A Wild Vision for Eastern Oregon Oct 9-11th

Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project and Western Watersheds Project are hosting a special event at Left Coast Lodge in Sisters, Oregon, October 9-11, and you are invited to attend! Join us at the Left Coast Lodge and learn more about the Eastside forests and wildlife you are helping to protect through your support of these projects!

The event will feature discussions about our work and a field trip to the nearby beautiful forests and streams threatened by the Green Ridge timber sale.

Details:

October 9th: Join us from 6-9 pm for an evening social hour and mingling at the Left Coast Lodge Clubhouse. Come talk with other people interested in forest protection in the region and enjoy some light refreshments.

October 10th: From 4:30-7 pm we will be hosting a free, public presentation at Left Coast Lodge. We will discuss what logging, livestock grazing, and Forest Service policy mean for National Forests, and our work to protect these ecosystems.

October 11th: From 10 am-3 pm, we will take a field trip to the Green Ridge timber sale, with a stop at the Metolius River downstream of the Green Ridge sale. Getting out in the field gives us the opportunity to point out ecologically important features of this area, and discuss how they are threatened by this sale. Space is limited for the field trip! RSVP here to reserve a spot.

Left Coast Lodge is generously offering 10% of their proceeds for October 9th and 10th to BMBP and WWP.  You can book reservations at the Lodge here or call to book at (541) 549-2551.

Blue Mountains Biodiversity Project has stopped tens of thousands of acres of logging and other ecologically destructive projects on National Forests in eastern Oregon and southeastern Washington. Together with our volunteers, friends, and supporters, we have helped protect forests on public lands for over three decades. With your help, we can continue our work.

Western Watersheds Project is a non-profit environmental conservation group that has worked alongside BMBP many times over the years. They work to improve public lands management throughout the western United States in order to protect native species and conserve and restore the habitats they depend on. Western Watersheds Project was founded in 1993 and covers 250 million acres of public land spanning all of the western states.

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