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Our Latest Videos
Amelia Marchand reading Spokesman Review article on Colville Tribes acquisition of Figlenski Ranch
Amelia Marchand is a member of the Colville Confederated Tribes and of Conservation Northwest’s Board of Directors. This article by Eli Francovich in The Spokesman Review newspaper was published on October 20, 2021.
Finding Gulo – TRAILER
We’re excited to share the trailer for Finding Gulo, a new 25-minute film from Cascades Wolverine Project produced by Wild Confluence and Wilder Studios with support from Conservation Northwest and Patagonia!
Central Cascades Resilience
Our Central Cascades Watersheds Restoration program works to restore public lands north and south of Interstate 90 that are vital to wildlife movement between Mount Rainier National Park and the Alpine Lakes Wilderness. Learn more. This is a focused complement to our ongoing Forest Field Program in watersheds spanning both sides of the Cascade Crest. Our Forest Field Program has a much longer history east of the Cascades, while this program is building relationships in the Puget Sound region, including watersheds that provide clean water to urban areas such as South Seattle and Tacoma. For the past 20 years, we have focused on maintaining and restoring habitat connectivity in the “bottleneck” around Snoqualmie Pass that is the primary linkage between Washington’s north and south Cascade Mountains. Through The Cascades Conservation Partnership, we purchased and protected 45,000 acres of private forest threatened with development that is now public land, and through our I-90 Wildlife Corridor Campaign we led a coalition to successfully advocate for more than twenty wildlife crossings to allow animals safer passage, while also leading wildlife monitoring and habitat restoration in key areas near the interstate. Now, in this new Central Cascades Watersheds Restoration, we turn our attention to restoring quality habitat on the vast adjacent public lands for wildlife to live and move through this landscape, and for people to sustainably enjoy this important piece of our Northwest natural heritage near to growing communities.
British Columbia mines threaten Washington waters
A legacy of mining development in British Columbia has already deteriorated the Similkameen River, yet proposals to greatly expand the Copper Mountain Mine threaten this transboundary watershed, Native American tribes and other local residents, and endangered salmon and steelhead. Washington state must demand action from British Columbia on mining regulatory reform before it’s too late! TAKE ACTION: conservationnw.org/bcmines
This Land Is Part of Us: Washington’s shrub-steppe ecosystem
A short film produced by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and Conservation Northwest. The shrub-steppe of central Washington’s Columbia Basin is a land of rich biodiversity, vibrant communities and poignant beauty. It is a place both iconic and increasingly at-risk. Here, at the northern extent of the great “Sagebrush Sea” that once sprawled across much of the American West, growing collaboration between agencies, Native American tribes, conservation organizations, local landowners and other partners seeks to preserve and restore shrub-steppe ecosystems while supporting cultural and economic values. Despite impacts from severe wildfires and habitat fragmentation, recovery programs are underway for species such as sage-grouse, pygmy rabbits, sharp-tailed grouse and pronghorn antelope, while efforts including the Arid Lands Initiative and Conservation Reserve Program foster constructive partnership for the future of Washington’s shrub-steppe. For wildlife lovers, hunters and anglers, Indigenous peoples, farmers and ranchers, outdoor recreationists and so many others, this land is no desert devoid of life, This Land is Part of Us. Learn more at conservationnw.org/sagelands/
Forest Restoration and Collaboration in Northeast Washington with Tiana Luke
Conservation Northwest’s Colville Forest Lead Tiana Luke talks about forest restoration and collaboration from Deer Park, near the Colville National Forest in northeast Washington. Through our Forest Field Program, Tiana Luke serves on the board of in the Northeast Washington Forest Coalition (NEWFC), a stakeholder group including local conservation groups, the timber industry, and local business owners, to improve forest restoration. This video was produced to be included in the Puget Sound Chapter of the American Association of Zoo Keeper’s virtual event, “For the Love of Truffles” on February 10th, 2021.
Conservation Reserve Program: Douglas County Virtual Tour 2020
With approximately 1.2 million acres enrolled, the federal Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) is one of the most successful conservation programs in Washington state. As part of the CRP, the State Acres for Wildlife Enhancement (SAFE) initiative plays a particularly critical role in restoring and recovering wildlife by establishing habitat through voluntary conservation efforts. It also highlights CRP’s success in our state because it is tailored to the type of landowner and their land, and the importance of local, state and federal partnerships in perpetuating its success.
