a supportive community and valuable resources to ensure a safe and enjoyable beginner experience. Read more…

Nominate a Leader for the 2024 Olympia Branch Service Award

Our volunteer leaders are a huge part of what makes the Olympia Branch such an inspiring, fun, and impactful community.  Each year we honor the hard work and dedication of one Olympia volunteer by presenting them with the Branch Service Award. Read more…

Represent The Mountaineers at the 2024 Wilderness Risk Management Conference

Represent The Mountaineers at this year's Wilderness Risk Management Conference (WRMC). Join us to foster an environment of open dialogue and enhance our organization’s understanding of risk management practices. As a WRMC attendee, you'll acquire valuable skills in risk management, connect with fellow industry experts, share field and administrative techniques, and contribute to the establishment of standards for risk management in outdoor adventure and education. Read more…

Big River: Resilience and Renewal in the Columbia Basin

In June, Braided River launched Big River: Resilience and Renewal in the Columbia Basin - a stunning photography book and engagement campaign spotlighting the Columbia River watershed. The Pacific Northwest’s largest river system - called the Big River by many Indigenous nations of the West - covers a landscape the size of France, beginning in the Canadian Rocky Mountains and ending at the ocean mouth, near Astoria, Oregon.  Read more…

Mountaineer of the Week: Luna Smith-Fisher

Each week we bring you a personal story from one of our members. For our member profile this week we talked to... Read more…

Trip Report: Hiking the Wild Olympics with Senator Patty Murray

When it comes to building support for our advocacy priorities, there’s no substitute for recreating together with lawmakers and land managers out on public lands. Washington state’s congressional delegation is filled with champions of conservation and recreation, and Senator Patty Murray tops that list. Earlier this week, I joined partners from the Forest Service and the Wild Olympics Campaign to hike the Gray Wolf Trail on Olympic National Forest with Senator Murray, where we discussed her Wild Olympics Bill. Read more…

Celebrating Net Zero Carbon Emissions for our Tacoma Program Center

As an organization that cares deeply about a healthy future for our lands, waters, and communities, we have an obligation to respond to the climate crisis by aggressively reducing our impact on the environment. The Mountaineers is committed to reducing our organizational carbon footprint, toward the ambitious goal of achieving net zero carbon emissions for our facilities and operations. Read more…

Peak Performance | Preparing for a Lake Bagging Trip

After the print edition of our magazine, we recognized the implications of using terms like “bagging” which are associated with a culture of conquest over nature. Shifting our language and recreation frameworks is an ongoing journey. Learn more about how to experience the joys of recreating mindfully at alpine lakes. Read more…

Jumping In to Slow Down: A New Take on Lake Bagging

At The Mountaineers, we strive to recreate mindfully and respectfully on the traditional lands of Native peoples. After the print edition of our magazine, we recognized the implications of using terms like “bagging” which are associated with a culture of conquest over nature. To honor our commitment to mindful engagement with the outdoors and the connections of Native peoples to the lands we love, we have revised the online version of this article to include ways to incorporate land acknowledgment and mindful and respectful recreation into your alpine lake visits. Read more…

2023 Impact Report: Advocating on Behalf of the Natural World

With the recent release of our annual impact report, we're celebrating all that donors and volunteers made possible through The Mountaineers in 2023.  Read more…

Nominate a Leader for 2024 Foothills Branch Service Award

Our volunteer leaders are a huge part of what makes the Foothills Branch one of the fastest growing branches offering a broad array of activities we all love. Each year, we honor the hard work and dedication of one Foothills volunteer by presenting them with the Branch Service Award. Read more…

Doing More to Foster Safety, Prevent Sexual Harassment and Sexual Assault

With recent reports of  sexual harassment and sexual assault in the broader outdoor community, we’re reminded of how much work there is to be done to reverse this troubling reality. This news has been particularly painful for the many people who have been the targets of sexual harassment and sexual assault. As a global outdoor recreation community, we can and must do better. The Mountaineers is deeply committed to keeping our community safe, both physically and emotionally. We are redoubling our efforts to protect members from sexual harassment and sexual assault.  Read more…

Mountaineer of the Week: Kimberly Hardman

Each week we bring you a personal story from one of our members. For our member profile this week we talked to... Read more…

Emotional Safety Workshop Recap and Actions for Creating Safer Spaces

Mountaineers staff and volunteers have been aware of gaps in our member and leadership training related to emotional safety for a number of years. Between 2020 and 2024, staff-sponsored Leadership Development Series hosted a number of evening seminars that touched on this topic. In 2023, staff in partnership with the Equity & Inclusion Committee introduced the Emotional Safety in the Outdoors eLearning course that connects the core values of The Mountaineers to these five themes:  Read more…

2023 Impact Report: Engaging a Vibrant Community of Outdoor Enthusiasts

With the recent release of our annual impact report, we're celebrating all that donors and volunteers made possible through The Mountaineers in 2023.  Read more…