Among the many things we鈥檝e learned during these surreal times is how to appreciate exploring our own backyards, local parks, and neighborhoods. It鈥檚 amazing how much adventure is literally right out your front door. From learning new skills to finding creative ways to challenge yourself,听there is no shortage of听ways to expand your surroundings.
Become a Paleontologist

鈥淚 found a fossil,鈥 my husband nonchalantly declared after watering the plants a couple years ago. He held up a fist-size chunk of sandy brown rock embedded听with a dark, ridged oblong shape, unmistakably a plant or shell fragment. A find like this is hardly rare in New Mexico鈥攖he state is littered with fossils, and our Santa Fe听neighborhood is built on ground studded with rock from the Paleozoic era, when life on earth exploded. After some research, I learned from the state鈥檚 听that exposed sedimentary rock is the best place to look. We set out one late afternoon for an hour of hunting. The sandstone bluff above the driveway yielded nothing, nor did the drainage wash behind the house, but then, by the trash can, my husband got lucky again: a chunk of rock almost as big as his head contained a fingernail-size shell. You never know what鈥檚 in your backyard until you go looking for it.听鈥擜leta Burchyski
Create a Fitness Test Route
Just as states were shutting down, I was taking my first tentative steps after a knee and ankle injury kept me from running for the听better part of a year. Nervous about reinjury and conscious of social distancing, I found myself jogging听the same trail loop over and over again. Rather than boring听me, the sameness freed me from the constant worry over what was going to happen next. I could suddenly shut off my brain and pay closer attention to my body鈥攈ow the same hill felt one day compared to the next, or how a ten-degree temperature spike made my energy level nosedive. I鈥檝e never been good at training, mostly because I鈥檝e never had the patience for it. I鈥檇 finish a workout and then immediately start overanalyzing whether I鈥檇 done the intervals at exactly the right speed. Now听I realize I was just missing one fundamental thing: simplicity. 鈥Ariella Gintzler听
Head Out on the Perfect Microadventure Bike

Some magic happens when you swap out your skinny road tires with 40-millimeter听treaded rubber on a gravel bike. You鈥檒l take that scrubby trail you鈥檝e always wondered about, the one that disappears into a new neighborhood,听or you鈥檒l ride up that forested dirt road just to see where it goes. That鈥檚 because 35 to 40 millimeters is, scientifically, the perfect tire width: fat enough that, on pavement, you let go of any ambitions of going fast and hammering听yet narrow enough to transform tame singletrack that would be too boring to ride on your mountain bike into giggle-inducing fun.
The versatility of a gravel bike invents adventures. I鈥檝e done a midweek overnight bikepacking trip straight from the office. I鈥檝e tried to ride 120 miles to the Jersey Shore from a small town in Pennsylvania, gotten lost, and had to bed down in a random hostel on the state line. I鈥檝e done night rides on neighborhood trails in fresh snow and 13-degree temps, warmed only by a flask of whiskey from听a friend鈥檚 back pocket.
There are Luddites who will sneer that they鈥檝e been riding road bikes on dirt for years and used to just call it 鈥渃ycling,鈥澨齮hat they didn鈥檛 need a specially engineered bike to do it. Don鈥檛 worry about them. On your gravel bike, you鈥檒l be having too much fun to care.听鈥擥loria Liu
Test Your Navigational Skills听
To survive the repetitive doldrums of the same walk every day, my two kids and I invented a little game we like to call: GET LOST! (Ages: all.听Players: unlimited.听Things you need: shoes, but not required.)
Phase 1: Introduce this activity with your best movie trailer voice, and appoint one of the youngest players to be the expedition leader. Have them lead the team to a less familiar part of the neighborhood, and encourage blowing off well-marked trails in favor of bushwhacking. (Don鈥檛 actually whack any bushes;听instead, dodge low eye-gouging branches, run from red anthills, and scream at every stink bug sighting).
Phase 2: The fear of God pivot. (Adult, you pull the trigger on this one.)听Stop suddenly and say something like, 鈥淯mmm hold up a sec guys.听That鈥檚 not the way we came, is it?鈥澨齏ait for the fear to surface in your kids鈥 eyes as you look around in panic. Suggest that you may be lost, then beg them to help find the way home.
Phase 3: Get them started in the right direction by asking them to spot certain landmarks. Then enjoy as your kids enter hero mode: 鈥淚 remember that tree! It鈥檚 this way!鈥 They will likely surprise you with an incredible sense of direction. If not, just keep one hand in your pocket with Google Maps activated. 鈥Hannah McCaughey听
Ditch the Car
I鈥檇听been practicing for the pandemic and didn鈥檛 even know it. Last fall, my wife and I welcomed our first child. Before our daughter arrived, my outdoor time consisted of half-day surf sessions, 30-mile mountain bike rides, and all-day rock climbing outings. Now that my time is more limited and we鈥檙e staying close to home, I鈥檝e adjusted, and in one critical way: I started adventuring from my doorstep. The clock is ticking once my hand leaves our front gate handle, so I figure the best use of my time is to make it all part of the outing.
I ride my gravel bike on connector roads to the open lands around my town. I run through the dog park behind our house听to another open space听and then to the trails beyond it. I sometimes use an e-bike to get to the base of the mountains and then run up one of them. The whole time I鈥檓 out is an adventure, because I鈥檓 not getting in the car. Part of it is living in a place like New Mexico, where this is relatively easy, but I鈥檓 convinced that adventure can be had for anyone with a little creativity and a few steps out the door鈥攁nd it doesn鈥檛 have to mean sacrificing time with your family. 鈥Will Taylor
Learn to Be a Naturalist

