This month, we're honoring the women who have advanced and challenged the outdoor world through their leadership, innovation, and athletic feats. The list that follows is far from comprehensive, and it is, of course, subjective: there are dozens of people who easily could have made the cut that we simply did not have room for here. (We cover some of them in our May issue, on newsstands now.) Our readers will recognize many of the names below. Others, they will not. But don't expect this to be the last time they appear in 国产吃瓜黑料 as they continue to shape our world.
Tara Houska

Tara Houska has been involved in a dizzying number of efforts. The tribal-rights attorney is the national campaigns director for the indigenous-led environmental justice organization . Houska has also served as adviser on Native American issues for Bernie Sanders'听campaign, co-founded to fight the appropriation of indigenous culture, and protested the Dakota Access pipeline at the Standing Rock Indian Reservation. 鈥Erin Berger
碍补迟丑谤颈苍别听厂飞颈迟锄别谤

碍补迟丑谤颈苍别听厂飞颈迟锄别谤 made history in 1967 as the first woman to run the Boston Marathon. Since then, she's dedicated her life to the sport and making it more accessible to women. Switzer's latest venture is a foundation called听, with a mission to bring running to groups of women around the world. (The number 261 is a nod to Switzer's original Boston Marathon bib number.) Five decades after her first time at Boston, Switzer still doesn鈥檛 feel burnt out on running. As听she told听国产吃瓜黑料听earlier this month, “Running has always been my touchstone. It's always been my soul. It's given me back the day. It helps me to sleep. It brings me back to myself. Want me to keep going?”听鈥惭辞濒濒测听惭颈谤丑补蝉丑别尘
Camille Seaman

Camille Seaman masterfully blends the beautiful and the political in her famous听. Hang them on your wall, and then launch into a conversation about climate change and the rapidly melting ice cap. As a Native American, Seaman says the icebergs also hold spiritual value. Recently, she has been working on a portrait project about Native Americans across the country called听.听The project intends to demythologize native communities and let them represent themselves in front of the camera. During the Standing Rock protests, Seaman set up a portrait booth to photograph the water protectors and听听of them afterward, asking what message they'd like to send to their descendants 200 years from now. 鈥Jakob Schiller
尝颈苍诲蝉别测听痴辞苍苍

Linsey听Vonn听is the best ski racer who's ever lived.听If that sounds hyperbolic, look at the numbers: 77 World Cup wins, nine Olympic and world championship medals (three of them gold), 138 podium appearances, and four overall World Cup titles. At press time,听Vonn听was a mere nine victories away from breaking听Ingemar听Stenmark鈥檚 World Cup record, a milestone that would quash any lingering doubts about听her total dominance鈥攐ver men and women. Her brand of skiing is听Nascar听driver meets BASE jumper鈥攁 combination of aggression, recklessness, and nuance that makes her a high-speed master of the downhill and super-G. 鈥础虫颈别听狈补惫补蝉
Mary Oliver

If there were a Poet Laureate of the Outdoors, there is a good chance听听would have held the title for the past 50 years. The natural world is the blood that courses through her body of work鈥32 collections and counting. Oliver's poems are filled with owls and ponds and trees and birds and sunrises and fields and a great many dogs. “Now through the white orchard my little dog / romps, breaking the new snow / with wild feet,”听she writes in “.”听This is the beauty of her work: it's a scene that anyone can recognize, displayed through a particular听Oliverian听lens that makes it somehow better, more beautiful, perfect. 鈥Jonah Ogles
Marianne Vos

You've probably heard听of听贰诲诲测听惭别谤肠办虫, the Belgian road and track racer who听won 11 Grand Tours and almost every major one-day race. But you might not have heard of Marianne Vos,听, closely nipping on the heels of his legacy. Vos has mastered more disciplines, with wins in road,听cyclocross, mountain, and track, and she's earned 22 single-day events victories, not counting the three general classification wins at the women'蝉听. Plus, unlike 71-year-old听Merckx, Vos is still racing. 鈥擜.N.
Vanessa Garrison and Morgan Dixon

