Education
MWBA stewards our local trails in many ways, but the lion’s share of our work is maintaining and improving them. Once a month or more we visit one of the trails under our stewardship to brush back overgrowth, repair failing tread, and sustainably improve sections of natural surface trail. We have lots of tools, experienced trail bosses, and knowledge to share, but it is the enthusiastic involvement and love of nature from all our volunteers that gets the work done. All are welcome to join us, especially those who are new to trail work! Read on for some basics about what to expect and how to prepare for the big day.
Check the route to the posted meet location before you leave the house and make arrangements with friends beforehand that are specific and definite. You may not be able to call each other once up in the mountains. Parking anywhere with amenities (trash cans and restrooms) in the Angeles National Forest requires an Adventure Pass. If you don’t have one MWBA will provide a day pass for your dashboard. Parking is often limited so please carpool if you can. Once you’re at the spot look for our crew of volunteers - we are hard to miss, if you see hand tools, hard hats, and MWBA gear, you're in the right place!
When all the forms are signed and all the donuts eaten, we’ll head out to the work site(s). Sometimes we drive, sometimes we hike in, and sometimes we bike to the site. The Eventbrite registration will always mention how we’ll be traveling to the work site, and if you should bring a bike!
Once we get to the work site, you will reconnect with your crew leader.
We will start you out with some straightforward basics and will never ask you to do anything outside of your comfort zone. We are eager to teach you foundational knowledge: What’s a natural surface trail? What features make it sustainable? What damages trails, and how can we prevent that from happening? Who are the trail users and what do they require from a properly-maintained trail? We’ve got the answers to these questions and so many more, and we hope to inspire you to come back, learn more, and progress your involvement. Point of fact: all of our crew leaders, trail bosses, and board directors started out as first-time volunteers too.
Ask questions! Don’t forget to drink water even if you don’t feel thirsty, and rest in the shade as often as you need to feel good. If you injure yourself, immediately stop working and alert your trail crew leader. But most of all, have fun! Get some dirt on you! We’ll work for a few hours getting as much accomplished as we can, and somewhere between noon and 1pm your crew leader will wrap things up and start herding everyone back to where we parked the cars. Make sure you pack out everything you brought, tools, packs, snack wrappers, etc. Leave no trace!
We’re tired, sweaty, covered in dirt, and ready for some lunch! When we get back to the trailhead please turn in your tools, hard hat, and gloves to the trail boss. Don’t leave yet though, because a bountiful spread is undoubtedly nearby! If we’re not eating where we parked then the lunch spot will likely be the closest public park.
We take our volunteer lunches very seriously and we firmly believe one of the best ways to show you know how much we appreciate your help is by providing you with a good meal after a long sweaty day. You will never walk away from an MWBA Trail work day feeling hungry.
But food is not the only perk of staying around for lunch! MWBA has a secretive trove of rare adventure prizes we are eager to distribute far and wide to our volunteers, and once the ravenous consumption of lunch winds down we’ll hand some of those bonus treats out. And that’s it! Top to bottom, pretty much exactly what you can expect on an MWBA volunteer trail work day. But don’t take my word for it, come out and see!
After you work on a trail, there’s really only one thing to do next: go enjoy it!
Get out there and enjoy the fruits of your labor! There is absolutely nothing as satisfying as riding a section of trail you’ve worked on. Beyond pure enjoyment, you can also train your critical eye on the other trails you use and start noticing where and why failures occur and what might be done to make a trail more sustainable. You will also start seeing where other trail stewards have left their mark, though the best work is always nearly invisible. Like a Magic Eye puzzle, once it clicks you’ll start looking at trails you thought you knew in a whole new way.
So much so that it may be difficult to wait for MWBA’s next big volunteer day! If that’s the case, we’ve got good news for you: MWBA often does smaller “strike mission” days between our big weekend days to tend to immediate needs on the trails we steward, and there are other orgs working in the Angeles National Forest (and San Gabriel Mountains National Monument) like the Lowelifes Respectable Citizens Club. MWBA generally coordinates with LRCC so our trail work days don’t conflict, and our advanced Sawyer teams work together regularly during saw season. Still reading? Ask your crew lead or trail boss about getting more involved!
Finally, make sure you find us on our social media and follow us on Eventbrite for all the latest on our next volunteer trail work event. Thank you so much for volunteering, we’ll see you on a trail!