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Many Citizens, One Voice: Why Members Matter

Ask any Wyoming Outdoor Council staffer and they’ll tell you: Protecting what’s best about Wyoming is a team effort.

From removing illegal fencing that harms wildlife, to securing laws that better protect drinking water and air quality, to convincing decision-makers that some landscapes are simply too special to develop, each of the hard-won successes the Outdoor Council has enjoyed since 1967 has come only because members, citizens, and partners came together to stand up for the places and values they love.

Longtime staffer Steff Kessler recalls two such successes—and the hard work of everyone involved.

1992: “We didn’t want our state to turn into a dumping ground.”

In the early 1990s, developers were eyeing Wyoming as the next best place to build in-ground facilities to house low-level radioactive waste.

[The Wyoming Outdoor Council] learned about this proposal at the last minute, during the first day of a 20-day budget legislative session,” Steff recalled. “We only had four weeks to understand this waste stream, its severity, and what it would include.”

As Outdoor Council staffers scrambled to learn more about the proposal, it became clear that to protect the state and the health of its people, we and everyone involved needed to better understand the regulatory process itself. Given the potential risks, though, along with the state’s lack of experience regulating radioactive waste, staff decided to act quickly to prevent the proposal from being fast-tracked through the Legislature without proper permitting or environmental preparation, study, or review. The best course of action: establish a moratorium.

In order to do that, however, the Outdoor Council needed to generate a groundswell of public support.

But how?

The first step, back in the days before the internet, was to activate the membership “phone tree.” The phone tree—which included hundreds of citizens—spurred momentum, as members began calling more and more people across the state to spread the word. But what really got things rolling was a full-page ad in the Sunday edition of the Casper Star-Tribune.

The ad was basically a call to arms, asking people to call or fax their state senators, and call or fax the governor’s office, and oppose the bill,” Steff said.

The day after the ad ran, the bill came up for a vote in the Wyoming State Senate. Steff recalls that as she waited in the gallery with a few other folks to hear news of the bill’s fate, she and her companions were summoned unexpectedly to the office of then-Governor Mike Sullivan.

There, they were told that the volume of faxes and phone calls coming in to oppose the bill had “broken” both the fax machine and the direct line to Governor Sullivan’s office.

It was a great example of working with our members and allies, and reaching out to the public to give them the info to chime in,” Steff said. “The general public did not want our state turned into a dumping ground. We knew Wyoming people did not want this here.”

As a result of the tireless efforts of the Outdoor Council, its members, conservation allies, and citizens, the moratorium on low-level radioactive waste storage was added to the Wyoming Environmental Quality Act in 1992. To this day, it requires any applicants for commercial radioactive waste management facility permits to pay a nonrefundable $100,000 fee and to submit a notice of intent to file at least 10 months prior to submission—effectively keeping such projects from being fast-tracked.

 

2016: “Your favorite place to hike or fish could someday belong to a person who fences it off, and you’d never get to go there again.”

Fast-forward two decades to 2013, when the Wyoming State Legislature began to rumble with plans for legislation to allow the transfer of ownership of federal lands in Wyoming to the state.

The main concern with transferring federal ownership to the state is the risk that these public lands could be privatized—essentially auctioned off to the highest bidder.

That basically means that your favorite place to hike or fish could belong to a person who fences it off, and you’d never get to go there again,” Steff explained.

Not a great outcome for a state like Wyoming, where nearly half of our land is public, and where tourism and outdoor recreation comprise the second-largest and fastest-growing economic sector.

For three years straight, lawmakers tried to push some variety of land-grab bill through the Wyoming State Legislature. The Outdoor Council found itself constantly beating back those efforts. Then, in 2016, groups from throughout Wyoming and outdoor enthusiasts of all stripes began to take a concerted, organized stand against these efforts.

“We felt that this was an attack on public lands, public access, and all kinds of conservation values like water quality and wildlife habitat,” Steff said. “We also knew that, throughout the West, there is a growing movement to take public lands away from the public and develop them more for special interests.”

In November of 2016, 400 people showed up to a public lands rally in Casper as part of Keep it Public, Wyoming—a diverse statewide coalition of nonprofit organizations, businesses, and groups who collectively support the idea of keeping federal public lands in Wyoming in public hands.