Safe Passage 97: Animals using the Janis Bridge Wildlife Undercrossing
Until recently, more than 350 deer were hit and killed each year by vehicles in a short stretch of highway in north-central Washington’s Okanogan Valley. The first phase of the Safe Passage 97 project concluded in August 2020, including renovation of Janis Bridge to serve as a wildlife undercrossing and deer fencing completed on either side of Highway 97 for one mile south of the bridge. Since the Janis Bridge Wildlife Undercrossing was first rennovated in 2019, hundreds of animals from mule deer and cougars to bobcats, coyotes and wild turkeys have used the crossing. This timelapse video shows some of the critters now finding safe passage under Highway 97 thanks to this collaborative wildlife crossing project!
Wildlife Safety 101: Tips and best practices for recreating near wildlife
Conservation Northwest staff share some tips and best practices for avoiding negative encounters with wildlife. From wildlife safety items to include in your pack, to how to deploy bear spray and set up a wildlife-safe camp, these proactive measures can keep both you and wild animals safe. Wildlife encounters can be rare, and most will be a positive, special experience. However, on extremely rare occasions, an animal may become aggressive if it is surprised or feels threatened. If you do come across an animal, remember the golden rules: (1) Stay calm, (2) Let animals know you’re human, (3) Be loud, (4) Be big, (5) Don’t run, (6) Don’t turn your back, and move away slowly. This video was created to be used during a Wildlife Safety 101 presentation during Refuge Outdoor Festival, a 3-day camping experience geared toward people of color. Video produced by Keiko Betcher, Heather Hutchison and Laurel Baum of Conservation Northwest.
First phase of Safe Passage 97 project completed with private funding
We’re proud to announce the completion of the first phase of the Safe Passage 97 project, with work concluding this month on the renovation of Janis Bridge to serve as a wildlife undercrossing, deer fencing completed on either side of Highway 97 for one mile south of the bridge, and gates and cattle-guards installed at access roads within the project area. “Deer-vehicle collisions have been a major problem in this stretch of Highway 97 in the Okanogan Valley, and everyone in my community has a story of hitting or almost hitting a deer in this area,” said project manager Jay Kehne, Conservation Northwest’s Sagelands Program Lead based in Omak.
How to set up the perfect remote camera site to document wildlife
Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project Team Lead Sophie Mazowita shares best tips and practices for documenting wildlife with a remote camera trap. This video covers what to pack, how to pick your site, on-the-ground scouting, camera placement, frame elements, recording field data, navigation to your site, and viewing captured images. This video is a supplement to the written protocols and species-specific instructions available at conservationnw.org/wildlife-monitoring.
Cascades to Rockies Connections
Connecting large landscapes is at the heart of our mission at Conservation Northwest, as those connections are critical for wildlife, especially in the face of climate change. Science shows that a corridor of wildlands connecting the North Cascades and the Rocky Mountains is particularly important for species from Canada lynx and wolverines to mule deer and wolves.
Gold Creek Pond Restoration
We’re proud to support local partners including Kittitas Conservation Trust and the U.S. Forest Service – Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest in efforts to restore Gold Creek, a critical corridor for wildlife moving under I-90 and a focal area for our Central Cascades Watersheds Restoration program. As the headwaters of the Yakima River, Gold Creek winds out of the Alpine Lakes Wilderness and passes under I-90 as it flows into Keechelus Lake near Hyak, just east of Snoqualmie Pass. Gold Creek was once a healthy wetland and creek habitat, teeming with biodiversity. Today, it’s an ecosystem dangerously out of balance.
Safe Passage 97 in Okanogan County
Our partners at the Okanogan Trails Chapter of the Mule Deer Foundation have helped lead the charge for wildlife undercrossings on Highway 97 in the Okanogan Valley! This stretch of highway has among the state’s highest rate of auto-deer collisions, presenting a huge safety hazard for drivers as well as wildlife. These accidents not only cost lives, they also cost a lot of money. Animal-vehicle crashes along Highway 97 alone cost drivers, insurers and taxpayers more than $2,275,000 annually, with an average of $6,500 per accident, including vehicle damage, Washington State Patrol and emergency medical response, and clean up.
