Cascadia Wild

  • Home
  • About
    • Equity Statement
    • Land Acknowledgment
    • Board of Directors
    • Supporters
    • Annual Report
  • Wolverine Tracking Project
    • About our target species
    • Camera Surveys
    • Winter Tracking >
      • Winter Tracking Surveys
      • Tracking Apprenticeship
      • Be a Tracking Leader
    • Fox Scat Surveys
    • Wolf Survey
    • Sponsor A Trail Camera
    • Internship
    • WTP Findings
  • Classes
    • Naturalist Training Program
    • Tracking Classes
    • Botany Classes
    • Outdoor Survival Skills Classes
    • Team Building
  • Get Involved
    • Calendar
    • Community Clubs
    • Volunteer
    • Join the Board
    • Contact Us
    • Join our Mailing List
  • Donate
  • Blog
  • Shop
  • Home
  • About
    • Equity Statement
    • Land Acknowledgment
    • Board of Directors
    • Supporters
    • Annual Report
  • Wolverine Tracking Project
    • About our target species
    • Camera Surveys
    • Winter Tracking >
      • Winter Tracking Surveys
      • Tracking Apprenticeship
      • Be a Tracking Leader
    • Fox Scat Surveys
    • Wolf Survey
    • Sponsor A Trail Camera
    • Internship
    • WTP Findings
  • Classes
    • Naturalist Training Program
    • Tracking Classes
    • Botany Classes
    • Outdoor Survival Skills Classes
    • Team Building
  • Get Involved
    • Calendar
    • Community Clubs
    • Volunteer
    • Join the Board
    • Contact Us
    • Join our Mailing List
  • Donate
  • Blog
  • Shop

Who We Are

Inspiring personal connection to the natural world and to community
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Fairy slipper found on a wildflower hike.
​Cascadia Wild is a Portland-based non-profit (501)(c)(3) organization whose mission is to connect people with the natural world.
Cascadia Wild offers: 
  • Wolverine Tracking Project community science wildlife surveys in Mt Hood National Forest. 
    Volunteers
    document tracks, monitor wildlife camera, and search for scat, as part of a long-term research project collecting data on the forest's rare carnivores and other wildlife.  ​
​
  • Classes that explore the natural world around Portland, Oregon.
    Topics include naturalist and wilderness survival skills, wildlife tracking, botany and foraging, and more. 
​​
  • Community Clubs in the greater Portland area.
    Our free monthly Tracking Club and Nature Book Club provide a place to explore the natural world, connect with community, and learn from each other. 

Our Mission

The mission of Cascadia Wild is to connect people with the natural world, combining modern ecology with ancient practices of living with the earth. We do this by teaching naturalist skills, creating meaningful interactions with local natural areas, and providing stewardship opportunities for serving the wildlife, forests, and land of the Pacific Northwest. 

We believe in balancing scientific study with heartfelt connection, creativity, and holistic awareness, combining the awareness of an intuitive tracker with the knowledge of a modern scientist. Our teaching style uses hands-on experiential learning to engage all the senses. By tapping into a person's own natural curiosity, nature itself becomes the teacher. The goal of this style of learning is to instill a strong connection to the land and a passion for stewardship.

Through our community science project, our goals are not only to inform research and management but to also offer an opportunity for stewardship. By providing a space where people can learn about and help protect the abundant life with whom we share the forest, we seek to instill a sense of belonging to a place and a recognition of the responsibility that comes with that, to inspire stewardship in the actions of everyday life.

We hope to foster a community of trackers, foragers, naturalists, community scientists, stewards, and people more deeply connected with the natural world – a community that is also a part of the wild life and wild places of Cascadia, our home.

It is our vision that people and communities everywhere will act with care and respect for the natural world, motivated by their understanding of their place in our interconnected ecosystems and their perception of their role in the cycle of life. 
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History

In 1998, a group of people joined together because they wanted to share their knowledge of the natural world with others. Since that time we have been able to offer many nature education programs to schools and independent groups, develop a partnership with the Mt Hood National Forest to spearhead rare carnivore monitoring efforts via the Wolverine Tracking Project, and mentor thousands of people in animal tracking, wild edible plants, and many other naturalist skills.

​​Cascadia Wild continues to thrive because of strong community support which comes from the volunteers that put it all together, our generous donors, and all of the participants and other supporters to whom we are forever grateful.

press and Media

​Cascadia Wild in the News

2019:
The volunteer-run Wolverine Tracking Project Camera Survey captured images of two different wolves at separate locations. ODFW suggests that the two may be the breeding pair of the White River wolf pack.
Read about it at The Oregonian.

2018: Cameras with the Wolverine Tracking Project caught some of the first footage of what is now designated the White River Wolf Pack!
​The Oregonian ran the story. 

2017: Check out this story on KPTV about the Wolverine Tracking Project.

2012: Press about our detection of Sierra Nevada red fox on Mt Hood via our camera survey - the first verification of this rare mammal in our forest! 
  • The Oregonian
  • Center for Biological Diversity
Wolverine Tracking Project Video

​This short video talks about what it's like to volunteer with the Wolverine Tracking Project's wildlife Camera Surveys:

VOLUNTEERS

Camera Crew
Tracking Team
Fox Team
Wolf Team
​5431 NE 20th Ave Portland OR 97211
[email protected]
503-235-9533
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Copyright © 2021