When Vanessa Dixon co-founded the Washington, D.C.鈥揵ased nonprofit in 2012 with Morgan Garrison, the two had only one goal: to get women to walk for 30 minutes each day. Now nearly 100,000 walkers strong, GirlTrek is a forceful national health campaign. Though all are welcome, GirlTrek focuses on African American women, who are the highest-educated 颅demographic in the United States, according to the Department of Education, and also the least likely to spend their free time on physical activity. As Garrison and Dixon point out, that's because they're too busy juggling work, family, and community. 鈥擡.B.
Angel Collinson

Look up “badass”听in the dictionary and there鈥檚 a photo of Angel Collinson. The native of Snowbird, Utah, is one of the world's best freeskiers: in 2010, at age 19, Collinson took home the overall women's title on the Freeride World Tour. She did it again in 2011, and four years later won Best Female Performance and Best Line (a first for a woman) at the Powder Awards. Collinson has played a huge role in getting the women鈥檚 big-mountain events on equal footing as the guys', all while keeping her sense of humor (just try to find a photo of her without a ) and kindness. 鈥擜.N.听
Serena Williams

In January, Serena Williams won her 23rd Grand Slam title, pulling ahead of for the all-time record. Of course, she has ruled the game as for far longer. Before Williams, tennis matches were won with finesse, speed, and dance-like grace. Williams has all of those things, but she's added power, endurance, and tenacity into the mix. 听鈥Carly Graf
搁耻别听惭补辫辫

Need a little motivation? Remember that you have the same number of hours in a day as 搁耻别听惭补辫辫. She is first and foremost the founder and CEO of听, an organization that fosters community and leadership among African American nature lovers. What started as a blog back in 2009 is now a network of 65 leaders and countless outdoor听meetup听groups and has been听.听Mapp听is also a commissioner for California State Parks and Recreation, member of the Outdoor Industry Association鈥檚 board of directors, founding member of the听, writer, and public speaker. In other words:听Mapp听is one of the foremost leaders making the outdoors a more inclusive place. Now what's your excuse? 鈥擡.B.
础产产测听奥补尘产补肠丑

'蝉听preretirement听soccer career wasn't half-bad: two Olympic gold medals, one long-awaited World Cup title, and 184 goals鈥攖he most scored by any player, male or female, in international competition. Not to mention a series of vocal efforts for gender and pay equality in her sport and beyond. But shortly after hanging up her cleats,听Wambach听found herself in a dark place. She felt stuck in a corroding marriage. She was living “in terror and fear of shedding my identity as a soccer player.鈥 For听Wambach, stepping away from competition has been about making changes. She got divorced. She wrote a memoir,听. On her book tour, she met bestselling author听, and now the听.听Wambach听recently moved cross-country, to Naples, Florida, to live with Melton and her three children and plans to help coach Melton's 11-year-old's girls'听soccer team. 鈥擩uliet听Macur
惭颈办补别濒补听厂丑颈蹿蹿谤颈苍

We've gotten so used to听惭颈办补别濒补听厂丑颈蹿蹿谤颈苍听winning that we almost expect her to finish a slalom course with a two-second lead over the next-place finisher. () She's a technical ski-racing expert, with a total of four Olympic and world championship gold medals to her name. Just last month,听Shiffrin听cinched the overall World Cup title. Oh yeah, and she's only 22. 鈥擜.N.
Junko Tabei

When Junko Tabei passed away in听November 2016, many in the outdoor world failed to notice. This is a severe oversight. The Japanese climber became the first woman to summit Everest in 1975. After in 1985, Tabei decided to tick off the ones she hadn't climbed and became the first woman to claim that achievement as well. (She reached the top of in 1992 to complete the seven.) But even that wasn't enough. By the , she had reached the highest peak in 56 countries. 鈥擩.O.
Kit DesLauriers

