Photojournalism
Retiring Outside
A photo essay (March 2023)
Maryanne Reiter, 64, is an avid outdoorswoman. Although she enjoys almost every outdoor activity, her passion is mountaineering, or climbing mountains. She has summited every major peak in Oregon multiple times. For her birthday this year, she and her wife, Trina, climbed to the top of Mount Hood.
Reiter moved to Oregon from Minnesota in her 20s. “I knew I was home the first time I walked out onto the beach in Oregon,” she said. But it wasn’t until years later that she discovered more extreme ways to enjoy the outdoors. Today, Reiter is a respected mountaineer in the climbing community and climbs mountains in all seasons and almost all conditions. She also backcountry skis, bikes, runs, hikes and kayaks.
Growing up, the outdoors was her safe space. Her father died when she was three, leaving her mother single and alone in the early 1960s. Her mother had a temper, and Reiter would climb up garages and churches to avoid the aggression. After trying mountaineering, she said, she learned that summiting mountains “is a lot better than church roofs.”
Reiter’s main outdoor community comes from the Obsidians, a local recreational organization focused on education and community building. The Obsidians was formed in 1927 as a rescue and recreational organization but began focusing solely on recreation in 1968 as the rescue and recreation areas split. The recreation maintained the name, and the rescue side become Eugene Mountain Rescue. EMR is an organization of trained volunteers, which Reiter volunteered with for many years, until her retirement. She was even featured in 2018 as a local hero in the 63rd issue of the prominent climbing magazine the Alpinist.
During the winter, much of Reiter’s climbing happens indoors. Each Tuesday, she meets a group of women to climb at Crux Rock Gym. She likes to keep her skills sharp so she is ready for outdoor climbs.
After retiring from her career as a hydrologist in 2019, Reiter started as president of the Obsidians, three-term tenure which ended in Jan. 2023. “When I first started as president, I was told, ‘Put your head down and don’t cause trouble,’” she said. “I’m not very good at that.”
Reiter, right, and her wife met at an Obsidians climb school led by Reiter. They joke with other friends who met through the organization that all people need to do to find their soulmate is join Obsidians. Their group of friends frequently meets up to go climbing, hiking and sometimes skiing.
Reiter was featured as a local hero in the fall 2018 edition of the Alpinist, a prominent mountaineering magazine. The piece highlights her search and rescue work with Eugene Mountain Rescue as well as outdoor educational work with the Obsidians.
Reiter trains for ascents by hiking with a weighted pack on, even when she is simply walking with friends and fellow Obsidians up Mount Pisgah, a hill overlooking the Willamette Valley near Eugene. This helps prepare her for what she’ll experience during the actual ascent.
Reiter, left, hikes with her wife, Trina, and friends as they prepare for an Obsidians trip to climb Mount Jefferson, the second highest peak in Oregon, with a prominence of 5,778 feet compared to the surrounding area. In Feb. 2023, the Reiters summited Mount Hood, the highest peak in Oregon at 7,706 feet of prominence, for Maryanne’s birthday, marking her 20th summit.
Reiter, right, and Trina often make dinner together. They eat mostly vegetarian meals, with Reiter serving as sous chef to her wife. Reiter says, “I’m a conveni-vore. I eat what’s convenient or what someone else cooks. Just not too much meat.”
Although neither member of the couple is religious, before they eat, the Reiters hold hands and say what they are grateful for that day.
Reiter has climbed every major peak in Oregon. She also enjoys climbing in other countries. On their honeymoon last year, she and Trina climbed using a technique called via ferrata — mountaineering with cables and mounted rungs or ladders — in the Dolomite Mountains of Italy.
Reiter takes gear and safety very seriously. When she started out, she said it was hard to find gear that was meant for a petite woman with small feet, but as more women participated, gear became easier to find and access.
Reiter serves as chair of the Obsidians climbs committee, so she runs their annual climb school in addition to leading climbs throughout the year. She likes getting to know students and building trust with them. “There is an intimacy that comes with trusting someone with your life,” she says.
Reiter enjoys lead climbing, or connecting her safety rope to carabiners mounted to the wall or rock face. The technique requires more skill and effort than climbing with a top rope, and comes with higher risk. Reiter trains at Crux gym so she is prepared for challenging outdoor climbs.
Reiter kisses her friend and fellow Obsidian, Shannon Clawson, on the cheek. For Reiter, outdoor recreation is less about the challenge than the people by her side. “The outdoor community is where I find my strength and resilience,” she says. “The summit is a sweet reward, but it’s not the purpose.”
Lovely
Josh Matthews co-owns Lovely, a health food restaurant in Springfield, Oregon, with his wife, Sarah Adler. The two opened Lovely in February 2020 with the goal of providing a community space centered on local organic, healthy food. See the final photo sequence below (July 2022).
Josh Matthews owns Lovely, a health food restaurant located in Springfield, Oregon.
Josh Matthews packs an order for pickup.
Lovely is known for its healthy meals, including kale-based salads like these.
Josh Matthews talks with two regular customers as they order lunch.
Josh Matthews prepares kale to use in salads at Lovely.
Photography
Below is a variety of still photographs I have taken, some as single moments, others as part of a sequence. Also included are selected stills from an audio-visual story about Mollie van Eekeren.