Into the Woods

Rue Mapp is using social media to lure people outdoors.

Two years ago rue mapp, 39, started Outdoor Afro, a social media network with a mission to connect African-Americans with nature. Today her online community鈥攚hich includes a mix of Facebook, Twitter, and blog (outdoorafro.com)鈥攂oasts thousands of participants who do everything from swapping camping gear to sharing photos of rare birds to discussing black women鈥檚 fears of getting their hair wet during water sports. Mapp鈥檚 network even made it onto the radar of President Obama, who invited her to this past year鈥檚 White House Conference on America鈥檚 Great Outdoors.

How were you introduced to the outdoors? 

My parents were from the South, and they had a very strong connection to the outdoors by way of farming, hunting, and fishing. So when they moved to Oakland, they bought a ranch 100 miles north in Lake County. There was a creek, and one of my favorite things was to spend time there. It was like a living laboratory. I remember seeing the evolution of a tadpole to a frog there.

 

What led you to start Outdoor Afro? 

At the same time that I was exploring the outdoors, I was also developing an interest in technology. When I was 11, I got my first computer, a Commodore VIC-20. I was an early adopter of email and I used bulletin boards. Years later Outdoor Afro was an aha! moment when a mentor asked me, 鈥淲hat would you do if you had all the time in the world?鈥 I said, 鈥淚鈥檇 use social media to connect African-Americans to the outdoors.鈥 Within a week, I鈥檇 bought the domain and thrown something together on a do-it-yourself blogger site.

 

What keeps African-Americans from doing things outside?  

Fear that the woods are not safe. There鈥檚 a historic reason for that. Just decades ago bad things did happen in the woods. You know the Billie Holiday song 鈥淪trange Fruit鈥? She鈥檚 not talking about fruit hanging from trees, but people. For some, though, it may just be bugs or wildlife . . . or the fear that people are going to stare at you and make you feel like this space doesn鈥檛 belong to you as well.

 

What鈥檚 an organized excursion like?  

I took some Oakland residents on a birding trip to Oakland鈥檚 Martin Luther King Jr. Regional Shoreline, which is home to some famous birds like the clapper rail. For many it was their first time there, despite living in the area for decades. It was a very moving experience. I鈥檝e gotten follow-up emails from them saying, 鈥淚鈥檓 noticing all the birds in my backyard now.鈥