While the women below are perhaps most well known for their athletic feats鈥攍ike skiing off the summit of Everest and winning 100-mile races鈥攖hey work equally hard for causes they believe in. As professional athletes, they鈥檝e realized they have a powerful platform from which to talk about issues like climate change and public lands. We spoke with these women about what matters most to them and what they鈥檙e doing about it.
Caroline Gleich
is a professional skier. She recently completed a five-year goal to ski 90 lines from the Wasatch guidebook . Only three people have completed all 90.
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Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
Organizations She鈥檚 Affiliated With: , , , , , and
鈥淢y sport lends itself well to the kind of activism I do. I see firsthand the effects of climate change. Being a ski mountaineer and doing mostly human-powered skiing and sports, I have a close connection to the environment and spend a lot of time immersed in the wilderness. Utah, where I live, has always been a really tough state for environmentalists, but I see it as a challenge for us to forge alliances and find common ground. I love to attend public meetings and hearings. For one, they鈥檙e an important opportunity to interact with the opposition. Being face to face with other people is a time to find common ground. I talk to coal miners about their stories, and I tell them my story, too. Not all interactions are amicable, but when they are, we realize that we have more in common than we thought. Everyone has their own stories to protect.鈥
Stephanie Howe
is a professional ultraunner who聽won the Western States 100 in 2014 and will run it again this summer. She also holds a PhD in nutrition and exercise science from Oregon State University.
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Location: Bend, Oregon
Organizations She鈥檚 Affiliated With: , , and
鈥淵ou can鈥檛 put a price on the outdoors. I feel like I鈥檓 most myself when I鈥檓 out on the trails鈥攖here鈥檚 something about connecting with something bigger than me that fills me up. It鈥檚 who I am. Developing our public lands is a possibility that terrifies me. Many trails I run on are or Forest Service land and can be sold to the highest bidder [if their management is handed over to the state]. Protecting public lands is hugely important. Awareness is one of my biggest weapons: as an athlete, it鈥檚 cool to use my platform for something that matters. A photo is a really great way to tell a story, so I make Instagram posts telling people what鈥檚 going on in the wilderness.鈥
Kit DesLauriers
DesLauriers is the first person to climb and ski the seven summits. In 2006, she became the first American鈥攁nd first woman鈥攖o climb and ski off Mount Everest.
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Location: Jackson, Wyoming
Organizations She鈥檚 Affiliated With: , and she鈥檚 an advocate for protecting the Arctic Refuge
鈥淚n the end, we can only really be good at doing what makes our hearts sing. Or in this case, speaking up for what makes our hearts break. Take a stand on the issues you believe in, and don鈥檛 be afraid to speak up about those positions. We all remember Dr. Seuss: 鈥業 am the Lorax. I speak for the trees. I speak for the trees that have no tongues.鈥 Take your stand where it feels right, and then be flexible. Sometimes it might mean showing up to a rally or a protest or a lobbying opportunity on Capitol Hill. Other times it might be signing an electronic petition or donating to your favorite organization. Remember: Not burning out is better than the alternative. Pace is important, but so is not quitting.鈥
Devin Logan
is a U.S. freeskier who won a silver medal in slopestyle at the Sochi Olympic Games. She鈥檚 training for the 2018 games in Pyeongchang.
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Location: Park City, Utah
Organizations She鈥檚 Affiliated With:
鈥淚 love skiing, and seeing warmer, shorter winters is really hard. I can鈥檛 do my job when Mother Nature doesn鈥檛 allow for it, so I鈥檓 trying to fight climate change. Working with POW, I talk to the next generation about climate change. How can we ? There are easy things for kids to do, to build habits they can pass on to others, like shutting off lights or using reusable water bottles. On a daily basis, if you can walk or ride a bike somewhere, do it. If you see trash on a hike, pick it up. Simple.鈥
Clare Gallagher
won the 2016 . This year, she鈥檚 running Western States for the first time and will head to Chamonix to run CCC.
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Location: Boulder, Colorado
Organizations She鈥檚 Affiliated With: , , and
鈥淧art of why I run is to have a wide platform from which to talk to people about climate change. On the local level, I want to protect our public lands. It鈥檚 not just about posting, but also bringing these conversations on group runs and around town. We can鈥檛 live online. I鈥檓 trying to blog more. I have an opportunity to not just talk about running. Perhaps there鈥檚 a middle-school girl trying to learn how I train who then discovers I care about refugees, and then maybe she starts to care, too. I think reading is the number one most important thing people can do. If you ever feel helpless or paralyzed about a topic, just do your research. That鈥檚 the beauty of our connected world. Find out what organizations get you jazzed.鈥