When Kit DesLauriers was 15, she visited Telluride, Colorado,听for the first time, and the mountains lit a path before her. A self-described Rocky Mountain girl born to New Englanders, DesLauriers graduated from college with a 4.0 grade point average and immediately moved to Telluride with the intention of getting into those peaks that stole her heart. In 2006, DesLauriers, along with her husband, Rob, and professional photographer and climber Jimmy Chin, skied from the top of Everest, completing . Since then, she's skied and measured the highest points of Alaska's Brooks Range and co-authored a scientific paper about the region. 鈥Charlie Ebbers
顿颈补苍补听狈测补诲

顿颈补苍补听狈测补诲'蝉听111-mile swim from Cuba to Key West听places her firmly in the pantheon of听. Between her first attempt, at age 28, and the last four鈥攁ll after the age of 60鈥擭yad suffered near听, the crushing force of a Gulf Stream that blew her dozens of miles off course, hypothermia, third-degree burns from saltwater chafing, vomiting from ocean swells, and the threat of shark attack. Six weeks after her historic landing in Florida,听. 鈥Stephanie Pearson
Gwen Jorgensen

At the Rio Olympics last year, 30-year-old听Gwen Jorgensen听took home gold in the triathlon. But rather than sitting back and enjoying her glory, Jorgensen immediately took on another enormous challenge鈥攕he ran her debut marathon, the New York City Marathon, less than three months after Rio. Jorgensen is constantly setting extremely high standards for everything she tackles. After a less-than-satisfying race in New York (2:41:01, good for听14th听place), she told听国产吃瓜黑料, “I'm not sure what I would have been happy with. I know I gave it my best, so that's all I can ask of myself, but I still wanted to be better. I think that鈥檚 what makes me an elite athlete.”听鈥擬.M.听
Lynsey Addario

The 43-year-old professional photojournalist turned her lens on war-torn regions and displaced peoples after 2001, when she got the call to return to Afghanistan to capture American troops entering the country. Addario has worked for the New York Times, National Geographic, and Time. “Photography becomes a way for her to travel with a purpose鈥攁 singular ambition that shapes and drives her,”听reads her website. 鈥擜.N.听
Paige Alms

, Paige Alms was born in British Columbia but moved to Maui with her family when she was nine years old. By 15, she was charging big days at the island's outer reef breaks. In 2015, on Maui's North Shore. Surfer magazine called it “one of the most significant tubes in the history of women鈥檚 surfing.”听鈥Matt Skenazy
Kate Brandt

In 2014, President Barack Obama appointed Kate Brandt to downsize the federal government's carbon footprint as the country's first chief sustainability officer. In 2015,听. Some of her current goals include powering the tech giant on 100 percent renewable energy and making water-sucking data centers more environmentally friendly. 鈥擟.E.
Shelma Jun

In March 2017, more than 300 women gathered in Bishop, California, to boulder, climb, take clinics, and hang out. They were there for the second annual Women's Climbing Festival, launched by 34-year-old climber and organizer Shelma Jun. The Southern California native grew up at the skate park and in the waves, but a shoulder surgery barred her from high-impact sports and led her into the climbing gym. Jun found the sport was not immune to sexism and sought out other women to create supportive environments in which to climb. An Instagram account of Jun and her girlfriends听climbing outside evolved into an online platform called for connecting female climbers. “I started Flash Foxy as a celebration of all the awesome women in my life who inspired me, supported me, and enriched my relationship with climbing outdoors,”听Jun says. Through that was born the Women's Climbing Festival, which, after selling out in one minute this spring, is expanding to a second location in Chattanooga this fall. 鈥Luke Whelan
Michelle Obama

Yeah, folks in the outdoor world are just as much in love with her as everyone else. During Michelle Obama鈥檚 eight years in the White House, the former First Lady managed to make eating kale cool and PE class as fun as dancing with Beyonc茅. These efforts were part of her , which brought healthier lunches to more than 50 million schoolchildren across the country. The initiative also included Let's Move! 国产吃瓜黑料, rolled out by the Department of the Interior, with the goal of encouraging kids to become active in the outdoors. The Obama family visited Yosemite and Grand Canyon, and Michelle's campaign provided free national park passes to every fourth grader in the country. 鈥擫.W.听
Ashima Shiraishi