30 Years Wilder
Since 1989 we’ve been protecting, connecting and restoring wildlands and wildlife from the Washington Coast to the British Columbia Rockies. Join us in keeping the Northwest wild: www.joincnw.org!
Woodcutters: check snag trees for cavities
Produced in partnership with the Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife, Yakama Nation Fisheries, U.S. Forest Service – Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest, and Yakima Valley Audubon Society, this video is designed to help educate woodcutters on how to identify cavities in snags so that these animal homes remain on the landscape.
Wolf Packs in Washington 2011-2018
Check out the growth of Washington’s wolf packs over the past 8 years in this timelapse video! At the end of 2018, our state was home to at least 126 wolves, 27 packs (including in Western Washington!) and 15 successful breeding pairs. Learn more at: http://bit.ly/WAwolves2018
Large Carnivores and You: How you can aid wildlife conservation and get connected to nature
Produced by students from the University of Washington’s School of Environmental and Forest Sciences, Department of Biology, and College of the Environment, March 2019. THANK YOU! You can help make an impact in the conservation of iconic Northwest species like the wolverine, Canada lynx, grizzly bear and gray wolf. Get connected with the environmental community and nature by participating in citizen science! The data we collect through our Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project is used by the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and other state, federal, tribal and independent scientists to inform wildlife conservation and land use decisions. Learn more including how to get involved in this short video! For more information, join our Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project Facebook group or visit our website: conservationnw.org/wildlife-monitoring
Fishers return to the North Cascades
Yesterday, we released six fishers into North Cascades National Park with our partners from the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, National Park Service and the Calgary Zoo as part of an effort to restore the species to Washington State. This is the first release in the North Cascades. We’re so grateful to leaders, elders and youth from the Upper Skagit Tribe and Lummi Nation (shown in the video) for being a part of this special day. THANK YOU! We’re looking forward to working with our state, federal and tribal partners to monitor the success of Washington’s fishers. Learn more about this collaborative comeback story at: www.conservationnw.org/fishers-released-in-north-cascades.
Animals using Gold Creek Wildlife Undercrossings
Do wildlife crossings work? Yes! Since they were completed, mule deer, coyotes and other species have been using the Gold Creek wildlife undercrossings to safely travel under I-90 in Washington’s Cascade Mountains. This compilation video from our partners at WSDOT shows a variety of species using these two wildlife undercrossings just east of Snoqulamie Pass over the last two years. Soon, two overcrossings or “wildlife bridges” east of Keechelus Lake and west of Easton will provide these animals a way to cross safely over the interstate.
Introducing the Okanogan Wildlife Crossing Campaign
We have a plan to provide safe passage through wildlife crossings. You can keep both people and animals safe through a donation. Learn more and lend your support TODAY at: www.okanoganwildlifecrossing.org! More than 350 mule deer a year are hit by cars in one short section of Highway 97 in north-central Washington. Help us create safe passage for deer and other wildlife including endangered lynx by donating to our new Okanogan Wildlife Crossing Campaign.
Wolverine rolling in snow from Cascades Wolverine Project
February 2018 – Multiple wolverines were documented this year by our Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project and our partners at the Cascades Wolverine Project, adding to knowledge about the animal’s return to Washington! See more of what we found at: www.conservationnw.org/citizen-scientists-contribute-to-wolverine-research
Google Flyover of Sagelands Heritage Program
Get a bird’s-eye view of our new Sagelands Heritage Program! We’re working to maintain, restore and connect shrub-steppe landscapes from British Columbia’s Okanagan Valley to south-central Washington’s Horse Heaven Hills for the good of both wildlife and people. This Google Flyover will take you through our program area, stopping at locations that provide valuable habitat and need to be better connected for wildlife to move today, and into the future.
Elk using Hyak Wildlife Undercrossing, May 2018
On May 9, 2018, our partners at the Washington Department of Transportation (WSDOT) captured this awesome remote camera footage of elk using the Hyak Wildlife Undercrossing just east of Snoqualmie Pass. Have YOU seen elk or other wildlife alive or dead along I-90 between North Bend and Easton? Report sightings at: i90wildlifewatch.org/report-a-sighting. Info from motorists helps inform wildlife crossings and other conservation efforts in this corridor!
