Language Selection

Get healthy now with MedBeds!
Click here to book your session

Protect your whole family with Orgo-Life® Quantum MedBed Energy Technology® devices.

Advertising by Adpathway

         

 Advertising by Adpathway

Black Birders Week Takes Flight in the Bay Area

1 week ago 43

PROTECT YOUR DNA WITH QUANTUM TECHNOLOGY

Orgo-Life the new way to the future

  Advertising by Adpathway

Black Birders Week attendees look for birds at Elsie Roemer bird sanctuary in Alameda, California . Amir Aziz / Bay Nature

“What could freedom look like if we moved like [birds], without all the barriers?”

This is the question the Black AF in STEM Collective is asking this year during Black Birders Week, the national effort to promote Black people’s engagement with the outdoors. The week of events kicked off May 24 and will run through the 30th. 

Black AF in STEM, an organization of STEM professionals and students who aim to introduce more Black people to the outdoors and to share stories of conservationists from the African diaspora, is hosting events in the Bay Area this week, as are other groups around the region. Proudly displayed on their website is the mission that Black Birders Week “envisions a future where all individuals, regardless of age, ability, gender, or socioeconomic factors, have equal access to and feel welcome in outdoor spaces” so that any one could join in the activities.

About 20 people from all over the Bay turned out for Black AF in STEM’s event in Alameda on Monday to scratch their birding itch and be among community. People with backgrounds in civil engineering and teaching school, as well as parents, were among the attendees. Binoculars were also supplied to create a truly inclusive experience.

Leading the group was Black AF in STEM member Ayanna Browne, born and raised in the U.S. Virgin Islands, and a wildlife biologist with a B.S. in animal science and an M.S. in integrative biology. She joined the org in 2022 and hosts birding events on the west coast.  She can also be found through Phoreign in Nature, a platform she created that’s dedicated to helping people reconnect with the outdoors in a welcoming, freeing, and restorative environment. 

This year’s Black Birders Week walk started around 9 a.m. in Towata Park in Alameda, then went through the Elsie Roemer Bird Sanctuary along the Bay. The 0.7-mile marshland stretch is a bird sanctuary named after the late Elsie Roemer, a conservation advocate and Alameda resident. 

Before reaching the marshland, we walked the path from Towata Park, bonding over our love for the outdoors. Amir Aziz / Bay Nature

For some, it was their first time birding. The walk included education about the birds we saw and provided space and an opportunity for people to feel safe in environments with experts and beginners alike. This year’s theme, “Flyways & Freedom: Advocacy, Action, and the Future” is an invitation to explore the possibilities found while engaging with the natural world through birdwatching.


Get Bay Nature’s Free Weekly Newsletter


Browne says that seeing Black people in nature is “still a shock” to her when exploring the outdoors. And it shouldn’t be.

Started in New York City, Black Birders Week was born out of the response to a white woman, Amy Cooper, who falsely reported to police that a Black male birdwatcher, Christian Cooper, was threatening her after he asked her to leash her dog in Central Park. The incident sparked one of the many and ongoing conversations about freedom of movement and barriers to greenspaces.

Black Birders Week, in addition to creating space for birders, also creates visibility of birding for diverse groups. Amir Aziz / Bay Nature

Along the way, we saw snowy egrets, house finches, black skimmers, blue herons, and California gulls. One can also expect to see pelicans and sandpipers in the area, but perhaps on a sunnier afternoon.

This house finch is on the fence. Amir Aziz / Bay Nature

Near the end of the walk along the shore, a Black woman approached our group. She asked if we were birders, noting many of us were holding binoculars. “I’m actually looking for a birding group”, she said, and asked for information about the group and future events.
“And this is why we need to be outside,” said Browne.

Black Birders Week attendees pose for a group photo at the end of the bird walk. Amir Aziz / Bay Nature

Amir Aziz, a 2025-2026 Bay Nature editorial fellow, is a documentary photographer and filmmaker whose visual work explores culture, community and the environments they shape. Originally from Oakland, he has documented community stories across the Bay Area, France and Hong Kong, often finding connections to his hometown along the way. His work has appeared in the New York Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, and The Globe and Mail. 

Read Entire Article

         

        

Start the new Vibrations with a Medbed Franchise today!  

Protect your whole family with Quantum Orgo-Life® devices

  Advertising by Adpathway