The timing couldn’t have been better: the following week, a legislative committee was slated to consider another land-grab bill—this one, an attempt to amend Wyoming’s constitution to pave the way for state takeover of federal public lands.

Energized by the Casper rally, 100 Wyomingites showed up to the meeting in Riverton to oppose this draft constitutional amendment. When legislators turned a deaf ear to the citizens and instead opted to discuss the amendment at a later date, Keep it Public, Wyoming leaders encouraged its members and supporters to testify at the capitol. But again, when they showed up in Cheyenne, 150 strong, lawmakers told them the committee would not hear public comment on the amendment itself.

The result? Well, you can see for yourself:

By the time the 2017 legislative session began, the public had expressed so much opposition for the bill that the senate president killed it himself.

This is a great example of the Wyoming Outdoor Council understanding the politics of the state, and of our ability to be nimble,” Steff said. “We really wanted to bring people together with common values, based on our love for public lands and the access and quality of life they provide for Wyoming citizens. As a result of that, we have a huge, diverse group. That group really sent a message to the Legislature, loud and clear.

The Keep It Public, Wyoming coalition is going strong and has become a powerful voice for keeping public lands in public hands. This fall, they’ve held three successful rallies across the state—in Laramie, Jackson, and Sheridan—to keep citizens engaged and informed about public lands and the threats they face in Wyoming.


If you are not a part of the Wyoming Outdoor Council but you love Wyoming’s public lands, value its clean air and clean water, and choose to live here because of the quality of life these things afford, we’d love for you to join us. Our success and the protection of Wyoming’s future comes from the strength in our numbers.

Click here to join, or continue your involvement with, the Wyoming Outdoor Council. With your support, there’s no limit to the ways we can work together and protect this wild, one-of-a-kind place we all love.

Thank You for Celebrating With Us!

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Thanks to everyone who joined us this past weekend to celebrate our 50th anniversary! We were delighted to connect with our Wyoming community, meet new folks who love the outdoors, celebrate decades of conservation, and think together about our vision for the future.

We couldn’t have done any of it without you. As we said throughout the weekend, our membership is, and always has been, the backbone of the Outdoor Council. So, if you haven’t already, please join us or renew your membership!

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In the spirit of kicking off the next 50 years, we’d love your feedback. You can help us improve future events as well as share highlights from the weekend by filling out this quick survey.

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We’ll be posting photos and videos from the weekend soon, in addition to sharing additional resources from our Citizen Advocacy Summit workshops. Stay tuned to our Facebook event page and our blog for more in the coming days.

Wyoming will continue to be a great place to live, work, and play for the next 50 years—and beyond—because of you. Thanks for supporting the Wyoming Outdoor Council!

Warmly,

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Jalan Crossland Band’s “last big hurrah” this Friday in Lander

A once-in-a-lifetime event is taking place at the Lander Community & Convention Center this Friday night… and you’re invited!

Not only will we be kicking off our 50th Anniversary Celebration and Citizen Advocacy Summit, but we’ll also be hosting the final performance of Wyoming’s own Jalan Crossland Band.

Described as “a grand experimenter” (Northern WY Daily News), a mixture of “raw talent and obvious practice with passion, whimsy, and a feel for what people want to see and hear” (‘The Ear,’ Park City, UT) and “an endemic Wyoming Treasure” (Rita Basom, Wyoming Arts Council), Jalan Crossland does more than put on a show that’s toe-tappin’-good; he creates an experience.

Just ahead of this Friday’s show—his last alongside his bandmates Shaun Kelley and Pat Madsen—Jalan kindly took the time to speak with us and reflect on where he is now, where he’s headed next, and how he’ll feel stepping off the stage this Friday night.

Wyoming Outdoor Council:
Your show in Lander on September 22 marks the end of your band’s journey together. Why did you and the band choose this particular event and location for the last performance of the Jalan Crossland Band?

Jalan Crossland:
It was a most fortunate serendipity that Lander was the last confirmed booking on the calendar when our drummer, Pat Madsen, made the doleful announcement that he would be moving back East, rendering it impossible for us to accept any further gigs as a band. But I can think of no more suitable place for our farewell show. We have loved playing in Lander for years and years. The good people there have always been supportive of us and our music and we are happy to hold the last big hurrah there with all of our friends.