The 16-year-old phenom is already one of the world's best rock climbers, having hoisted herself up what is widely considered one of the hardest sport routes on earth before she was old enough to get her driver's license. Ashima Shiraishi is also the only female climber with a V15 boulder problem under her belt, and she recently nabbed a sponsorship from Coca-Cola. 鈥Greg Thomas
惭别濒颈蝉蝉补听础谤苍辞迟听搁别颈诲

惭别濒颈蝉蝉补听础谤苍辞迟听搁别颈诲 has听worked as a guide for RMI and other outfitters, as well as for her own guiding service, which she started in 2010. She takes clients up Rainier,听Aconcagua, and Everest, among other peaks. In the past decade,听Arnot听Reid has become one of the best in the world at what she does, which, if you ask her, is walking uphill slowly. She has听summited听Everest six times, more than any other American woman. Her most recent ascent, last spring, was without the aid of supplemental oxygen鈥攕omething that only 165 people, seven of them women, have done.听Arnot听Reid is the first American woman to do so and survive the descent. 鈥础苍苍补听颁补濒濒补驳丑补苍
Tammeca Rochester

Tammeca Rochester started in April 2016 with a distinction so simple it shocked a lot of people: it's the first spin studio in Harlem. Anyone familiar with New York City's spin-crazed fitness scene might find that hard to believe. But Rochester saw the studio as a much-needed alternative to the ubiquitous classes that are often pricey and intimidating. “Going to these studios downtown, I was always the only [black woman],” last year. “I wanted to create a studio that was open to everyone鈥攔ace-wise, health-level-wise.”听That's apparent in everything from the small classes (20 people max) and intro-level offerings to the music and decor inspired by the Harlem Renaissance and, yes, the price: $25 for one class, to SoulCycle鈥檚 $34. Rochester is leading the charge to make the fitness studio more than just a club for the in-crowd鈥攁nd creating a lot more healthy, happy people in the process. 鈥擡.B.
Allyson Felix

: she's a nine-time Olympic medalist (six gold and three silver, which ties her with Merlene Ottey as the most decorated track and field Olympian of all time), six-time U.S. National Champion in the 200 meters, three-time U.S. National Champion in the 400 meters, and four-time recipient of the USATF鈥檚 Jesse Owens Award, designating her as the Athlete of the Year. But perhaps what's most impressive about the 31-year-old L.A.-born runner is that amid today's never-ending doping controversies, Felix has managed this level of dominance clean. Ahead of the 2016 Beijing Olympics, Felix became a member of U.S. Anti-Doping Agency's Project Believe, which meant frequent testing leading up to the games. “I like to focus on bringing out a really positive image to the sport and investing in the next generation, so that's where I focus my sights on,”听Felix . 鈥擶es Judd
Lynn Hill

In 1993, the Nose of El Capitan in Yosemite Valley had never been climbed without the use of artificial aid, despite attempts by some of the world's best climbers. The first ascent was considered one of the Valley's last great prizes. Lynn Hill, then 32 years old and already an internationally famous competition climber, had attempted the route four years earlier with British climber Simon Nadine but failed to work through all 32 pitches. But that September, Hill tried again, this time with Brooke听Sandahl. After dreaming that she freed the route,听. “It goes, boys,” she famously quipped after the climb. It was a giant leap forward for female climbers and more than 20 years before 叠别迟丑听搁辞诲诲别苍听and her then-husband Tommy Caldwell made the second and third free ascents. 鈥擬.S.听
Sally Jewell

罢丑别听former secretary of the interior under President Obama听is a dyed-in-the-wool听outdoorswoman听armed with corporate business savvy. After turning REI into a听multibillion-dollar听company during her 17-year tenure as its CEO and a three-year stint managing the country's 640 million acres of federal lands, Jewell recharged by road-tripping with her husband across the lower 48 back to their home state of Washington. 鈥擥.T.听
Mira Rai

