
Tamara Antunes
TKO’s Engagement Manager
TKO’s Engagement Manager, Tamara Antunes, first developed a connection to the outdoors while growing up in Brazil. “In my childhood, we had a yard with lots of plants and flowers and herbs that we used to heal our bodies,” Tamara said. “It really soothes me when I think about it. That was my first connection with the outdoors.”
But it wasn’t until Tamara moved to Maine as an adult that she started getting interested in hiking. “At first it was disastrous, because I didn’t know what I was doing, and I didn’t have any guidance.” To learn more, Tamara joined a hiking group through the Appalachian Mountain Club for people in their twenties and thirties, but she soon transferred to a group of older adults after having a hard time “keeping up” with the younger group. “It was interesting because people were so patient. They would teach me everything from how to pace myself, to what to bring in my backpack (ten essentials), Leave No Trace principles, how to plan for a hike, or how to measure elevation. They also taught me a lot about gear, which I didn’t know. I had no idea. And that was my first experience with getting outdoor education.”
From there, Tamara started solo hiking, and before moving to Oregon, she hiked seventeen out of forty-eight of New Hampshire’s 4,000+ foot peaks. Hiking benefited Tamara’s mental and physical health, and she was excited to continue learning about hiking and mountaineering in Oregon, but she was met with roadblocks. “I hit this barrier of education, and affordability of trainings, and, really feeling like I was excluded in those spaces,” Tamara said.
She ended up connecting with a group of Brazilian friends who also loved the outdoors, and they started going on hikes together. After a while, their group started guiding other people on hikes too, and The Brazilian Backpack Project was born. “We saw, just, lots of people coming through the door and asking us to take them somewhere, or where they should go to hike or backpack and even where to find appropriate gear,” Tamara said. “And that’s when we officially decided that we wanted to guide and we wanted to call ourselves an outdoors group.”
As it has grown, The Brazilian Backpack Project has partnered with a nonprofit called Loco por la Aventura, which hosts outdoor adventures for Latinx folks throughout the PNW. “They were a big support for us with activities, especially related to climbing,” Tamara said. “It was great to connect with them, and it was also great to feel like we belonged in another group that is part of our ethnicity. Being in a room filled with Latinos is just pure magic, and it brings a lot of compañerismo and friendship and joy.”
In the following years, Tamara went on to earn her master’s in social work from Portland State University, where her education focused heavily on public policy, nonprofit improvement, engaging communities and a strong alignment with Diversity, Equity, Inclusion, and Belonging (DEIB). She was drawn to TKO because it was aligned with those DEIB values. “I would only work for a place where I feel like their mission and values align with mine,” Tamara said. “And TKO was aligned with that.”
As TKO’s Engagement Manager, Tamara leads our Trail Ambassador program, which focuses heavily on sharing information with trail users about safety and land stewardship at popular trails and in the backcountry. “I would always encourage people, yes, explore, but also give back. We should keep the land clean, keep it accessible, keep it open, keep it free for everybody, and I think that’s the part that I advocate for,” she said. “Take care of the land that you’re stepping on. That means do not leave your dog poop behind. That means do not leave your trash. Do not pick up that flower just because you think it’s cute, you know? People don’t realize that their impact on nature is huge.”
Tamara also guides TKO’s accessibility team, a group that heads out to trails and makes note of accessibility considerations, including parking and restroom conditions. “We go to the trail and we look to see if there are any holes where people could fall, or spots that are too cliffy, or if there’s benches and they have big rocks in the way–what’s the point of having a bench if somebody cannot get to it?” Tamara said. These notes on trail accessibility are then included in hiking guides on OregonHikers.org so people with different needs and abilities can decide whether the trail is right for them or not.
Tamara hopes to expand TKO’s accessibility work to include more information related to mental health, sensory needs, and less visible types of disabilities, which she herself has struggled with. “If you look at me, you cannot tell that I am a person that has disabilities. I started hiking because of my mental health, which means a lot of times I was walking when I really needed to be alone, and I was processing my thoughts, and sometimes people can be very loud, or they can ask weird things on the trail. So that’s another consideration that I would add in there,” she said. “People also cannot tell that I have really, really terrible vision, close to low vision, so I can’t see a lot of things, and people don’t realize that’s an issue when you are on the trail. So I think that’s another thing that comes from my experience, and I would love to see that being expanded to other people.”
And, to Tamara, accessibility also means making the outdoors more inclusive for people from other marginalized identities, including people of color. “I bring a perspective of inclusivity and representativity that really matters for not only my community, but many communities excluded from the outdoors every day,” Tamara said. “To me, being a Trailkeeper means encouraging people from marginalized communities to reclaim the land, because it has been kept from our ancestors for so long, and people were excluded for so long. They don’t even feel like the land is theirs anymore. So part of my work is to show people that they belong to the land, and that they should be part of doing that stewardship.”

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