Page de couverture de Female Guides Requested

Female Guides Requested

Female Guides Requested

Auteur(s): Szu-ting Yi
Écouter gratuitement

À propos de cet audio

The first plan for this podcast is to interview female guides to learn about their stories, pool their wisdom and advocate their presence. And to seek out resources and guidance from related industries to better the guiding profession and working environment for female guides and guides from other underrepresented groups.Szu-ting Yi Gestion et leadership Économie
Épisodes
  • EP 52 - Amber Smith - Affirmations
    Sep 24 2025

    Amber’s Links:

    • Amber wants to share her writing with you! To sign up for her newsletter or to contact her, follow this link! https://linktr.ee/ambersaffirmations
    • A personal essay from 2018 all girls Mount Baker climb: https://mountainmadness.com/blog/among-women-in-the-mountains-a-female-guideâ-s-learning-from-an-all-girls-climb


    Episode Intro:

    Dear listeners of the Female Guides Requested Podcast, happy Wednesday. This is your host Ting Ting from Las Vegas. Today our guest is Amber Smith.

    Amber is a femme-queer AMGA Certified Rock Guide with over a decade of experience. Most summers you’ll find her at the Yosemite Mountaineering School, climbing grandiose granite walls with her guests. She is passionate about playful, trauma-aware, and embodiment-focused instruction, and she views climbing as an opportunity for powerful personal transformation. If you go climbing with her, she will encourage you to craft a positive affirmation to hone your power.

    Before landing in Yosemite, she guided throughout the western United States. She has led glacier mountaineering and alpine rock objectives in Washington’s North Cascades, ski descents in Wyoming’s Grand Tetons, sandstone crack climbs in Utah’s deserts, and girls’ climate science research expeditions on Alaska’s glaciers. In 2016, Amber earned a degree in Geography and wrote her undergraduate thesis on what she called “Feminist Outdoor Leadership: A Guide to Facilitation Strategies for Inclusion and Participant Empowerment in Outdoor Adventure.”

    I enjoyed my conversations with Amber. Her thoughtfulness was evident when listening to her reflections on her life journeys. She is also inquisitive and not shy about experimenting with new ideas. She is keen on exploring her inner voices to facilitate her own growth and be tuned to others’ needs. Now please enjoy this episode with Amber.


    What We Talked About

    • Amber’s current, past, and future plans
    • Amber’s Affirmation on guiding – be safe, have fun, try your best
    • Doubts and questions about guiding as a profession
    • Engrossed in the outdoor leadership program in college
    • Feminist outdoor leadership
    • From Oregon to Washington, stepping into commercial guiding and keep her foot in outdoor education
    • Transitioning to Yosemite and guiding full time
    • Loved the Yosemite climbing community
    • Yosemite climbing and work cultures
    • Hosted a webinar about working in Yosemite
    • Thinking entrepreneurial – mental health and mindset fields
    • Learn to Lead with mindfulness clinics
    • Experiments / Curiosities on grief and climbing and guiding
    • Affirmation in life – exercise your weakness, leverage your strengths, don’t worry about the looks

    Quote:

    • Keep my priorities clear. And its number one, keep yourself and your guests safe. If that’s all I do at the end of the day, nobody had a great time, but at least we were safe, then that was a successful day.
    • I’d say that’s the whole journey of this industry for me is building the confidence in my voice, trusting myself and figuring out how to be myself in these spaces while also still sort of meeting some of the expectations of what your employers and your clients may want from you.
    • I’m definitely not [the best climbers in the world]. But what I am good at is supporting people in their climbing goals. And that’s what the job is actually about..
    • I think that’s really rad that I’m an ebike commuter to my rock guiding job.
    • I think we get a lot of burnout when we’re not being intellectually stimulated.
    • I’m basically not like ingraining negative association with the experience. I’m keeping my association with the process positive. and by having these positive associations, then I want to keep doing it
    • One of the most important attributes of a guide is that you need to be intuitive with your guests. It’s very customer service type job. And we need to be intuitively listening to what they need all day.

    ... More


    EP 52 – Amber Smith – AffirMATIONs – Female Guides Requested Podcast

    Voir plus Voir moins
    1 h et 27 min
  • EP 51 - Lindsay Fixmer - Patience and Partnership
    Aug 20 2025

    Show Notes:

    Lindsay’s Links:

    • www.fixguiding.com
    • https://alpinist.com/newswire/womens-expedition-explores-new-routes-in-indias-zanskar-range/
    • https://amga.com/meet-amga-lindsay-fixmer/

    Episode Intro:

    Dear listeners of the Female Guides Requested Podcast, happy Wednesday. This is your host, Ting Ting, from Las Vegas. Today our guest is Lindsay Fixmer from Bozeman, Montana.


    Lindsay Fixmer is an experienced alpine, ice, and rock climbing guide who has been guiding since 2006. She is on the American Mountain Guides Association (AMGA) Instructor Team, develops and teaches outdoor programming at Montana State University, and also instructs at indoor facilities. Lindsay spends her winters ice guiding in Montana and Wyoming, spring and fall at various rock venues in the western U.S., and splits her summers between Bozeman and the eastern Sierra. As an AMGA Certified Alpine and Rock Guide, Lindsay brings her passion for climbing to her work, inspiring her clients to excel, build confidence, hone skills, and meet their goals.