WOC: What are you looking forward to about the “next step” from here?

JC: I’m looking forward to performing as a soloist for awhile, taking it back down home to the basics, the simplicity. I’m eager to write and record an album of new, solo songs, with the only instrumentation being a guitar, or a banjo, a harmonica, a boot stompin’ on a porch’, and a high lonesome voice, just like old times.

WOC: Your show on the 22nd is part of the Wyoming Outdoor Council’s 50th anniversary celebration; what do you admire most about the Council’s work to protect public lands in Wyoming?

JC: Wyoming offers some of the mostest vastest expanses of public land in the lower 48. We all benefit from this feeling of freedom in the great outdoors. It’s among the main reasons that I remain in Wyoming. Sure as hell ain’t the weather. If the Wyoming Outdoor Council is endeavoring to preserve this heritage, then I’m with them.

WOC: As a Wyoming native, what are some of your favorite parts of the state? What is it about this part of the world that makes it so magical and special?

JC: I love all of Wyoming’s natural places, from the high, pined mountains, to the lonesome, sweeping prairies, to the mean ol’ badlands. As I said, it’s the feeling of freedom that can yet be experienced here, amidst the rapid encroachment of Civilization with all of its strictures. In Wyoming, it’s still possible to step out into untamed nature and feel like a wild, hot blooded hominid, with your bare skin touching everything from the earth to the stars.

WOC: As a band, are you doing anything special to commemorate your last show together?

JC: Yes, for the first time in our career, we intend to catch all of our cues and make all of the chord changes at the correct times. I will remember all of the words to ‘Trailer Park Fire’ and perform them in the correct order. Give or take.

WOC: After you’ve played that final song, and heard the last echoes of the applause from the crowd… how do you hope to feel as you’re walking off stage together, one last time, as the Jalan Crossland Band?

JC: I’m sure that we’ll all feel some melancholy. We’ve been partners, brothers, and friends, as they say, making music together for over 12 years. But we’ll be satisfied that it was a dang good run. There’s no time for dwelling on the past anyway. The future will need more songs.”

Don’t miss out on your last chance to see the Jalan Crossland Band, this Friday night at the Lander Community & Convention Center!!

The schedule for Friday night’s free festivities includes:

  • 5 p.m. – Doors open
  • 5 p.m. – Community mural project, hosted by local artist Virginia Moore and the Lander Art Center (learn more here)
  • 5:45 p.m. – Low Water String Band
  • 7 p.m. – Jalan Crossland Band

But the fun doesn’t stop there! Tickets for Saturday’s anniversary celebration events, including a host of engaging workshops and a delicious harvest dinner, are on sale now!

We’ll see you this weekend in Lander… we can’t wait to celebrate!

See you in one week for the Outdoor Council’s 50th!

We are excited to welcome you to Lander for our 50th anniversary gathering in one week on September 22 and 23! We’ve provided some helpful updates below to ensure everyone has a fantastic time.

  • Friday night’s free community concert is shaping up to be a rip-roaring good time. Come out to Lander City Park and enjoy music from Low Water String Band and the final performance of the Jalan Crossland Band! Local food and drink vendors will be on site. The music starts at 5:45 p.m., but come by earlier to take part in a community mural project hosted by local artist Virginia Moore and the Lander Art Center.
  • The menus for Saturday evening’s Tom Bell Memorial Cocktail Hour and Harvest Dinner are sure to whet your appetite! See them here.
  • Be sure to head over to our silent auction website and check out the great donations. From a Nordic ski coaching session with a Winter Olympian to a guided fishing adventure, there’s something for everyone. Local auctioneer Layne Weber will facilitate a lively “live WOCtion” on Saturday night.
  • See our recently updated schedule for updates to our workshop lineup. Drawn to the Outdoors I & II are the only workshops with attendance limits, and they are full. Feel free to pick and choose among the other options, regardless of what you originally signed up for.
  • Unfortunately, the Photography and Social Media workshop leader canceled due to a scheduling conflict, but we have added new sessions that we know you’ll enjoy, including a Conservation Journalism Roundtable.

