9 outdoor yoga classes to try this winter in Los Angeles - Los Angeles Times
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A group of women take a yoga class on paddleboards in the water.
A yoga class on the water with YogAqua at Mother’s Beach.
(Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

Need a boost of vitamin D? Here are 9 outdoor yoga classes to try this winter in L.A.

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It’s no secret that Angelenos can be smug about our weather, especially in the winter. And we’re justified in our smugness: While much of the country is hunkered down at home under a pile of blankets, we’re strolling down Sunset Boulevard in our T-shirts.

This perennially good weather has many perks, and we’re here to shine a light on one you maybe haven’t considered: year-round outdoor yoga classes.

L.A. is a yoga town and has been for quite some time. The city’s fascination with the ancient Indian practice can be traced back to Self-Realization Fellowship founder Paramahansa Yogananda, who popularized yoga in the West starting in the 1920s.

These days, there are hundreds of yoga studios across Greater Los Angeles that offer all variations of the practice: Vinyasa, Kundalini, Ashtanga, Yin — you name it.

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I’ve always enjoyed yoga the most, though, when I practice it outdoors. I find that natural scenery and the sensory cornucopia it offers — the wind rustling through the trees, the birds chirping, the sunshine warming my face — helps me to feel extra calm and focused.

Here are nine excellent options across L.A. for getting your flow on outside. Most of these classes are donation-only and pay-what-you-can. Yoga studio memberships are costly, and community classes make the practice more accessible for those who can’t afford to pay upward of $200 a month.

Los Angeles is a vast city brimming with outdoor yoga opportunities, and we’ve only scratched the surface. But with this guide alone you could plan a week of yoga classes and never set foot inside a studio. Namaste.

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People doing yoga on mats under tall trees.
(From Emily Phillips)

Yoga in Griffith Park

Los Feliz Yoga
When I lived near Griffith Park during the pandemic, I remember seeing Instagram posts about Emily Phillips’ class near the bear statue at Fern Dell Drive and Los Feliz Boulevard. I never made it there at the time, but I wish I had. Her class is one of my favorites on this list.

On Wednesday nights and Saturday mornings, Phillips leads her students through a gentle Vinyasa flow that works well for seasoned yogis and beginners alike. Her energy is serene and genuine. She started offering the Griffith Park class a few years back when she moved to the area from her home state of Indiana.

“This is my West Coast community,” Phillips told me. The class definitely had that feel. At least two dozen people were there when I went, their yoga mats resting on a soft bed of pine needles.

When: Wednesday nights and Saturday mornings. Exact times vary based on the season (check for updated times).

Cost: Pay what you can.
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People on yoga mats raise their arms next to a funerary monument and reflecting pool
(Irfan Khan / Los Angeles Times)

Yoga at Hollywood Forever Cemetery

Hollywood Yoga $
Depending on how you feel about cemeteries, yoga at California’s most famous cemetery might appeal to you … or really freak you out.

For the organizers of community yoga at Hollywood Forever, the venue makes perfect sense: “In Buddhist and Hindu teachings, the graveyard, or charnal grounds, is an auspicious place of practice where yogis must confront our mortal destiny, our fear of death, and our aversion to constant change,” they write on the cemetery’s website.

Personally, I appreciated the Kundalini yoga class held on a warm Thursday morning along the edges of a reflecting pool flanked by masoleums. It was my first time doing Kundalini yoga and instructor Jay Moton made the poses, breathwork and chanting less intimidating for a novice like me. Moton incorporates incense and music into his class, which is certainly pleasant for many people but could present some challenges for sensory-sensitive folks.

Hollywood Forever has donation-based yoga classes on the Fairbanks Lawn every day of the week, including silent disco (!) yoga.

When: Mornings, mostly. Check out the schedule here.

Cost: Pay what you can.
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Two people doing a yoga pose on stand-up paddleboards, with boats and buildings in the background
(Dania Maxwell / Los Angeles Times)

Stand-up paddleboard yoga on the Westside

Marina del Rey Yoga
If you’re looking for a one-of-a-kind yoga experience that will really test your balance, check out YogAqua’s stand-up paddleboard classes. They’re on the pricier end, but YogAqua will provide you with all the gear you need, and the classes run a bit longer than usual at 90 minutes.

An instructor will give you a brief paddleboarding lesson while you explore the placid lagoon of Mother’s Beach (in other words, no waves here!). You’ll then drop an anchor for your Vinyasa flow. I’d never been paddleboarding before, let alone tried SUP yoga, and I found it easier than I expected — and really fun. Corpse pose was particularly enjoyable as I let my hands flop into the cold water, the warm sun hitting my face.

When: Throughout the week, mornings and afternoons. Check out YOGAqua’s schedule here.

Cost: $44 a session.
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People in an outdoor yoga class in Elysian Park in November.
(From Steven Arcos)

Yoga in Elysian Park

Echo Park Yoga
Steven Arcos has been leading community yoga classes in Echo Park, where he grew up and still lives today, for a decade. For most of that time he was at Echo Park Lake, but aggressive geese and the period when the park was fenced off (after unhoused people were removed from the area) prompted him to move his practice to Elysian Park.