鈥淲hat are those yellow flowers?鈥 I asked my roommate on a recent walk. 鈥Those,鈥 she said, 鈥渁re dandelions.鈥 I never realized that the plants turn听golden-petaled after shedding their furry form. It was the latest example of my complete ineptitude at听terrestrial ecology.
If we had been underwater, it would have been a different story. As a听divemaster and self-proclaimed fish nerd, I can identify at least the genus of almost anything in a saltwater aquarium. So, to make my daily three-mile walk more interesting, I started to reimagine the world around me as a reef听teeming with alien life. Luckily, on land, I have听the advantage of these things called 鈥渁pps鈥 that allow听me to identify nature听in real time. In the morning, I use听the free听 to determine the individual voices in the chorus of birdsong. On lunchtime walks, I snap听photos of flora with the also-free听 and try听to find a match in its听database of more than 300,000 species. As I go听along, I pick a few to identify each day; by the next walk, I can usually name them on sight.
Like all great naturalists before me, I鈥檝e faced trials in my pursuit of knowledge. A neighbor听chased me off while I was trying to photograph one of his trees. On my most recent foray, I was stung by a bee while attempting to upload a picture of a reddish tree that I think is a Mexican shrubby spurge. But听all those trials were worth it to transform the static world around me into one of constant exploration. 鈥Kaelyn Lynch
Create a Hometown Travel Guide
When I moved to Santa Fe from New York a year ago听and those 鈥渨e鈥檒l definitely visit鈥 send-offs turned into a few booked flights, I was excited to play host. When friends and family visited me in New York, they already had most of their agenda mapped out, but in Santa Fe, which for many still feels unfamiliar, I could have free rein on their experience. So听when we went into lockdown and those trips were postponed, I decided to use the听time to create听my perfect visitor鈥檚 itinerary to have ready for the future. I asked colleagues, friends, and neighbors for their ideas; combed local blogs and forums for insider spots; and sought out less-crowded alternatives to popular locations. From there, I arranged each stop by a set of criteria based on the preferences of my potential visitors, such as price point, ideal time of day to visit, duration, and difficulty level. What I actually ended up with was a hometown bucket list for myself.听鈥Erin Riley
Get Dirty听