As always, please let me know if you have any questions. Thanks for your continued support of the Wyoming Outdoor Council. I look forward to seeing you next weekend!

Warmly,
Amy

P.S. Tickets are still available, so if you have friends and family that would like to attend, be sure to share the event with them!

 

Top 5 Reasons to Attend the Outdoor Council’s 50th Anniversary Celebration

In just two weeks, we’ll be gathering in Lander to celebrate the 50th anniversary of the Wyoming Outdoor Council. Whether you’re making plans to join us both days (Friday and Saturday, September 22 and 23) or simply stopping in for a workshop or two, we’re excited to see you there!

As we get closer to the date of the celebration, here are five features we’re feeling particularly delighted to share more information about:

Award-winning artist Bethann Merkle

 

1. The opportunity to be “Drawn to the Outdoors” through a two-part workshop series.

We’re thrilled to feature Bethann Merkle, an award-winning artist who uses her work to communicate important messages about conservation, in our Citizen Advocacy Summit. Not only does Bethann create “quirky-yet-elegant” illustrations to improve scientific literacy and encourage advocacy, but she’s also passionate about helping even the most novice of artists unlock their inner illustrator. During her two workshop sessions on Saturday (“Drawn to the Outdoors Part I: Field Journal and Observational Sketching Basics” from 10 a.m.–12 p.m., and “Drawn to the Outdoors Part II: Field Journaling on Red Butte” from 1–4 p.m.), you’ll receive a professional-quality, field-ready sketching kit, learn how to use it, then put your new skills directly to work on location as you venture out onto Lander’s iconic Red Butte. Space is limited; register today!

 

 

2. You can join in and help create a community mural.

During Friday night’s concert in City Park, local artist Virginia Moore will be creating a stunning mural… and she’ll need everyone’s help to complete it! The mural, representing the Outdoor Council’s values and depicting our work over the past 50 years, will be facilitated by Virginia, making it easy for all ages to participate. Paint and brushes will be provided! Come and be part of creating a special piece of history in our community.

 

3. The live and silent auctions offer the chance to win incredible, one-of-a-kind items and experiences.

Ranging from a full-day fishing adventure with Sweetwater Fishing Expeditions, to stunning original artwork (including pieces by Laney Hicks, Fred Kingwell and Virginia Moore), to a curated collection of western-themed books (written by 12 Wyoming authors, including Jeffrey Lockwood, Robert Kelly and Mary Beth Baptiste) our auctions offer items for every taste. Some of the most unique items up for bid include:

        

A hand-carved canoe paddle by Lander artist Tim Hudson; a one-week stay at a luxury Granite Ridge home in Jackson Hole’s Teton Village; and a four-night stay for four people at the HF Bar Ranch, a guest ranch where a slow pace is the norm and adventures in horseback riding, fly fishing, and hiking await.

 

4. We will be presenting a conservation award to Yvon Chouinard, founder of Patagonia.

Yvon Chouinard, founder of Patagonia

Patagonia has been one of the most vocal for-profit companies in the preservation of public lands, and we’re honored to be able to present Chouinard with this award for his work. The ceremony, which will feature two additional conservation award presentations, will take place during the harvest dinner (a locally sourced spread prepared by Lander’s Cowfish restaurant) on Saturday, September 23. We’d love for you to join us in applauding Chouinard’s efforts to help protect the public lands we love. Reserve your tickets now for the award ceremony, the dinner, and the keynote address!

 

 

 

 

5. Friday night will mark the final performance of the Jalan Crossland Band.

Jalan Crossland of the Jalan Crossland Band

One of Wyoming’s most beloved home-grown bands will be taking the stage one last time on Friday, September 22, in Lander’s City Park. Settle in with your favorite chairs or blankets for a night of rollicking tunes, and be part of a crowd the band will surely never forget.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The five features above are just a curated selection taken from a full schedule of fantastic experiences we cannot wait to share with you during this weekend-long celebration in Lander. We invite you to join us in celebrating 50 years of keeping the best parts of Wyoming wild and wonderful, just as they were made to be, and learning how we can best ensure this critical work will continue for years to come.

