RFOV launched and is leading the Glenwood Canyon Restoration Alliance for recovery in the wake of 2020’s Grizzly Creek Fire. These are our 2021 Goals & Activities.
Meet RFOV's New Executive Director
Following winter transition, Becca will become ed on march 15th.
We're excited to announce that Becca Schild will become RFOV’s Executive Director. Becca is currently the Associate Director for RFOV, and the staff and Board are thrilled to see her embrace this new role. With her 15 years of experience across many non-profit stewardship and education organizations combined with her Ph.D. research in volunteer stewardship, Becca brings a diverse skill-set to the RFOV community.
New Foundations
Current Executive Director, Ron Rash, has implemented significant organizational changes in his two years of leadership. Though RFOV has served Pitkin, Garfield, Eagle, and Gunnison counties since 1995, never before has it been so confident in its financial sustainability and its community support. Ron's tenure with RFOV will be remembered by the dedicated and inspired team he assembled. As a Crew Leader and Crew Leader instructor, Ron will remain connected to the RFOV community in his retirement.
Dedicated to Outdoors Leadership
RFOV will benefit from incoming Executive Director Becca Schild's 15 years of experience as an outdoor and environmental educator, her academic background in environmental stewardship, and her extensive experience in the non-profit sector. Most recently, she co-founded and directed the High Mountain Institute’s Adventure and Conservation Semesters in the American West and Patagonia while also working on her PhD in Environmental Studies at CU Boulder. Her doctoral dissertation, entitled “Civic Recreation: the Promise of Uniting Outdoor Recreation and Environmentalism in the 21st Century”, examined the role that recreation-based stewardship organizations play in successful land management. Her previous experience as an administrator, overseeing the Environmental Center and Campus Sustainability at Fort Lewis College, and as an educator, teaching environmental studies courses for Colorado College, University of Colorado Boulder, Colorado Mountain College, and Utah State University, will also serve her well in this new role.
art, Art, ART!
2020 Year-in-Review
2020 Volunteer of the Year
September 2020
YSP Autumn Preview
Ben's Member Story
Who is the Outdoors?
Tea And Trails All Together
News Roundup: June 15th
Want a peek inside Roaring Fork Outdoor Volunteers?
Here’s what local newsmedia have recently written about us:
Aspen Times, June 11th, “25 Years of Roaring Fork Outdoor Volunteers” (Scott Condon)
Roaring Fork Lifestyle, June, “Windows to Our World” (Finn Collier)
Basalt Magazine, 2020, “RFOV Celebrates 25 Years of Community-Powered Stewardship”
Want to get involved in RFOV? There’s opportunities for any age, any ability, any background! Join us as we make community with our own hands.
A Founder's Story
Making Cents of this Together
Jamin's RFOV Story
Tales of Trails: Grizzly Creek
A Roof Above Our Heads
Reflections on Nature: An Essay by Shannyn, RFOV Spring Intern
For as long as I can remember, I’ve loved being outside, loved exploring nature, loved animals and plants and sunshine and snow. Understanding nature’s origins is, I believe, essential to understanding how I can (and should) live in the world: our trees provide us with oxygen, our ground provides us with food, and our rivers provide us with water. So nature is the basis of our existence – it’s why we are where we are today.