Connecting the Wild Northwest
Our job isn’t just to restore wildlife, we ensure habitat is protected and connected so that wolves, wolverines, mule deer and other species can be sustained across our region. Premiering at our 2018 Hope for a Wild Future Auction & Dinner, this short film looks at our successes connecting habitat through wildlife crossings under and over I-90 near Snoqualmie Pass, and how we’re applying similar strategies and collaborative expertise in new areas through our Sagelands Heritage Program and work for wildlife crossings in the Okanogan Valley. By partnering with local communities and bringing people together, we’re keeping the Northwest wild acre by acre, underpass by overpass, from the mountain wildlands to the arid sagelands. But this work is only possible through the support of our conservation community. If you weren’t able to join us at our auction this year, please consider joining or renewing your membership through a gift of $35 or more at www.donatecnw.org. Your support is keeping the wild Northwest connected!
Cascade Crossroads
Released in January 2018, Cascade Crossroads is a 30-minute documentary film chronicling the story unfolding over and under Interstate 90 just east of Snoqualmie Pass in Washington’s Cascade Mountains. Here at the intersection of an east-west transportation corridor and a north-south wildlife migration corridor, a monumental project combining conservation, collaboration, and innovation led to the construction of North America’s largest wildlife crossings project in conjunction with major infrastructure improvements for motorists. The I-90 Snoqualmie Pass East Project, and the wildlife crossings and roadway improvements within it, is a win-win for people and animals that offers a new model for major infrastructure projects bisecting wild places. Commissioned by the I-90 Wildlife Bridges Coalition, the Cascade Crossroads film aims to not only share this unique story but also inspire action in other landscapes facing similar tensions between wildlife and roadways. Conservation Northwest is the administering organization and fiscal sponsor for this coalition.
Voices of Cascadia: Climate Leaders
Prepared for the Cascadia Partner Forum’s 2017 WildLinks meeting, this video features the voices of climate leaders from throughout the Cascadia landscape speaking directly to those working on the ground to manage, monitor, and conserve natural resources in this region. Each of them defines what a resilient Cascadia means to them, what threats they see to a resilient future, why it is important for us to come together, and specifically what they’d like to say to those working on the ground today.
Animals on the move near I-90 Wildlife Crossings
Animals big and small travel through the Interstate 90 corridor around Snoqualmie Pass—from elk and mule deer migrating between their summer and winter ranges, to black bears, bobcats, and even wolves and wolverines searching for food, mates and new territories to call home. Have you seen wildlife along I-90 between North Bend and Easton? Be sure to report it at i90wildlifewatch.org/report-a-sighting!
Protecting, Connecting and Restoring
Thanks to the support of our members, we’re restoring fishers to Washington. But keeping the Northwest wild is about so much more than just one species. Will you help protect our natural heritage and ensure a wild future by becoming a Conservation Northwest member at: www.conservationnw.org/join-us? Our M.O. is simple: connect the big landscapes, protect the most vulnerable wildlife, and conserve our natural heritage for future generations. But we can’t do it without your support!
Time for the Grizzly?
Now is the time to restore the North Cascades grizzly bear! The North Cascades Ecosystem is home to the only remaining grizzly bear population on the West Coast of the contiguous United States. Although grizzlies have lived in the North Cascades for thousands of years, biologists estimate that fewer than ten remain today, making it the most at-risk bear population in North America.
After decades of research, the National Park Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and other agencies have released proposals to support the recovery of this iconic species. This is welcome news, and a historic conservation opportunity. But just how do we restore these magnificent animals?
Follow the story of grizzly bear recovery in Montana’s Cabinet Mountains, through the lens of ecologist and bear expert Chris Morgan. Grizzly recovery in the Cabinet Mountains, done through science and community involvement, could serve as a model for the North Cascades.
Learn more and help #SavetheCascadesGrizzly at www.northcascadesgrizzly.org
A Chris Morgan Wildlife / Wildlife Media Production. Made possible through the support of the National Parks Conservation Association, The Cutler Foundation, Conservation Northwest, Vital Ground, Fox-Dobbs Family Trust, Temper of the Times Foundation Inc., BearTrek, Woodland Park Zoo, Icicle Fund, the Mountaineers Foundation, and Joe Scott & Tanja Wilcox. More information at https://www.timeforthegrizzly.com/.