Tickets for our 50th Anniversary Celebration and Citizen Advocacy Summit are on sale now at https://woc50th.splashthat.com, and workshop spaces are filling up fast! Sign up today to reserve your spot.

For a complete list of the weekend’s events, visit https://wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org/about/50-years/.

The Countdown to our 50th Anniversary Celebration is On!

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The weekend of September 22–23 is fast approaching! We continue to add programs to our two-day 50th anniversary bash, so be sure to check out our schedule of events and reserve your spots soon. We’re excited to spend the weekend with so many friends, celebrating 50 years of conservation and equipping citizens with the tools and skills needed to keep advocating for Wyoming’s future.

If this is your first time hearing about this event, be sure to check out this recent story on Wyoming Public Media.

We’re thrilled to announce that following a day of great workshops on Saturday, and ahead of the evening’s keynote address by former EPA Administrator Gina McCarthy, we’ll host an awards ceremony, where we’ll recognize three citizens whose commitment to Wyoming’s wild places and outdoor heritage is unparalleled.

Yvon Chouinard, Patagonia founder and environmental maverick, will receive the Tom Bell Legacy Award for his tenacious lifelong commitment to conservation. His support of groups such as Citizens for the Wyoming Range and his staunch advocacy for public lands and the environment have made a lasting difference for the people and wild places of Wyoming. Patagonia, Chouinard’s outdoor gear and apparel company, is among the leaders in defending public lands traditions in the West. (If you haven’t seen the company’s first-ever TV ad, we recommend checking it out.)

Brian Rutledge, vice president of Rocky Mountain Audubon, will receive the Conservation Leadership Award for his exemplary vision and collaboration in sage-grouse conservation. Brian’s passion and his thoughtful approach have been instrumental in helping to keep the Greater sage-grouse viable in Wyoming and the Rocky Mountain West.

Michael Burd will receive the Civic Action Award in honor of his outstanding leadership of the citizen effort to protect the Wyoming Range, a landscape filled with wildlife and popular with hunters, anglers, and other outdoor enthusiasts.

All three award recipients will be in attendance Saturday evening, and we hope you can join us in celebrating these luminaries and honoring their legacies.

The 50th Anniversary Celebration and Citizen Advocacy Summit is a way for the Outdoor Council not only to honor our founders, dedicated members, and 50-year history, but also for the people of Wyoming to look ahead to the future.

“We’ll be thinking together about how citizens can be the most engaged, effective advocates for the outdoor places and wildlife they love,” said executive director Gary Wilmot. “I know the entire Outdoor Council staff and board is looking forward to connecting with old friends, making some new ones, and discussing what the future of conservation looks like for Wyoming.”

 

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Remember, we’re kicking off the weekend with a free community concert on Friday night, headlined by Wyoming’s own Jalan Crossland. Crossland recently announced that this will be the band’s last show, so it’s a gig longtime fans will not want to miss.

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Story Behind the Photo: “Red Desert Fire” by Scott Copeland

It’s April 19th at dawn, and I’m standing on a bluff trying to capture the Honeycomb Buttes.”

So begins this particular tale of Wyoming-based nature photographer Scott Copeland, a man on a mission.

His task is not easy, either, capturing a glimpse of all that exquisite scenery in one shot: the green grass and multi-hued layers of dirt, the sweeping majesty of Continental Peak, the snow-dusted Wind River Range.

I’m looking for just the right vantage to capture all three. Too far away and the Buttes’ striking colors and textures are lost; too close up and the Winds hide behind them.”

Up with the sun, Scott breathes in the cool, clear air and revels in the soundtrack you only get to hear in moments like this: Pure Wyoming, infused with a morning chorus of horned larks and the careful tread of Scott’s own footfalls. It’s the song of wide-open space and a slow, deliberate pace.

As the first tendrils of early morning begin to stretch out across the rocks, Scott lifts his camera and lines up the shot. And with a few clicks of the shutter on a peaceful April morning, the image—“Red Desert Fire”—is born.

A panorama like this captures the wide openness of the place. The butte details stand out nicely in the foreground and Continental Peak is prominent on the skyline, but the Winds were shadowed behind clouds and a little behind Continental Peak. A beautiful spot and an nice shot, but the hunt for the perfect Honeycomb Buttes image goes on.”

