Exploring the Owyhee Canyonlands
A recent adventure through the Owyhee Canyonlands reignited a fervent commitment to secure its permanent protection as a national monument.
Can you imagine a world filled with more wildlife and wild places? So can we. And we’re working together to make it happen.
Every minute, we’re losing two football fields worth of wild lands, and too many animal species face extinction. It’s up to us to turn things around. We imagine an America with more mountaintops where all we see is forests below, with more rivers that flow wild and free, more shoreline where all we hear are waves. An America with abundant wildlife, from butterflies and bees floating lazily in your backyard, to the howl of a coyote in the distance, to the breach of a whale just visible from the shore. Together, we can work toward this better future.
A recent adventure through the Owyhee Canyonlands reignited a fervent commitment to secure its permanent protection as a national monument.
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Join us on Thursday, May 2 at 5:00 p.m. PT for a virtual event highlighting how bringing back sea otters can benefit our struggling kelp forests.
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"By the time the study wrapped, the otters were preventing 10 or so inches of salt marsh loss per year."
A uranium mine just began operations — mere miles from the Grand Canyon and all of the wildlife that call it home.
Right now, thousands of whales are making their way up our coast to spend the summer up north.
Event gave folks the opportunity to explore the Owyhee Canyonlands through stories from hiking, rafting and local experts
In Eugene, students are organizing their classmates as a part of the larger coalition’s work to protect the Owyhee Canyonlands