Our world has undergone a drastic change over the last few decades. As social creatures, humans have become extremely isolated due to the rise of technology. With the loss of
The Rocky Mountain Front is a landscape of striking contrasts. To the east, prairie grasses and rolling hills embody wild possibility. To the west, Douglas firs and aspens beckon adventurers
During our second section of Conservation Across Boundaries, we left backpacking in the Bob Marshall Wilderness and exchanged our backcountry lifestyle for guest speakers, Traditional Knowledge, and visits to Glacier
07:00 The WRFI student begins their day groggy from a mediocre night’s sleep that had one pee break and several instances of tossing and turning. The WRFI student is already
Clink, clink, clink! The sound of quarters being dispensed out of the change machine snapped me out of my gaze. The WRFI crew had just reached Browning, Montana. Our group
“More Fire, Less Ice” was Daniel Lombardi’s summary of the effects of climate change in Glacier. Daniel is a Communications Specialist for Glacier National Park whom we met with to
I was up early. It was a cold morning at our camp in a high elevation meadow in the Snowcrest Mountains of Southwestern Montana. I greeted our ever-cheerful instructor Steve
As we arrived at our campsite in Glacier National Park after a breathtaking ride over Logan Pass on the Continental Divide, I felt as though I was home. Glacier’s ecosystem
As each member of our group clumsily hopped on their loaded bikes in Billings, eager and unprepared, and as we faced the many grueling miles we had ahead, the end