These are the moments that illustrate why we do what we do at the Outdoor Council; why we use our voices, write the letters, make the calls, and show up at events. There’s no other place in the world quite like Wyoming, and we want nothing more than to protect these values for future generations to enjoy.

It’s thanks to photographers like Scott that some of our state’s most stunning moments are captured forever; it’s thanks to passionate members like you that these sacred Wyoming landscapes will be protected. (As well as for Scott to continue trekking, in search of the ever-elusive “perfect” image of the Honeycomb Buttes.)

A large canvas of this photo, featured in our 2014 “Celebrating the Red Desert” calendar, will be up for raffle/auction at our 50th Anniversary Party on Saturday, September 23. Be sure stop in and stake your claim!

To learn more about all the events we have in store for our 50th Anniversary celebration, check out the full schedule here.

Story Behind the Photo: “Killpecker Tracks” by Dave Showalter

Ever been curious about what was happening on the other side of the lens at the moment a particularly gorgeous shot was snapped? So have we, because we know that simply looking at a picture only tells part of its story. For this picture, the story begins in the northern Red Desert.

If you’ve ever taken part in our annual Run the Red trail race, you’ve left your own footprints behind in the sand of this vast, scenic landscape. If you’ve never been to this area of Wyoming, we assure you it’s an experience you’ll never forget—especially if you get to hear the Killpecker sand dunes sing.

The science behind their song is simple—the round, highly polished grains of sand are stimulated by movement, such as footfalls or wind, and their “voice” is created as a result—but the effect is nothing short of magical.

It was in the midst of this majestic landscape that Colorado-based conservation photographer Dave Showalter snapped the striking shot above.

(You may remember seeing it as a featured image in our 2014 “Celebrating the Red Desert” calendar.)

On the morning he captured this image, Dave had headed out into the Killpecker dune fields in search of seasonal “dunal ponds,” which are naturally formed in the spring when embedded ice crystals in the sand begin to melt.

Going into the shoot, Dave had hoped to get a few shots of high-desert wildlife quenching their thirst at one such pond; although he didn’t find quite what he was looking for, he found something just as captivating.

“Well into the dune field, I realized the ponds had dried for the season and I turned to see my tracks leading from the Boar’s Tusk. It’s a different take on an iconic and sacred Wyoming landmark in an ecologically sensitive place, with tracks lending a feeling of being there.

One learns to expect surprises and take what nature gives you in such a dynamic landscape. On a windless night, with just a few distant songbirds breaking the silence, I lingered until the light had long faded—one of the most gorgeous evenings I’ve ever spent in the outdoors.”

The Red Desert has always held a special place in the Wyoming Outdoor Council’s heart; in fact, we’ve been working to protect it since our inception in 1967. It’s the landscape where Wyoming native Tom Bell—decorated World War II veteran and this organization’s founder—experienced solace after the war when his plane was shot down; he lost an eye, and nearly lost his life as well.

It was in Wyoming’s wild landscapes that Tom found spiritual and psychological healing, and his life-changing experience in the Red Desert inspired him to create the Outdoor Council to protect the Desert and similar places for future generations.

Photographers like Dave help us to continue this work in Tom’s memory by ensuring that some of our state’s most stunning moments and places are captured forever and illustrated for the world to see—and it’s thanks to passionate members like you that these sacred Wyoming landscapes will be protected for future generations to enjoy.

Run the Red Provides a Unique Glimpse into a Stunning Landscape

Photo: Josh Milek

Driving into the northern Red Desert from Rock Springs, the first thing you notice are the vistas. In early June, the distant Wind River Mountains to the north still hold plenty of snow, a striking contrast with the vibrant green sage and the rolling golden swath of the Killpecker Sand Dunes in the foreground. The next thing you notice is the temperature. Although cool in the morning, the northern Red Desert in late spring can become hot by midday, necessitating thoughtful layering and plenty of sunscreen. Then, you start to take in the folks around you. Those who love the desert—whether on their first or fiftieth visit—are people worth getting to know.