Fishers Reintroduced at Mount Rainier National Park
Fishers have returned to Mount Rainier after being lost to over-trapping and habitat loss almost a century ago! Learn more about our collaborative reintroduction project with the National Park Service, Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife, and other partners at: www.conservationnw.org/fishers. Video: Ted Grudowski December 2, 2016 at Mount Rainier National Park.
Cascade Crossroads: Film Trailer
We’re excited to share a brand new trailer for a film that will tell the story of the monumental wildlife crossings now being built under and over Interstate 90 east of Snoqualmie Pass! Cascade Crossroads is a film project of the I-90 Wildlife Bridges Coalition, a collaborative group of conservation, recreation, tribal, business and community organizations administered by Conservation Northwest. Thanks to the organizations and individuals who contributed video, photos and content to this trailer: Conservation Northwest, Washington State Department of Transportation, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, Forterra, The Nature Conservancy, Ben Hammond with Lighthawk, Chase Gunnell, John Marshall, Steve Gnam, and Sean Frego. Many organizations and individuals have made the story that is unfolding in the I-90 corridor of Washington state possible. We look forward to recognizing them in the feature documentary. Trailer created by Ted Grudowski, Kris Browne, and Sandy Asher.
Keeping the Northwest Wild
For 27 years we’ve worked to protect, connect and restore wildlife and wildlands in Washington and British Columbia. We’ve won protections for millions of acres of wildlife habitat, reintroduced endangered species and advanced coexistence with iconic carnivores, and reconnected fragmented landscapes for wildlife including lynx, caribou, elk, wolves, wolverines and grizzly bears. Using conservation biology, a collaborative approach, and staff living and working on the ground across our region, we’re keeping the Northwest wild for future generations. This short film premiered at our April 2016 Hope for a Wild Future auction and dinner. Produced by Ted Grudowski and Chase Gunnell. Special thanks to Dr. Gordon H. Orians, Doug MacDonald, Mitch Friedman, Jeff Baierlein and Jen Watkins. Additional footage by Paul Bannick, Alaina Kowitz, Story Warren, Eric Zamora, Lena Jackson, Sean Frego, Chase Gunnell, Eric Snider, Jeremy Williams, Western Wildlife Outreach, WDFW, WSDOT and ODFW.
Protect Your Lands
America’s public lands not only give us cherished outdoor recreation opportunities and protect our fish, wildlife and natural heritage; they also provide strong economic benefits for local communities. Yet our public lands are under threat by powerful special interests who want to seize or steal them for profit. If we want to keep our public lands in public hands, we must raise our voices and ensure that elected leaders defend and preserve them.
Let’s save southwestern British Columbia’s grizzly bears
The Coast to Cascade Grizzly Bear Initiative is a coalition united to save southwest British Columbia’s grizzly bears. Conservation Northwest serves as the administering organization for this collaborative effort. Find out more about the threatened grizzly bears of southwest BC, the challenges they face and our collective hopes for preventing their decline towards extirpation (local extinction). www.coasttocascades.org Video by Jeremy Williams / River Voices Productions.
Fishers Return to the Cascades
Fishers are back in Washington’s Cascade Mountains for the first time in over 70 years! Seven fishers were reintroduced near Mount Rainier on December 3rd, 2015.
The release of seven fishers is just the start of an effort to rebuild populations by moving as many as 80 fishers within the next two to three years to the Gifford Pinchot National Forest and Mount Rainier National Park. The releases will occur on the Gifford Pinchot National Forest and in Mount Rainier National Park. Two to three years later, releases are planned to follow in the North Cascades in the North Cascades National Park Service Complex and in the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest.
Chief Ian Campbell (Squamish Nation) on grizzly bear recovery
For Chief Ian Campbell of the Squamish Nation, protecting, connecting and restoring grizzly bear populations is part of our responsibility to future generations.
The Coast to Cascades Grizzly Bear Initiative is a collaborative effort to stem the ongoing loss of grizzly bear range and promote grizzly bear recovery in the transboundary ecosystems of southwest British Columbia and northwest Washington state.
Voices Of Cascadia: The Next Generation – WildLinks Conference 2015
If the youth leaders of tomorrow’s conservation movement could tell natural resource practitioners, wildlife and wildlands agencies, and non-profit organizations one thing, what would it be? To kick off the 2015 WildLinks Conference we decided to find out!