There鈥檚 a reason plant and seed sales surged during lockdown. There鈥檚 hope in gardening, watching seedlings rise out of the ground to provide food and beauty, and knowing that they鈥檝e been doing so for thousands of years. Gardening also brings year-round pleasure. Fall is the perfect time to plant perennials and hardy winter greens听and to harvest the last of the vegetables. I used to think of gardening as a chore鈥攖he weeding, the grass-mowing, the pruning. I remember trying to hide when my father (who, at 83,听still grows enough vegetables each year to feed an army)听would yell on hot, sticky summer days: 鈥淚t鈥檚 time to weed the garden!鈥 But while at home during COVID-19, I developed a new relationship with my own garden and the benefits of working in it. After a couple hours of lugging around bags of soil and trimming hedges, I consider it my workout for the day. It uses every muscle in my body. The growth in the garden also keeps me present. This spring, I observed the vines and shrubs come back to life and lost hours watching bees pollinate and birds care for their young.
You don鈥檛 need a large amount of land, either. A few pots on a windowsill will bring the joy. Recently, a colleague and I have been experimenting with a hydroponic gardening farm stand听that works both outside and indoors called , and it鈥檚 thriving with herbs, lettuces, and vegetables.
Now that it鈥檚 fall, apples and pears are dropping from the trees in my backyard, and I鈥檓 thinking about which bulbs to plant. I love digging into the earth and seeing all the action going on underground鈥擨鈥檓 particularly thrilled when I find earthworms, a sign of healthy soil鈥攁nd studies show that microbes in dirt help relieve depression. I鈥檝e been seeking out videos on how to get raspberries to fruit and how to properly prune roses, which is far more entertaining than Netflix. There鈥檚 more to learn than I can in one lifetime. And therein lies a garden鈥檚 real beauty: it will carry on long after I鈥檓 gone. Time to get dirty.听鈥擬ary Turner
Seek Out Water
Since entering lockdown, I鈥檝e found myself returning to the same creek near my home over and over again. I soon found a body of research called 听science, which delves into the potential health benefits of aquatic environments.
The idea resonated with me on an intuitive level. In New York City, where I grew up, long walks often ended along the Hudson or East River. Later on, when I lived in Vermont, we鈥檇 catch sunsets over Lake Champlain or hike to hidden swimming holes. In Seattle, I鈥檇 ride ferries to Puget Sound islands on weekends. In Kansas City, my refuge was a running path along the Missouri River. Wherever I鈥檝e lived, even the most casual journey to the water helped me reset and recharge.
The creek near my home is modest compared to some of the waterways I鈥檝e loved in the past. It鈥檚 barely eight feet across in lots of places. But for now, it鈥檚 become my happy place. 鈥Xian Chiang-Waren听
See Through New Eyes

In mid-March, my girlfriend and I got a dog from a local shelter. During one of our first walks, we came across an alley that we鈥檇 never noticed before. As we moseyed down what we thought was a dead end, a neighbor told us we could continue through the gate at the end of the street听and follow a short path to enter a neighborhood on the other side. We soon found more gates connecting old burro paths dating back to the 18th century, lined with gorgeous old homes.
On every walk since, my attention has been completely absorbed by my surroundings, and having the dog with me has meant that I can linger. I soon started reading about the history of the area and can now cite facts dating back to the turn of the century. It鈥檚 given me the same sense of hyperawareness I鈥檝e experienced during my travels. Getting a dog hasn鈥檛 only helped us with quarantine-fatigue鈥攊t鈥檚 also given us an excuse to find new meaning in our immediate surroundings. 鈥Luke Whelan
Capture Golden Hour
If you have recently gone outside around 6 P.M., you鈥檒l likely have noticed that the golden hour makes the world feel a bit different. As a photographer, I鈥檝e found that in those late-afternoon hours, my neighborhood becomes a gold mine of shooting opportunities.
To take advantage of that low sun, start by studying the way certain scenes look in the low sun. For landscape shots, set your camera on screen mode so you aren鈥檛 blinded by the viewfinder, and shoot directly into the sun and around its circumference. This will create light streaks or solar flares that can add a fun touch. Try placing some plastic wrap or a prism over the lens to test out different effects in refracting the light. It鈥檚 also a great time to shoot portraits:听just ask your subject to close their eyes while you set up the shot听and have them look at the camera on the count of three so you don鈥檛 catch them squinting. If you鈥檙e photographing inanimate objects, late-summer foliage often looks translucent at the right angle and can be a great way to add dimension to an image. 鈥Kyra Kennedy听