Mira听Rai'蝉听story is almost impossibly听scripted.听Raised in a rural village in eastern Nepal, the听ultrarunner听spent her childhood hiking barefoot along mountain trails with her mother, sometimes 14 hours a day, to buy rice at the market and bring it home to sell. When she was 14, Rai left her home in Nepal to join the Maoist rebel army, where she trained in shooting, trail running, and karate. (She saw no military action.) Fast-forward to 2014, when at age 25, Rai accidentally ran her first听ultramarathon. “I didn't realize it was a race,”听she says, flashing a blazing grin. Rai showed up for a trail run in Kathmandu and bolted 50 kilometers (31 miles) through a slicing hailstorm with no food or water. She won the female division鈥攁nd was the only woman to complete the course. 鈥Katie Arnold
Rebecca Rusch

It would be easy label Rebecca Rusch simply as “mountain biker.”听She鈥檚 a seven-time world champion, has won the infamous Leadville Trail 100 MTB race a record-tying four times, and last year, with teammate , was among the third party ever to summit Mount Kilimanjaro on bikes. Rusch has also won world and national championships in cross-country skiing, orienteering, whitewater rafting, and adventure racing, and has a first female ascent climbing El Capitan in Yosemite. At 48 years old, Rusch continues to crush. With a refined, patient approach to racing, she's beating men half her age. “All these guys will go out hot [in endurance bike races], and hours later I catch them,”听she told 国产吃瓜黑料. “They always ask, 'Why do you start so slowly?'听And I answer, 'Why do you finish so slowly?'”听鈥Wes Judd
Kris Tompkins

Kris Tompkins has worn a lot of hats. After ski-racing competitively in college, she worked for Patagonia back when it was called Chouinard Equipment. As CEO of Patagonia for 20 years, she oversaw its growth into a successful brand, focused the company's environmental ethic (launching the ongoing initiative to ), and championed on-site childcare. Even after retiring in 1993, Tompkins essentially became a full-time conservationist: she moved to Chile with her late husband, Doug Tompkins, and purchased hundreds of thousands of acres of land for protection. In March, Tompkins donated one听million acres of land to the Chilean national park system (the largest such donation in history), spurring Chile to add another 10 million acres. Her big-picture goal? Protect at least half of the earth's land and water. We don't doubt she means business. 鈥擡.B.听
叠别迟丑听搁辞诲诲别苍

Before 16-year-old听础蝉丑颈尘补听厂丑颈谤补颈蝉丑颈听and 19-year-old听Margo Hayes听were crushing some of the hardest routes in the world,听there was 叠别迟丑听搁辞诲诲别苍, the original teenage climbing听phenom. In 1998, while just 18 years old,听Rodden听became the youngest woman to climb a 5.14a. And that was after just three years in the sport.听Rodden听would go on to tick off some of the hardest听trad听routes in the world, including Meltdown, which until recently was the hardest route in Yosemite and, despite numerous attempts, has yet to be repeated. 鈥擬.S.听
Lucy Walker

British film director Lucy Walker is the creative mind behind countless documentaries, including the acclaimed Waste Land and Blindsight, a story about six blind Tibetan teenagers who attempt to climb a 23,000-foot peak in the Himalayas. In 2013, Walker shocked the action-sports industry with her film Crash Reel. Premiering at the Sundance Film Festival, it follows professional snowboarder Kevin Pearce鈥檚 recovery from a traumatic brain injury. The film spotlights the danger of action sports and makes the case that sports like snowboarding and mountain biking are as destructive as the NFL. The film inspired our investigative report on the subject, “After the Crash.”听鈥Ben Fox
Donna Carpenter

Donna Carpenter is just plain cool. The original “Burton girl,” she met her husband, Jake Carpenter, in 1981, four years after he'd founded his听eponymous snowboarding brand. Currently Burton's CEO, Carpenter has spent the past year restructuring the business, promoting and hiring people鈥攎ostly women鈥攖o get the brand back to its former glory. She oversees the company's biannual Women's Leadership Day in Vermont, so it was no surprise when, this past January, Carpenter offered to cover food and lodging for any employees interested in attending the Women's March in Washington, D.C. Not a surprise, but still cool. 鈥擝.F.听
奥补蝉蹿颈补听狈补锄谤别别苍

