Skip to content
Cascadia Wildlands

Cascadia Wildlands

we like it wild.

  • Campaigns
    • Protecting Forests and Watersheds
    • Bringing Back Wolves
    • Saving Our Wild Salmon Heritage
    • Combating Climate Change
    • Thriving with Wildfires
  • News
    • Get E-News
    • In the Media
    • Press Room
    • Annual Report
    • Cascadia Review
    • Blog
  • Get Involved
    • Volunteer! Join WildCAT
    • Events
    • Events Calendar
    • Take Action
    • 25th Anniversary Celebration: Summer Soirée and Auction
  • About Us
    • Who we are
    • Staff and Board
    • Our Tools for Change
    • Foundations and Funds
    • Business Partners
    • Financials
    • Employment & Internships
  • Ways to Give
    • Make a Single or Monthly Donation
    • Retirement Account Giving
    • Leave a Bequest
    • Endowment Fund
    • Charitable Gift Annuity or Remainder Trust
    • Donate Stock
    • Donate Cryptocurrency
    • Online Shop — Map Your Adventure
Search
<

Tag: Pints Gone Wild

Carolyn comes to Cascadia!


Greetings! My name is Carolyn Candela, and I’m the new Development and Operations Manager at Cascadia Wildlands. I am currently finishing up my Masters degree in Nonprofit Management at the … Continue reading Carolyn comes to Cascadia!

Posted on June 6, 2014Tags Bellingham, Carolyn Candela, Cascadia Wildlands, Eugene, Pints Gone Wild, Portland, Seattle, Ted Turner, Vancouver BC

Ninkasi Commits to Another Wild Year


Local brewer and friend to Cascadia Wildlands Ninkasi Brewery just committed to another year of the legendary Pints Gone Wild events.  The 2012-2013 series will start in early September 2012. … Continue reading Ninkasi Commits to Another Wild Year

Posted on June 12, 2012March 25, 2020Tags Ninkasi, Pints Gone Wild

Join Cascadia!

  • Donate
  • Email Sign-Up
  • Volunteer
  • Take Action

Take Action Online

  • Take Action: Thank Eugene City Council for Supporting Common Sense Climate Policy 
  • Take Action: Tell President Biden – U.S. Climate Strategy Must Protect Forests
  • Cancel Bureau of Land Management Plans to Log 200 Year Old Coast Range Forests
  • Writing for Newspaper Publication: Tips and Contacts

Recent News

  • In the Media: A gas utility’s astroturf campaign threatens Oregon’s first electrification ordinance March 7, 2023
  • Take Action: Thank Eugene City Council for Supporting Common Sense Climate Policy  February 10, 2023
  • Press Release: Eugene becomes first city in Oregon to phase out gas in new construction as electrification movement grows February 7, 2023
  • Statement on the 9th Circuit Court Ruling Dismissing our Portland Teargas Case February 1, 2023
  • In the Media: Not Going Flat January 30, 2023

About Cascadia

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Employment & Internships
  • Staff and Board
  • Business Partners
  • Foundation and Fund Supporters
  • Volunteer

Contact Us

Loading

Cascadia Wildlands
P.O. Box 10455
Eugene, OR 97440
541.434.1463

Facebook

Cascadia Wildlands

2 hours ago

Cascadia Wildlands
Wowzers ... See MoreSee Less
View on Facebook
· Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on Linked In Share by Email

Instagram

cascadiawildlands

March 21 is the International Day of Forests. Our March 21 is the International Day of Forests. Our forests can be key tools for taking on climate change. Conserving old-growth and mature trees is one of the most powerful—and cost-effective—ways to remove carbon pollution from the atmosphere. But right now, only a fraction of them are protected in the US. We need to #ActOnClimate, by protecting mature and #OldGrowth forests from logging and deforestation.

Tell @potus @usdepartmentofagriculture to make🌲🌳🌲 part of the climate solution. 

Take action > LINK in Bio ➡

#WorthMoreStanding
#InternationalDayOfForests
#welikeitwild
Happy first day of spring! 💚 Our favorite ear Happy first day of spring! 💚 

Our favorite early spring wildflower is definitely Western trillium. These unmistakable plants softly light up the understory of western Cascadia's moist coniferous forests and are recognized by their flowers and leaves that come in threes. Later in the spring, you may notice that some of the flowers have turned a purplish color. This tells us that the trilliums have been pollinated and are getting ready to fruit and return back to the soil until next spring. 🌱

Remember to only admire and photograph trilliums, but *never* pick them — these flowers are extremely sensitive and can take up to 10 years before they bloom. 

📸 Cascadia Wildlands staff

#welikeitwild #spring2023☀️
📢 Can you help us put citizen science tactics o 📢 Can you help us put citizen science tactics or legal tools to work to protect imminently threatened wildlands, waterways, and wildlife?

Link in Bio ➡

We have two open positions!

#welikeitwild
⚡️🚨Oregon’s largest gas utility is fundin ⚡️🚨Oregon’s largest gas utility is funding a ‘front group’ to overturn the city of Eugene’s new building electrification ordinance.

Link in Bio ↗️ to read the article

“They’re thinking that if they can roll back climate policy in progressive, dark green Eugene, then they can do it anywhere,” Dylan Plummer, a senior campaign representative for the nonprofit Sierra Club, told Grist. “Our coalition is ready to fight and do whatever it takes … to show that our city supports climate justice and a transition off of fossil fuels.”

#ElectrifyNow #FrackedGasIsThePast #FossilFreeFuture 

📸 Grist / Getty Images
Load More... Follow on Instagram

Join Cascadia

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Employment & Internships
  • Staff and Board
  • Business Partners
  • Foundation and Fund Supporters
  • Volunteer
© 2018 Cascadia Wildlands || Maisha Theme by Anariel Design || Child Theme by netCorps || All rights reserved