Real positions. Real organizations. Real outdoor economy. Graduates of the Prosperity Program get priority matching.
Prosperity Program graduates unlock verified profiles on this board. Earn your Tymmber Terrain Practitioner Certificate (TTP-1) to post a verified grad profile, receive priority matching to org partners, and signal to employers that you have completed Tymmber's outdoor human development standard. All listings are open to browse. The certificate unlocks direct application access and personal org introductions.
The nation's first state outdoor equity grant program — $10.5M awarded since 2020, connecting 128,000+ youth from rural, Tribal, and underserved communities to transformative outdoor experiences. Field-facing role with direct youth contact across New Mexico's most underserved communities. One of the most mission-aligned positions in the state.
Connect Albuquerque youth and families facing access barriers to meaningful outdoor experiences. Bilingual (English/Spanish) preferred. Volunteer leaders build documented facilitation records — the strongest pathway to paid outdoor education work in the state.
Lead guided hikes and outdoor education experiences for youth through the Moving Montañas program near Las Cruces. Celebrating the monument's 10th anniversary in 2025 with expanded programming. Field-based, high-impact, community-rooted work at one of New Mexico's most significant public land assets.
New Mexico's oldest hiking club leads weekly outings at easy, moderate, strenuous, and difficult levels statewide. Qualify as a trip leader and build a documented facilitation record — one of the clearest pathways to paid outdoor guide work in the state.
A Nature Conservancy-led partnership of 100+ organizations restoring forested lands upstream to protect the Rio Grande watershed. 30,000 acres of restoration annually — reducing wildfire risk, protecting clean water, and maintaining outdoor access for future generations. Hands-on land stewardship with direct and measurable ecological impact.
NM's primary statewide trail maintenance nonprofit. Hundreds of logged volunteer hours each year across public lands. Volunteer hours documented here count directly toward your Prosperity Program outdoor hour record and support TTP-1 field documentation requirements.
2025–26 recipient of the NM Outdoor Recreation Trails+ Grant. Annual park pass in exchange for 10 volunteer hours. One of northeastern New Mexico's most scenic state parks in the Sangre de Cristo foothills. Entry-level outdoor service experience with documented hour tracking.
The official organization representing NM's licensed hunting and fishing outfitters since 1978. Members operate elk, mule deer, bighorn sheep, oryx, antelope, bear, cougar, bird, and world-class San Juan River trout fishing operations. The Prosperity Program works with NMCOG to match TTP-1 graduates to apprenticeship openings with licensed member outfitters — the most direct pathway to a professional guide career in New Mexico.
TTP-1 graduates earn a verified seller badge on the Tymmber Marketplace — the right to post guided outdoor experiences, skills workshops, nature immersion programs, and outdoor hospitality services directly to Tymmber's audience. Set your own price. Own your listing. This is the entrepreneurial on-ramp: your certificate is your credential, the Marketplace is your storefront.
BLM manages millions of acres of New Mexico public land. Seasonal recreation tech positions support trail designation, visitor management, campground operations, and dispersed recreation oversight — including at Río Grande del Norte National Monument, the Taos Box, and the Organ Mountains. Federal employment with documented field hours and a pathway to permanent positions.
New Mexico's legislatively commissioned 500+ mile cross-state recreation trail — Colorado to Texas along the Rio Grande corridor. 90 miles open and growing. Coordinators support trail development, community outreach, and partnership management. A rare opportunity to help build a piece of state infrastructure from the ground up.
Supports the network of local farmers markets and small-scale agriculture across New Mexico. Outdoor skills, food production, foraging, and handmade goods all have a home here. A natural first economic participation step for Prosperity Program graduates building toward self-employment — accessible, low-overhead, community-embedded.
The Lost Horse Lodge model — a grid-independent short-term stay property deployed on accessible land — is the entrepreneurial blueprint the Prosperity Program teaches. TTP-1 graduates who own or have access to rural land can apply the Casita GI-HOME framework to create an income-generating hospitality asset. Tymmber provides the product, the curriculum, and the Marketplace listing infrastructure. You provide the land and the intent.
If you are a verified organization in the NM Terrain Network and want to post a position, apprenticeship, or volunteer opportunity — reach out. We verify before we list. Nullius in Verba.
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