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Crissy Field Day (Saturday, October 2018) was a special day. It marked the beginning of Crissy Field’s next chapter taking flight. Community from across the Bay Area gathered to celebrate the ecological and historical landmark, all in the view of the mighty Golden Gate Bridge in the distance. The love was truly palpable amid the ocean breeze. Visit crissyfieldnext.org to get involved in shaping this waterfront park’s future.
Curran White/Parks Conservancy
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These parks are fiercely alive. While I was having a solitary moment on a hike back to the Tennessee Valley Trail trailhead, a family of black-tailed deer crossed my path. I managed to snap this shot while the deer was examining if I was friend or foe.
Curran White/Parks Conservancy
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This photo was taken at the last formal reunion for Alcatraz Island alumni on the island. To me, this looks like a Renaissance painting. A hushed crowd stands hanging on every word of an elder (former guard George DeVincenzi, center) recounting stories from the days of the federal penitentiary.
Curran White/Parks Conservancy
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Public Service Announcement: Respect the almighty, unbridled power of the ocean from a safe distance.
Paul Myers/Parks Conservancy
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Enjoying a hike at Lands End
Paul Myers/Parks Conservancy
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Dramatic day heading up towards Hawk Hill in the Marin Headlands.
Paul Myers/Parks Conservancy
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Sunrise on Mt. Tam is magical. When I realized this photograph shows the city, Alcatraz, and the Golden Gate Bridge, it made getting up 90 minutes before dawn worth it.
Alison Taggart-Barone/Parks Conservancy
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Photographing the Golden Gate Bridge is a challenge. How to make a new and interesting image of such a familiar icon? For me, when the flock of cormorants flew into the bottom of the frame, it completed the photo.
Alison Taggart-Barone/Parks Conservancy
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This big pinniped came ashore on a busy weekend at Crissy Field, rolled around in the sand and then leapt back into the bay. Thankfully, park visitors gave him plenty of space, and I caught this image, which reminds us how closely entwined we are with the natural world around us.
Alison Taggart-Barone/Parks Conservancy
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During the restoration portion at Lands End during the Give Back Kick Back event, this person stopped to take in the view.
Alexandro Paz/Parks Conservancy
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Summer camp is a time to continue learning and growing while on break from the school year. During a group activity, these two young people used their binoculars and bird books to identify wildlife in Crissy Marsh. Listening to them discuss and narrow down the species drove home why Crissy Field Center programs are so impactful.
Alexandro Paz/Parks Conservancy
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I felt like I was home with my family during this moment at the Naturaleza y Cerveza Trail Mixer. This group was chatting away, making crafts, sipping beverages, and enjoying their time together. Multiple generations, speaking in multiple languages. Surrounded by the Presidio Native Plant Nursery, the air was filled with energy.
Alexandro Paz/Parks Conservancy
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This photo captures the spirit of our volunteers, staff, and interns. They make hard work look elegant and easy. They bring their whole selves, work together as a team, challenge each other, make each other laugh, and still have the energy to pose.
Yakuta Poonawalla/Parks Conservancy
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Rising and setting, the sun offers time to reflect.
Yakuta Poonawalla/Parks Conservancy
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Cultural programs, festivals and celebrations bring people together. The human and natural worlds are so deeply connected, and the more I find commonalities between both, the more I start seeing true and deep appreciation for each other.
Yakuta Poonawalla/Parks Conservancy
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I begin the new year at work always looking forward to MLK Day of Service in January. It’s a day that allows me to start the year with intention, acknowledge the great work done by environmentalists and activists of the past, and get inspired by new stewards!
Yakuta Poonawalla/Parks Conservancy
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Most construction signs are labeled “men working,” but that doesn’t stop the ladies of the trail crew! We simply added the letters “WO” to this sign before we got to work at one of our newer trail sites in Marin City at the Orchard Trail.
Sue Gardner/Parks Conservancy
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Women’s Trail Day (WTD) was an event inspired by a previous trail crew intern, Mirella, to bring female, non-binary, and non-gender conforming folks together to perform trail work together, which is typically male-dominated. This was our first WTD program at Lands End, and it was a great success!
Sue Gardner/Parks Conservancy