Working with students from the Doris Duke Conservation Scholars Program at University of… as well as attendees of the North Cascades Institute ‘s Environmental Learning Center, we interviewed over a dozen young people about what they thought was important for a wild and healthy future in our region. This video is a sampling of what they had to say.
Led by the Cascadia Partner Forum and Conservation Northwest, WildLinks is our annual conference and science briefing that brings together researchers, conservationists, land managers, agency officials, tribal and First Nations leaders and other experts from Washington and British Columbia. The goal is to share ideas and better coordinate keeping our region’s wildlands and wildlife populations healthy and connected.
The 2015 WildLinks Conference is hosted by the Cascadia Partner Forum and sponsored by Conservation Northwest , the Skagit Environmental Endowment Commission , Washington Department of Fish & Wildlife , North Pacific Landscape Conservation Cooperative and the Great Northern Landscape Conservation Cooperative. Learn more here.
Video by Joseph Eusebio (2015 Doris Duke Conservation Scholar) and Chase Gunnell (Conservation Northwest). Produced by Ted Grudowski (http://www.tedgrudowski.com/)
Connecting Wildlife Habitat Under and Over I-90
The landscape in Washington’s central Cascades, spanning Snoqualmie Pass and bisected by Interstate 90, forms an important travel corridor for people, goods and wildlife. Since 2000, through The Cascades Conservation Partnership and the I-90 Wildlife Bridges Coalition, we’ve led efforts to reconnect Washington’s north and south Cascades by protecting and restoring habitat and establishing safe wildlife crossings under and over I-90. Video produced by Ted Grudowski.
Ranching and Grizzly Bears 2015
Originally produced in 2004 by Conservation Northwest (then the Northwest Ecosystem Alliance) Chris Morgan (Insight Wildlife Management), Vidcom Productions and John Cofrin, we’ve updated this 30 minute documentary-style film for 2015 and the announcement of a long-awaited North Cascades grizzly bear restoration EIS!
WildLinks: Why Grizzly Bears?
Produced by Conservation Northwest for WildLinks 2014 and the Cascadia Partner Forum, this short video dives into the role of grizzly bears as an important umbrella species for wildlife and wild lands across the Northwest, from B.C. into Washington’s North Cascades. Restoring these Northwest natives, now absent from much of their historic range, provides a powerful tool for collaboration, coexistence and region-wide conservation.
The Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project
When it comes to documenting the presence of wildlife in our region, our Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project staff and volunteers are on the front lines; tracking wildlife where state and federal agencies don’t have the resources to go, from the Washington Cascades to the Kettle Crest to British Columbia. Video produced by Ted Grudowski.
Chief Michelle Edwards on Grizzly Bears in British Columbia
Chief Michelle Edwards of the Cayoose Creek Band, St’at’imc Nation, talks about what grizzly bears mean for her people, and how First Nations are working to restore these iconic animals in British Columbia and the greater Pacific Northwest. Learn more at www.coasttocascades.org.
Spring-Fall 2014 Best Photos! Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project
Our spring-fall 2014 volunteer wildlife monitoring season has come to a close! See highlights and some of the best animal photos from this past season in this new video produced by our monitoring team.
Wolf Management Research Symposium
On October 29, 2014, some of the leading experts on wolf ecology and management came together at the University of Washington to present current science on the different impacts that lethal management may have on wolf ecology, pack structure, habitat connectivity, social acceptance, and recovery and to discuss how to apply this knowledge to wildlife management in the Pacific Northwest.
Howling with Washington Wolves in Colville National Forest
We came back from a range riding trip in Eastern Washington with this neat video of using howls as a tool to locate a wolf pack, and make sure they were separated from the rancher’s livestock.
Conservation Northwest celebrates 25 years!
This video, produced by Ted Grudowski, was created for our 2014 Hope for a Wild Future auction. It takes us back to the early days of Conservation Northwest and celebrates 25 years of success.
Wolverine Attacks Trail Camera! | Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Program
A wolverine attacking one of our Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Program trail cameras in the Chiwaukum Mountains west of Leavenworth!
2013 Wildlife Monitoring Results | Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Program
Highlights from Conservation Northwest’s Cascades Citizen Wildlife Monitoring Project. Remote cameras were installed and maintained by volunteers in Washington’s Cascade Mountains and British Columbia’s Rossland Range during the 2013 season. You can volunteer or sponsor a camera team here!