    We dive deep into the interconnectedness among all different forms of climbing and how learning one can inspire the learning of others, and vice versa. I explored in depth Lindsay’s mission statement, how she emphasizes educating and inspiring people through patience and partnership. We talked about the balance of work and play, mentorship, and more. I learned so much from Lindsay, and listening to her describe ice climbing made me want to pick up ice tools again.

    Things We Talked about:

    • Climbing career started early
    • Indoor versus outdoor climbing
    • Potential side gig
    • Lindsay’s mission statement
    • A life-changing experience – 12 year old backpacked through Canyonlands
    • All women’s trip to India and first ascents in Northern Himalayas
    • Guiding and doing first ascents with Chicks Climbing and Skiing
    • “Ice is my life” – Lindsay’s ice climbing journey
    • The interconnectedness of rock climbing and ice climbing and all climbing
    • Work/play balance
    • Mentorship and Tom Hargus’s inspiring quote “the day I stop learning is the day I stop guiding.”
    • Performance anxiety?

    Quotes:

    • If you enjoy watching people succeed and become more knowledgeable and more skilled, then it [guiding] is very rewarding work.
    • I’ve been teaching ice climbing for a long time, but you’re always learning something new and the way that people respond to the words that you’re using and also the descriptors and the movement, you continually learn how people differently see things and respond.
    • …even rock to ice. We say that they’re very different, but I don’t think that’s true because you’re either in or out of balance in life. So Our ergonomics don’t change. It’s just the medium.
    • It is very much a partnership. you have to feel confident that your guide is with you and they can relate to you and understand and help you.
    • Patience is a massive component of helping people succeed and opening that door to being more vulnerable and being okay with that.
    • …when you really realize how small you are and how large the Earth and the universe is. And it was pretty amazing.
    • Oftentimes you had to make adjustments based on the conditions and how to get off of something that you had climbed. It wasn’t always just V-thread really straightforward. There were some more interesting ways of getting off of things.
    • Ice is always changing. It’s never the same. The routes always change, which is pretty cool.
    • If you’ve shut yourself off to learning or just don’t want to do it anymore more. You’re on to something else in your life.

    Voir plus Voir moins
    1 h et 37 min
  • EP 50 - Angel Robeldo - Holiday Guiding
    Jul 23 2025

    Show Notes:

    Angel’s Links:

    • Rock Iguana
    • Coast to Bluff Recreation Access and Conservation
    • Angel Robeldo’s Instagram


    Episode Intro:


    Dear listeners of the Female Guides Requested Podcast, happy Wednesday! This is your host, Ting Ting. In this episode, I have guest Angel Robeldo from Rock Iguana, a guide service located in the Cayman Islands. Towards the end of last year, one of my SPI students told me he needed certification to work in the Caribbean, which piqued my interest. As soon as I knew the owner of the guide service was a woman, you can probably guess what happened next!

    Angel was born and raised in Sao Paulo, Brazil. She left Brazil in 2005 to discover the world and ended up discovering herself. She has climbed around the world and done a lot of high-altitude mountaineering, including in the Himalayas, Andes, and Denali. Angel has traveled through more than 80 countries but found Cayman Brac to be the perfect place to live and enjoy her lifestyle. Since 2013, she has promoted and helped develop rock climbing in the Cayman Islands. She also helped build a non-profit boulder gym in Grand Cayman where a climbing community started to grow. Angel is an AMGA Certified Single Pitch Instructor.

    One might say Angel is truly living the dream, but I’d say that is the guaranteed result because she has always followed her mind and heart. Now please enjoy the episode of Angel Robeldo.


    What We Talked About:

    • From ocean to mountains and back to both ocean and mountains
    • An injury changed Angel’s life trajectory
    • Fulfilled her dream of living in the Caribbean
    • Personal and Professional climbing journey in Cayman Brac
    • Growing up in Brazil
    • Fear of height | Fear of Exposure
    • Where are the clients from?
    • Climbing courses and adventure travel
    • Climb Iguana & Coast to Bluff Recreational Access and Conservation
    • Work & life balance
    • Being away helps strengthen the love of her residence Cayman Islands
    • Holiday guiding

    Quotes:

    • I was terrified of heights. And that was one of the biggest thing why I stick to climb because I want to investigate that fear and I want to go over that fear.
    • I love to guide people afraid of heights. That’s my favorite because I know exactly where you are.
    • Have the fear and go for it. And then suddenly there is no more fear.
    • I keep doing what I love and what drives me and what makes me feel very alive.
    • When you owe a guiding company when it’s just you working it’s way easier because you just have to manage you when it started to get big and they have all the employees it’s just like sometimes it’s way more work and no more money
    • Most of the time what stop all of us doesn’t matter if you are on a female body, on a masculine body, all stop us is on our heads

    Voir plus Voir moins
    1 h et 24 min
Pas encore de commentaire