Now you can find him there every Saturday and Sunday morning, guiding locals through a strength-building Vinyasa flow. I felt like I got a workout in the class without it moving too fast (a sweet spot for me). I could hear birds warbling in the jacaranda tree above me. It’s a peaceful spot, and you might even meet a few neighbors there.

Elysian Park is big, so check out Arcos’ Meetup page for detailed instructions on how to get there.

When: 10 a.m. Saturdays and Sundays

Cost: Pay what you can.
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Four people in yoga poses on mats on the grass, tall trees in the background
(From Amber Rhabb)

Yoga at Norman O. Houston Park in Baldwin Hills

Baldwin Hills/Crenshaw Yoga
Disillusioned by the grind of working at a studio, Amber Rhabb started leading yoga classes at Norman O. Houston Park in the Baldwin Hills neighborhood in early 2023. She wanted to make yoga easily available in Black and brown communities, especially for people who have suffered intense trauma, she said. She’s working on getting blocks and mats donated so anyone in the park can join in.

“I do it because I love it,” Rhabb told me. “There’s something about seeing how helpful it is for people and giving them an outlet.”

Rhabb sets up every Saturday morning under a few shade trees. Her teaching style is friendly and gentle. I got a real workout from the Vinyasa flow, but I also felt serene and buoyant after — which is to say, exactly what I want from a yoga class.

When: 11 a.m. Saturdays

Cost: Pay what you can.
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A standing person plays a small harp among dozens of people lying on yoga mats on the ground
(Western National Parks Assn.)

"Yoga on the Mountain" in Calabasas

Calabasas Yoga
Once a month, teachers Dawn Geer and Greg Thiry lead an hourlong Kundalini yoga class on Saturday mornings at King Gillette Ranch, a nearly 600-acre expanse of parkland nestled in the heart of the Santa Monica Mountains between Malibu and Calabasas.

True to the practice of Kundalini, this class incorporates intentional breathwork, chanting and selective pressurization of certain areas of the body, like the forehead or stomach, all under a canopy of sycamore trees. Geer and Thiry play live acoustic instruments at the end of the class, making it an extra-special experience.

The class is co-sponsored by the National Park Service and Western National Parks Assn. and is free, but you’ll want to sign up ahead of time on Eventbrite (there were dozens of people there when I went in October). Afterward, you can wander the grounds of King Gillette Ranch, which is part of the Santa Monica Mountains National Recreation Area.

When: 10 a.m. to 11:15 a.m. last Saturday of each month

Cost: Free
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A yoga instructor stands as students practice poses outdoors on the grass under tall trees
(From Daniel Overberger)

Yoga in Runyon Canyon

Hollywood Hills West Yoga
Musician Daniel Overberger stumbled upon his first yoga class in Runyon Canyon Park in the early 2000s, at a time when he really needed it. He was going through a divorce and career transition, and yoga helped calm his mind and body.

Overberger’s been running the class in a fenced-in children’s play area at the Fuller Avenue entrance of Runyon for 18 years now. He’s an attentive and hands-on instructor, and will politely adjust you (with your consent) as you move through your Vinyasa flow. During the class you’re bound to overhear the gossip of passersby and someone talking to their agent. This is Hollywood, after all.

When: 10:30 a.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday

Cost: The class is donation only, with a $5 suggested fee.
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People lying on their backs, legs straight up, on yoga mats in a park
(From Kathy Chu)

Yoga in South Pasadena's Garfield Park

South Pasadena Yoga
Nestled in a neighborhood of Craftsman houses and plentiful trees, this class in South Pasadena’s Garfield Park has a charming community vibe. The instructor, Kathy Chu, greeted each student by name and chatted casually with everyone before the class started. Chu even offered me her homemade insect repellent (which it turned out I desperately needed that night).

Chu calls her class an “intuitive approach to yoga that caters to the community.” She asks everyone about what’s going on in their bodies and what could use some support, and tailors each class to those needs. Sometimes it’s restorative, sometimes it’s Yin and meditation, and other times it’s focused on power and Vinyasa. Chu incorporated the use of resistance bands into the class I attended, and my arms were sore the next day.

When: Saturday and Sunday mornings, Tuesday afternoons, Thursday mornings and afternoons. Exact times may vary based on the season. Check the schedule here.

Cost: $10
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People do a standing yoga stretch in a rooftop class.
(From Stephanie Stock)

Rooftop yoga in Koreatown

Westside Yoga
Yoga instructor Stephanie Stock started weekly rooftop yoga classes at her apartment building during the pandemic when the studios she taught at shuttered. At first, friends and other folks in her building came, but word got around and other people living in Koreatown and surrounding neighborhoods started showing up too.

If you’re into smaller classes with sweeping views of the city, Stock’s Wednesday night class is for you. When I went, there were six students total. The sun was setting, casting a soft pink glow over Koreatown, and there was a pleasant autumnal chill in the air. Stock led us through a Vinyasa flow that got our blood pumping but was still accessible for beginners.

When: Wednesday evenings. Start time varies based on season.

Cost: $20. Buy tickets on Eventbrite.
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