奥补蝉蹿颈补听狈补锄谤别别苍听is the听, but rather than rest on her laurels,听Nazreen听is parlaying her exposure into a bid to get girls outdoors. Her foundation,听, focuses on training adolescents in Bangladesh, Nepal, and Tibet to become the next generation of expedition leaders in the听Himalaya. 鈥擥.T.
Sally Bergesen

As the founder and CEO of the women's running company Oiselle, Sally Bergesen has earned a reputation for being outspoken and strong-willed. Since founding the brand in 2007, she's raised the bar for quality women's running apparel and taken a prominent, fiery stand against track and field sponsorship rules that she considers detrimental to athletes and the sport. In a 2016 国产吃瓜黑料 feature, Bergesen described Oiselle's identity as “low-key, committed to an 颅active life, with a New York aesthetic and a feminist bent.”听Even while luring high-profile names like Kara Goucher, Lauren Fleshman, and Kate Grace into the Oiselle ranks over the years, Bergesen still strives to keep the brand accessible to the everyday, middle-of-the-pack runner. 鈥擬.M.
贰谤颈苍听罢谤颈别产

Professional photographer 贰谤颈苍听罢谤颈别产听is on the road six to eight months a year, and since 2004, she has been covering conflict and social issues around the world, frequently embedding with U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan. Her photographs鈥攊ncluding a听鈥攈ave been published everywhere from听Rolling Stone听to the听Times of London. In 2011,听Trieb听launched the听, using her images to bring attention to PTSD and other issues that returning veterans face. The project has been exhibited 50 times and received prominent media exposure. 鈥Mary Turner
Rose Marcario

After a come-to-Jesus departure from the world of private equity in 2008, has shaped the California-based apparel brand into an industry leader in sustainability. In addition to restructuring Patagonia's supply and labor chains to obtain B Corp certification, Marcario oversaw the inauguration of , a venture capital arm aimed at finding and assisting startups with an ecological purpose. “Rose understands the need for revolution,”听Patagonia founder Yvon Choinard told Fortune in 2015. “She's the one who's 颅going to lead us there.”听鈥Reid Singer
Jane Goodall

In 1960, made her second journey to Africa and changed the face of primatology forever, and not just for her discoveries that chimpanzees create and use tools, hunt, eat meat, have distinct personalities, or form strong, lasting family bonds鈥攁ll revolutionary findings. It's also how Goodall defied the scientific conventions of the times and immersed herself in their world as a fellow primate rather than a distant observer. It's how, when she later attended Cambridge to pursue her PhD, Goodall was told she did everything wrong and yet she persisted. And it's how she has inspired so many people to follow in her footsteps. Today, Goodall is as busy as ever, traveling 300 days a year, speaking and encouraging her audiences to fight for environment. Twice a year, Goodall still finds time to return to her to observe the great-grandchildren of the chimpanzees that first accepted her into their lives. 鈥
Stacy Sims

When it comes performance fueling, women “are not small men.”听This is the message in听, the new book from University of Waikato exercise physiologist and nutrition scientist Stacy Sims. It's the culmination of her nearly two decades studying female athletes and their athletic feats. Years ago, Sims realized that most nutrition research had been done on men, and it was assumed that one could extrapolate this data to women. Through her research, Sims, an elite athlete herself, has made a career of disrupting this assumption. She's even听. 鈥擶.J.
Emily Erickson

Emily Erickson's introduction to surfing began at Sunset Beach on Oahu's North Shore, which some would argue is like starting your climbing career on Mount Everest. “Because my dad surfed there, I never thought it was impossible,”听she says. “There were no limits.”听As a child in Hawaii, Erickson watched her father, Roger, a big-wave legend and former North Shore lifeguard, ride giant swells while she played in the sand. At 17, she began learning about the ocean and its moods on a boogie board. A year later, her father gave her his 10'6″ big-wave gun. Erickson was hooked. “Nothing hit me as hard as surfing did,”听she says. 鈥厂丑别濒产测听厂迟补苍驳别谤