Photo: Claire Cella

Last Saturday, there were many answers to the question of who was motivated enough to join us in the quest to run 50, 23, or five kilometers through this expansive, rugged landscape. Run the Red—a young but gritty Wyoming trail race hosted by the Wyoming Outdoor Council and the National Outdoor Leadership School, among others—attracts some incredible runners, walkers, and desert enthusiasts.They are folks from the nearest towns, Rock Springs and Green River, but also from farther afield: Pinedale, Lander, and Casper. There are a few from Montana, and even one each from South Dakota and Nebraska. Many of them have never been to this part of Wyoming before, and are just as eager to explore on foot as you are. Some have sought out this race and have been training for weeks, while others were more spontaneous in their visit because it fit in with their training schedule or they were curious. Regardless of their reason for coming, before the end of the day, all of them will have a newfound appreciation for this place—and for their own abilities. Below are comments from some of this year’s runners:

“I must admit, that even though the course was extremely challenging and arduous for me, I felt a level of accomplishment that I had not experienced in a number of years of running upon finishing the run.”
“I love that the race is low-key and only has a t-shirt instead of a swag bag full of materials I need to later throw away. The location is fantastic and the organizers great.”

“My wife and I have participated in numerous races around the country, and we really enjoyed this one. The conservation/advocacy messaging that is part of the race is an excellent added bonus.”

In its fourth year, this race has gained popularity with local and regional trail runners. And with good reason: the incredible views, diverse opportunities for recreation, and close-ups of the Boar’s Tusk all combine to make Run the Red one of Wyoming’s best kept secrets. The Wyoming Outdoor Council has long been invested in making sure the most unique areas of the northern Red Desert look the same way for future generations as they do today. With the Bureau of Land Management set to continue work on its new land-use plan this fall, there is no time like the present to provide folks with new experiences in this landscape so they can have a shared appreciation of its value to our state and the need protect it. These public lands belong to all of us—runners, walkers, hikers, the dogs that play in the desert’s ponds, the kids who slide down the dunes, the ATV riders who fly across the sand. And know that when it’s time to speak up for how you want to see these lands managed, we’ll let you know. Until then, plan your race schedule to include Run the Red 2018 and pack your bags for a sand-dunes camping trip while the migratory birds are still there and the spadefoot toads are chorusing. Stay in touch and we’ll happily help plan your next Red Desert trip. Hope to see you out there!

 

For more photographs from this year’s race, check out our photo album, too.

 

Get Your Early Bird Tickets for Our 50th Anniversary

Dear friends,

Back in 1967, Tom Bell, Mardy Murie, and others came together to protect Wyoming, because they understood that a few scattered, unorganized voices would never get the job done. They created the Wyoming Outdoor Coordinating Council and worked together to help quash some very shortsighted plans, including an effort to dam the Upper Green River near Pinedale, a proposal to clearcut large sections of the Bridger-Teton and Shoshone national forests around Dubois, and—as crazy as it sounds today—a harebrained scheme to detonate nuclear bombs underground in the Upper Green River Valley to release and extract natural gas. Tom’s group didn’t stop with these successes: they and those who came after them went on to help create Wyoming’s “citizen’s lobby” and secure passage of our state’s foundational environmental laws—laws that continue to protect our wildlife and air and water quality today.

Fifty years later, thanks to the dedicated support of members like you, the Wyoming Outdoor Council is still doing the work these visionaries began. Every day, we bring citizens together from all corners of the state to create lasting solutions to tough problems, all in the name of protecting this wild, wide-open place we love.

I’d like to invite you to join me in Lander September 22-23 for our 50th anniversary celebration. Inspired by our founders, we’ll spend the weekend looking ahead, thinking together about how citizens can be the most engaged, effective advocates for the wild places they love. We’ll cap off the weekend of workshops and conversation with a keynote address by Gina McCarthy, former head of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. At a time when so many safeguards are being rolled back, I’m eager to hear her perspective on what’s next for all of us.

Purchase your tickets, and find a full schedule, at our website. (Reserve your tickets by June 1 for a discounted early bird rate!) Amy Rathke (amy@wyomingoutdoorcouncil.org) will be happy to answer any questions you may have.

Thanks for your commitment to Wyoming. I hope to see you in September!

Dave Hohl,
Chair, Wyoming Outdoor Council Board of Directors
Pinedale, Wyoming