Because the final little bit of the afternoon solar beamed down on a patch of grass proper exterior Elysian Park, hikers unfurled yoga mats and stretched beside a busy road. Canines tugged at their leashes.
William Vazquez moved via the gang, greeting acquainted faces and welcoming new ones. He requested for a present of palms: “Who’s right here for the primary time?”
William Vazquez, founder and president of We Discover Earth, a nonprofit devoted to selling particular person well-being and environmental stewardship.
A minimum of half the group raised their palms. L.A. native Vazquez, who based We Discover Earth, a nonprofit out of doors group, welcomed and launched himself.
“It’s the proper time to understand, to admire — but in addition to reap,” he informed the group, referencing the sturgeon moon rising later that night. Named after the enormous fish as soon as ample in North American lakes, the sturgeon moon is August’s full moon and has lengthy been related to seasonal harvests.
Trash grabbers have been handed out because the group crossed the road collectively to start the quick hike. Like most of We Discover Earth’s out of doors experiences, this one included a cleanup part.
The group hosts free group hikes, cleanups and nature experiences throughout Los Angeles. Its hottest occasion — a full moon hike capped with yoga, a sound tub and stargazing — occurs each month, timed to the moonrise, and infrequently attracts dozens of newcomers. These experiences rotate between Elysian Park and Griffith Park.

On the high of the hike, attendees take part in half-hour of volunteer-led yoga.
The gatherings are open to all ages and expertise ranges and are substance-free by design. Vazquez caps RSVP numbers at 100, although turnout normally lands between 50 and 60. The hikes are quick — normally one mile up, one mile down — with half-hour of yoga and a 30-minute sound tub below the rising moon.
“I believe lots of people discover their tribe right here,” Vazquez stated. “A number of them are taking their first steps into nature with us.”
Earlier than founding the group, Vazquez labored within the music business, producing occasions for artists similar to Steve Aoki and on exhibits similar to “Jimmy Kimmel Reside!” However after a couple of years of burnout and melancholy, he stepped away, uncertain of what would come subsequent.
He began organizing cleanups and group hikes only for enjoyable at first. However the response was so robust, the demand so clear, that he started constructing one thing larger. Now, We Discover Earth hosts as much as 14 occasions a month. There are intro-to-backpacking workshops, natural walks, tenting journeys, path upkeep tasks and extra. The group has chapters in New York and San Francisco, and counts REI, Patagonia and Arc’teryx amongst its sponsors.

Attendees participate in volunteer-led yoga on the high of the hike. The free, month-to-month occasions are additionally dog-friendly.
Nonetheless, Vazquez runs all of it as a volunteer, masking his personal payments with facet gigs like Instacart supply and advertising jobs, whereas making use of for grants in hopes of doing this group work full-time. He’s additionally an authorized wilderness first responder, including an additional layer of preparedness to the group’s out of doors occasions.
Vazquez has discovered better objective in main this group and says he’ll at all times present these experiences totally free.
“Our objective is to placed on an excellent expertise and go on information of exploration, conservation and likewise mindfulness,” he stated. “On the finish of the day, nature’s free. Why would we cost individuals?”
Yvonne Temal, vp of We Discover Earth and head of its ladies’s division, was nonetheless catching her breath as she made her approach up the hill through the hike. Temal met Vazquez a couple of years in the past whereas main her personal ladies’s mountaineering group. They merged efforts below We Discover Earth.

