"You're our top
candidate..." After finishing a phone interview 45 minutes prior, I wasn't
expecting to hear those words so soon, or really at all. My name is
Lindsey, I’m 29 years old (quickly approaching 30), from Los Angeles, CA, and through
social media, my world changed. Via a Facebook post found on Modern Hiker
– a hiker I follow to learn of new trails in the greater Los Angeles area – I
was introduced to a great opportunity being offered through Backpacker
Magazine in partnership with The North Face. It was an intern
position working with one of their esteemed athletes to coordinate an inaugural
service event at the annual athlete summit, this year being held in Jackson
Hole, WY.
Upon my introduction to The North
Face headquarters located in Alameda, CA, I was in complete disbelief at how a
building could embody my ideology on sustainability and environmental
awareness. In Los Angeles, I worked as an Art Department Coordinator for
film and television, and oftentimes I’m known as the girl who brings
her own bowl. Working in an industry that is wasteful overall, it was
great to see a company so dedicated to the environment – through their use of
reusable water bottles, composting, an onsite garden, and every type of bin to
collect items for reuse or recycling (even an energy bar wrapper collection
bin), not to mention their approach to their products being cruelty-free and
having the least amount of environmental impact in production and
shipment. I was a fan from the beginning.
Through countless phone calls and
e-mails, Heidi Wirtz (TNF climber, philanthropist, and awesome woman) and I
were able to develop a great service event partnering with the American Alpine
Club’s Grand Teton Climbers’ Ranch. The American Alpine Club, a climbing
and advocacy group, through their Climbers’ Ranch, provides an accommodation
option to mountaineers and their families during the summer months. In
the first week of June, the Ranch conducts “work week,” a great program for
climbers and those interested – in exchange for a week of working on
improvement projects, a month of accommodation at the Ranch. In
preparation for work week, the Ranch needed our help in readying it for
visitors.

To say that the arrival into
Jackson Hole, WY was bumpy, would be an understatement. After a fall from
the sky, and a ride reminiscent of being inside a “BOGGLE” game, Blair (Sr. OE
& Community Development Coordinator) and I touched down. Welcomed by
a short spurt of rain, we started off readying for the next day’s service event
– picking up work gloves donated by an amazing organization, Teton Science
Schools, which educates about nature and the ecosystem through a variety of
programs, and conducting a quick site visit at the Ranch to run over the
last-minute details. Meeting with Philip, the manager of the Ranch, and
the two assistant managers – Debbie and Gary, gave Blair and I great insight
into the Ranch, and the actual scope of work that we were undertaking. We
were even welcomed by some of the locals – two moose, and a bushy-tailed fox!

The day of the event was met with
a mix of nerves and excitement. Once at
the Ranch, Heidi, Blair and I readied for the arrival of the athletes and the
TNF staff. To keep the carbon footprint
to a minimum, we used human-power to get the majority of the volunteers to the
event. Via forty bikes, five cars, and some on foot, everyone began to
arrive. The Tetons were shrouded in clouds for most of the morning, but
as the runners ran, the bikers biked, and the cars drove up, the clouds lifted,
creating a nice welcome to the Ranch.
With four awesome project leaders
at the helm, there was little that could go wrong. The Ranch had been
closed for winter, and our efforts were concentrated on de-winterizing: moving
bikes out of cabins and picnic tables out of the cook shelter, cleaning
windows, removing shutters and storm doors, hanging screens, cleaning coolers,
and the largest task of the day – gravel relocating. The gravel is
dispersed unevenly around the Ranch, and was in need of some leveling and movement
for better mobility via foot, bike and car. Each volunteer took to his or
her project with great enthusiasm and excitement! Seeing snowboarders
wielding wheelbarrows, runners riding bikes from the cabin to the bike rack,
skiers cleaning windows, and climbers carrying shutters on their heads to
storage, it was a multi-sport grouping of awesome and inspiring individuals
doing their part to give back. From the physicality of the shoveling, to
some creativity in getting the bikes out of the cabins, and even window washing
extending from the cabins to the cars nearby, everyone had a great time giving
back and getting in a small workout. The event was a success being
celebrated after by a lunch brought in from Jackson Whole Grocer – a fresh, wholesome,
and organic market in town. With the Tetons as the backdrop – it couldn’t
get much better!


Leaving the event, it seemed
surreal that it was over. Philip and the Ranch were ecstatic with
everything we were able to accomplish, and the day exceeded their expectations!
Everyone I have met, from the
receptionist at the TNF front desk, to the contacts at the nonprofits in
Jackson, to each member of the marketing and PR team at The North Face, has been helpful, kind and welcoming! To have this opportunity truly embodies
Backpacker Magazine’s description of the position – a dream job.
It has been a stellar experience, and has only reinforced my love for the
outdoors and the industry that services it!

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