Environment
Sawyer Filters are Changing Lives by Improving Access to Clean Water
These Washington Environmentalists Are Trying to Save the Elusive Wolverine
The Everglades Need More Fresh Water. Here’s What’s Being Done to Help.
Wildfires and Beetles Are Plaguing Our Forests. But We’re Not Powerless.
All Jokes Aside, New Comedy Video Series Tackles Important Environmental Issues
Landscape Architecture Is All About Finding Balance with Nature
This Farmer Has Been Working to Revive California’s San Joaquin River for over 65 Years
A New Film Encourages Viewers to Voice Support for Tongass National Forest
A Mesmerizing Drone Film of Water and Land Intertwined
A Solitary Whale in Search of Connection
Ultrarunning Through Wyoming’s Longest Migration Corridors
The Future of Oregon’s Wild and Scenic River System
This Boy Wants to Save the World from Plastic
Preserving Washington’s Shrub-Steppe
Light Painting Under the Night Sky
Mother Earth Confronts the Human Race
The Klamath River Is the Lifeblood of the Yurok Tribe
Using SUPs to Deliver a Plastic-Free Future
It’s Time for Mountain Bikers to Step Up
How Fire Suppression Made California Fires Worse
Ultrarunning Through Wyoming’s Longest Migration Corridors
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Two years into a research project on Wyoming’s wild mule deer, Patrick Rodgers lost his father—the person who taught him how to appreciate our public lands. Rogers found solace though covering long distances in the wild, much like the migrating animals he studies. This film, directed by Shannon Vandivier and produced by Cold Collaborative in partnership with Sitka Gear, Yeti, and the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership, follows Rodgers on a transformative 90-plus-mile backcountry run along one of Wyoming’s longest migration corridors for mule deer.