August’s sturgeon moon rises over Los Angeles throughout a group hike at Elysian Park.
“As we grow old, I really feel personally prefer it’s a bit of more durable to seek out the area, additionally the consolation stage whenever you’re out in nature,” Temal stated. “I’ve heard so many tales of ladies not feeling protected out within the atmosphere, so having the ability to present a ladies’s-only group actually helped.”
Temal has discovered objective in giving ladies the instruments to really feel protected and empowered outdoor — instruments she needs she’d had when she was youthful.
Throughout a break in the course of the hike, new volunteer and full moon first-timer Aria Intermediary took a seat on a close-by rock. She stated that earlier than becoming a member of We Discover Earth, she had been utterly disconnected from nature.
“I electronic mail all day, day by day. I’m behind a display all day, day by day. It will get suffocating,” Intermediary stated. “Screens haven’t been round endlessly. What has been round endlessly is the Earth.”
When a university buddy posted a couple of hike, Intermediary determined to hitch. Though her buddy canceled, she went anyway. “I used to be welcomed with open arms,” she stated. “It felt like I had the area to be a newbie, and the area to be ignorant.”
She has since helped with the group’s social media and says the occasions have reworked how she sees the town. “It simply will get me higher acquainted with the Better Los Angeles topology,” she stated. “And it offers me a little bit of spirituality.”
On the high of the hike, individuals laid out yoga mats because the roar of the gang at Dodger Stadium echoed within the background. For the following hour, they have been led via half-hour of yoga adopted by a 30-minute sound tub because the moon slowly rose above the horizon, and Vazquez started establishing his telescope.

Nicole Johnstone leads a sound tub for individuals mendacity on yoga mats throughout a full moon occasion at Elysian Park.
As twilight settled in, sisters and We Discover Earth first-timers Abigaille and Sarah Leon sat on a rock, searching over the town. “I liked it. There was no stress,” Abigaille stated. They’d discovered We Discover Earth on Instagram, uncertain of what to anticipate.
Now L.A. locals, the sisters are initially from Yucatan, Mexico, the place they are saying the moon holds non secular significance. As youngsters, their grandmother would ask them to talk to the moon, sharing what they needed to let go of — and what they hoped to welcome in. “It’s very nice, as a result of now we get to do it with different individuals,” Abigaille stated. “That’s vitality — at the very least to me.”
Sarah, who typically will get anxious about mountaineering, stated she would completely do it once more. “There’s no stress to do something,” Sarah stated. “It’s very inviting.”
Because the solar totally set and folks waited in line for the telescope, sound practitioner Nicole Johnstone packed up her devices. She typically volunteers her time with We Discover Earth.
“It felt like a bunch exhale,” Johnstone stated. “Listening to the sound of the Dodgers sport and having 100 individuals simply meditating on the high of the town — I used to be smiling ear-to-ear.”
When she struggled with grief and psychological litter after dropping her father, Johnstone discovered that sound baths helped her reconnect with herself. Now, she sees the identical peace settle over the group every time.
“I really feel like everybody, once I go above their face, I can see a bit of smile,” she stated. “I might do that day in, time out. It feeds me.”
She additionally believes illustration issues within the sound-bath area. “It feels actually good being a Black lady on this area — a Black, tattooed lady,” she stated. “It’s vital to point out up and be myself, to not attempt to match into the cookie-cutter yoga beige world.”
Among the many group was Rico Coria, who stated the full-moon hikes and We Discover Earth occasions have grow to be a grounding routine in his sobriety journey. Now three years sober, Coria stated having a social expertise that doesn’t heart on alcohol has made all of the distinction.
“I used to be in search of issues to do this didn’t contain consuming, but in addition to assist psychological well being,” Coria stated.

A participant appears to be like via a telescope aimed on the sturgeon moon throughout an evening hike at Elysian Park.
He’s now a daily and has met buddies via the group — even inviting longtime ones to hitch.
Because the occasion wrapped up, Vazquez started main individuals again down the path. Just a few hikers lingered on their mats, watching the moon rise.
He’s seen the group develop yearly, particularly through the pandemic, when extra individuals started in search of which means and contemporary air.
“The proper individual to come back,” he stated, “is somebody who desires to be taught extra about nature or join with the group — somebody who desires to seek out their tribe.”
Some come for the views. Others come for the yoga, or the telescope or the trash cleanup or an evening of sobriety. However most come again for the sense of group.
The following full-moon occasion will probably be Sunday, Sept. 7. Reservations replenish rapidly. Monitor We Discover Earth’s Eventbrite web page for up-to-date info.