Daily Press (Sunday)

Making trails accessible

Parks across the country receive requests for accessibil­ity info

- By Amanda Morris

Beneath the wooden boardwalk where Syren Nagakyrie, 40, was on a hike through Lettuce Lake Conservati­on Park in Tampa, Florida, dark shadows of fish moved in the vegetation-clogged waters, while red-eyed herons strode between the cypress roots that stuck out from the water like knobby, twisted knees.

Nagakyrie, who is nonbinary, pointed out a turtle sunning itself on a log. But to see the wildlife, Nagakyrie’s mother, Vickie Boyer, 59, had to lean out of her wheelchair and peer through cracks between the wooden railings. The short wooden boardwalk loop, near Boyer’s home in Riverview, Florida, was supposedly on an accessible trail. Nagakyrie jotted down the railing’s height measuremen­ts in a notebook. It was 42 inches, 6 inches higher than what someone using a wheelchair could comfortabl­y see over.

While some organizati­ons offer to have non-disabled people carry, push or otherwise help people with disabiliti­es navigate the outdoors, Nagakryie, who has conditions that cause chronic pain and fatigue, reflects a growing movement of disabled people pushing for more independen­t access to the great outdoors, taking steps themselves by publishing trail guides, establishi­ng nonprofits to empower others through equipment, advocacy and training, and testifying before Congress.

Growing interest in outdoor recreation

As a result of the pandemic, more people nationwide have turned to outdoor recreation. A March 2021 report commission­ed by the Outdoor Industry Associatio­n found that 53% of Americans older than 6 participat­ed in outdoor recreation in 2020 — the highest rate on record. Many destinatio­ns managed by the National Park Service also welcomed record numbers of visitors in 2020.

As visitation increases, so do the number of visitors with disabiliti­es, said Jeremy Buzzell, an accessibil­ity program manager with the National Park Service.

Last April, several disability activists testified at a hearing on Capitol Hill, in front of members of the House Natural Resources Committee, which oversees the Park Service, to push for greater accessibil­ity in outdoor spaces and call attention to barriers in public parks.

Buzzell said that parks across the country are receiving increased requests for more accessibil­ity informatio­n, and the demand prompted the agency to form an Accessibil­ity Task Force and launch a five-year strategy in 2015 to improve accessibil­ity.

More national parks are partnering with local disability organizati­ons to get accessibil­ity, Buzzell said, and the agency is assessing trails to see if there are improvemen­ts that could be made that could increase access.

“Very often, even if a trail is not able to meet the letter of the law as an accessible trail, we can still change things to make it more accessible,” Buzzell said.

Hikers want more informatio­n

Some outdoors enthusiast­s have begun to write their own trail guides for national, local and state parks, such as Nagakyrie. They founded a project called Disabled Hikers to empower others and share detailed trail guides they write. A native of Washington state, they have already completed close to 200 trail guides, most of which are clustered in the Pacific Northwest.

Nagakyrie was inspired to start this project after struggling to determine which trails they could hike — sometimes trails that were labeled easy presented challenges like stairs or rocky, uneven surfaces that a non-disabled person might not think twice about.

“I’m not out here to tell any individual ‘yes or no, you can or can’t do this trail,’ ” said Nagakyrie. “I just want to provide informatio­n so they can make that decision themselves.”

Rather than only sticking to paved trails, they argue that any trail can be more accessible if disabled hikers are equipped with the right informatio­n — and even trails labeled “accessible” can present challenges that park staff don’t always recognize.

Some trail guides are already available for free on the Disabled Hikers website, but Nagakyrie also plans to publish a guidebook, which is available for pre-order. Each trail is given a rating of how many “spoons” it takes to complete, in reference to a popular term used by those with chronic fatigue to describe how much energy they have to complete a given task. The more spoons a task requires, the harder and more energycons­uming it is.

Collaborat­ions to improve access

This is the type of informatio­n Georgena Moran would like more available on websites for national, state and local parks. Since being diagnosed with multiple sclerosis two decades ago, Moran, 64, has held on to her identity as an avid outdoor enthusiast. A former canoe racer and scuba diver, she uses her chin to drive her power wheelchair on hikes near her home in Portland, Oregon. She particular­ly loves to get off paved trails.

“My adventurou­s spirit never died because my disability increased,” she said. “I still want to go out and challenge myself as much as possible.”

While she usually brings an able-bodied companion the first time she tries a new hike, she said that going on hikes independen­tly is equally important for her to connect with her spiritual self.

“It’s a way of re-rooting,” she said.

But simple obstacles can prevent her from even getting onto a trail — sometimes there is no available handicappe­d parking, or curb cuts for her to get out of the parking lot. At the trail head, she has found concrete barriers designed to keep out cars and ATVs but that also block her from entering.

Experience­s like these pushed Moran to start Access Recreation, an organizati­on that created guidelines for the type of informatio­n parks should provide disabled hikers. The group wrote sample trail guides for around three dozen trails in Oregon with the intention of getting larger organizati­ons involved.

Access Recreation is now working with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to improve accessibil­ity at the Ridgefield National Wildlife Refuge outside of Ridgefield, Washington, with the aim that it will serve as an example for other parks. Juliette Fernandez, a project manager with the Wildlife Service, said the agency is collecting and publishing better informatio­n about the trail, as well as installing new signs at the park that blind people can read through touch.

“We can really move mountains with very subtle touches,” she said.

 ?? TODD ANDERSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2021 ?? Vickie Boyer on the boardwalk trail Dec. 3 at Lettuce Lake Conservati­on Park in Tampa.
TODD ANDERSON/THE NEW YORK TIMES 2021 Vickie Boyer on the boardwalk trail Dec. 3 at Lettuce Lake Conservati­on Park in Tampa.

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