Pride on the Ridge Trail and Around the Bay Area

In the San Francisco Bay Area, we have some of the most visible LGBTQIA+ Pride celebrations in the nation! Wherever you are on this spectrum deeply involved with the LGBTQIA+ community to curious about the acronym below are a few resources to further explore issues that impact LGBTQIA+ people and ways to support Pride celebrations, during June and all year round!  🌈

Local Celebrations

LGBTQIA+ Educational Resources

LGBTQIA+ and the Outdoors

In Honor of Caribbean-American Heritage Month & Juneteenth

  • Check this SF Chronicle Datebook page for Juneteenth celebration events around the Bay.
  • Listen to this 13 minute Making Gay History podcast or read about Sylvia Rivera, a transgender activist who identified as Afro-Taíno.
  • Read CNN’s article: “7 black LGBTQ leaders in honor of Juneteenth and Pride month”
  • Watch this video of the NAACP’s President and CEO talk about Juneteenth becoming a federal holiday in 2021
  • Read this NatGeo article on Juneteenth and what it celebrates.

Honoring a Life out on the Trail

Sitting in the shade on a bustling goat farm in Pescadero, CA is a bench with a plaque that reads: 

“G.O.A.T.
get out and travel
Remembering Grant Biggers”

Grant loved visiting Harley Farms Goat Dairy with his family, and when he passed away in February 2021 at the age of 23, a beautiful redwood bench was made and placed on the farm in his honor. Grant’s parents, Bill and Karen Biggers, decided to further honor their son this year at Ridge to Bridge 2022.

Grant's bench at Harley Farms

Bill and Grant at Angels’ Landing, Zion National park, Nov. 2020

Bill describes Grant as always at his “happiest on the trail.” Resistant to the pace of the city and struggling with social groups, he enjoyed being outdoors the most, finding peace in natural open spaces. While Karen is mainly a hiker, and Bill a mountain-biker, Grant loved running most. The family still found a way to enjoy the trails together, however, with Grant keeping pace on foot while Bill rode his bike, often on trails through the open spaces of the Peninsula. One of the last parks Bill and Grant visited together was Purisima Creek Redwoods Open Space Preserve in Woodside, one of their favorites. Grant was also a big traveler, walking from Northern California to Oregon, all over the U.S. and even New Zealand. He explored a lot of the places that are now on Bill and Karen’s bucket list, like Banff and Glacier National Parks. 

With Grant’s birthday approaching on April 27th, Karen and Bill wanted to find a way to celebrate and honor him. It all came together when they saw that the 25th annual Ridge to Bridge event on April 30th featured a 25-mile bike ride – 25 miles, 25th event, 25th birthday! Bill and Karen saw a way to fundraise in honor of their son and support expanding trails and open spaces, the places Grant felt happiest.

At first they set a fundraising goal of $500, but Bill and Karen quickly received that, and more, from friends and family. Seeing another way to align with the number 25, they increased their goal to $2,500. They surpassed this goal as well, and ended up raising $3,100 for the Ridge Trail. Joining them on their fundraising team was their friend and Ridge Trail board member, Ross Heitkamp. They named their team the Mountain GOATs, “goat” being a nickname for Grant (reflective of his love for the goats at Harley Farm) and also standing for “Get Out And Travel” as an homage to Grant’s love of exploring the world.

Bill, Karen and team Mountain GOATs at Ridge to Bridge 2022

Beyond fundraising, Bill and Karen enjoyed participating in the Ridge to Bridge event itself, each in their own way. Bill has participated in the event’s bike ride a few times before, but this year was a new experience for him (riding in a group), and he enjoyed having company on the trail. Karen volunteered for the first time, greeting and orienting event participants at the checkpoint in Tennessee Valley. In addition to Ridge to Bridgers, other visitors were curious about the event and came up to the table to learn more. Karen enjoyed the opportunity to spread awareness about the Ridge Trail with others. 

We’re so thankful for Karen and Bill and their participation through our Ridge to Bridge event, and to those friends and family who supported their fundraiser in Grant’s honor. Those funds will go towards the work we do every day to expand trails and open spaces around the Bay Area so more people, like Grant, can find peace and happiness in natural spaces near home.

Ridge Trail 2025 Strategic Plan

 

At the end of 2021, the Ridge Trail Council completed our strategic planning process and adopted the 2025 Strategic Plan. This Plan fleshes out key initiatives and actions, sets priorities, and weaves program elements together into a cohesive whole. Specific strategies target key trail challenges like: access across private land gaps, complex transportation crossings, supporting circumnavigators, engaging new communities, and raising funds to plan, build and maintain the trail.

As with any strategic planning process, we looked at opportunities, constraints and potential new directions. Our strategies fit within three overarching goals: to open more trail miles, to enable more people to enjoy the trail, and to build and sustain the Council to fulfill our mission and realize our shared vision.

Click HERE (or on the image below) to read a summary of the 2025 Ridge Trail Strategic Plan.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Crockett Boulevard Trail Project

The Project

Contra Costa County is working with John Swett Unified School District, the Bay Area Ridge Trail Council and East Bay Regional Park District to seek funding for a trail and protected street crossing beginning at the intersection of Pomona Street and Crockett Boulevard and continuing to the entrance of the Willow School and Crockett Hills Regional Park. This trail is needed to provide a safe route for students and the public to reach the bus and downtown Crockett. Currently, students at Carquinez Middle School and Willow High School use the shoulder of the road to access the bus stop. This trail would improve safety and connectivity for students and the public and close a 0.3 mile gap in the Bay Area Ridge Trail.

The project includes:

  • A 10′ wide, ADA-accessible paved bicycle and pedestrian path;
  • A pedestrian crossing with safety-enhancements and signage across Pomona Street;
  • Fencing and retaining wall adjacent to the Carquinez Middle School campus to address safety and topography concerns.

Additionally, the trail is a key gap in both the Bay Area Ridge Trail and Carquinez Strait Scenic Loop Trail, two regional recreation trails.

Renderings and a map of the proposed project are provided below.

We Need Your Input!

Please fill out the survey linked below by May 23rd, 2022  to provide your input and hopefully your support for this project to the Bay Area Ridge Trail Council and Contra Costa County. Community input from this survey will be submitted with the application to the State for grant funding.

Crockett Boulevard Trail Project Survey

Map of proposed project area along Pomona St. and Crockett Blvd.
map of crockett blvd. proposed project

Rendering of proposed trail along Crockett Blvd.
rendering of trail and fence along a road with student walking

Rendering of proposed trail along Crockett Blvd. adjacent to Carquinez Middle School. The project will include fencing along the perimeter of Carquinez Middle School.
rendering of retaining wall and fence along proposed crockett trail

2021 Ridge Trail Impact Report

 

2021 was a momentous year! Together we reached a key milestone, despite the ongoing challenges presented by a global pandemic. Your membership and gifts do more than build new miles of trail—they support outings, advocacy, partnership building, and volunteer opportunities. Click the image below to see a PDF of our 2021 Ridge Trail Impact Report. 

 

To receive a printed version of future Impact Reports in your mailbox, become a member today!