"As
it does for many people, tracking gives me back the closeness I had
with the out-of-doors as a young person and gives me balance for the
high stakes profession I've chosen. It gives me a way to contribute
to wider efforts to do something about the degradation of the planet.
But it also puts me in an environment that breeds ferocious learning"
-Mallory Clarke
Wilderness Awareness School offers some of the finest wildlife tracking
training courses anywhere in North America. With programs designed for
everyone from beginning to advanced students, we are dedicated to continuing
the development and growth of the art and science of tracking.
View our Wildlife Tracking Courses
Wilderness
Awareness School's teachings are all built on the foundation of understanding
nature with the depth of knowledge of a naturalist, and with the connection
and sense of place of a native inhabitant. We view animal tracking as
an integrative discipline which requires knowledge and skills in variety
of naturalist pursuits and outdoors skills. We train trackers that speak
a language which is based not only on a thorough knowledge of tracks,
trails and sign, but also on a rich grounding in the natural history,
anatomy and behavior characteristics of animals, and ecological processes.
Whether it's out for one morning at our Tracking Club, or for ten months
of in-depth study around the Pacific Northwest with our Wildlife Tracking
Intensive course, we offer something for everyone interested in learning
more about the art of wildlife tracking.
Our Instructors
All of our tracking programs are lead by instructors that bring a diversity
of teaching experience as well as practical experience applying tracking
skills in field. Our tracking instructors are both skilled trackers
and experienced educators.
We see tracking as a growing and evolving field and encourage our instructors
and students to continue to refine and expand their skills. Because
of this you will find our classes are dynamic, engaging, and constantly
evolving. We teach best practices in the field and include the latest
research and understanding of wildlife ecology and tracking techniques
in all of our classes.
Guest instructors, well known practitioners in the field, also join
us for our intensive programs and to give public speaking appearances
from time to time.

Discover which wildlife tracking course is best for
you...
Our Wildlife Tracking Courses
and Expeditions
Monthly
Tracking Club - One Sat. morning per month, Sept. -
June
Fun-filled mornings of community learning as we see into the lives of
wild animals through the tracks they leave behind. Participants are led
by skillful naturalist instructors into the world of mystery and intrigue
that we call tracking.
Snow
Tracking and Winter Wilderness Survival Skills -
Feb. 6-8, 2009
Revel in the beauty of the Methow Valley of the Northeast Cascades
as you track cougars, marten, coyotes and other wildlife this winter,
and study the behavior of wildlife in winter through their tracks and
sign! For more advanced trackers, challenge and expand your knowledge
with the assistance of highly experienced trackers. We will also learn
winter wilderness survival skills such as shelter construction, snow
travel techniques and winter safety.
NEW
- Fundamentals of Wildlife Tracking - April 10-12,
2009
The ability to find, identify, and interpret the multitude of
animal tracks and signs requires careful observation skills as well
as a depth of knowledge of wildlife behavior and ecology. Join us at
our comfortable wooded campus in Duvall, WA to learn or refine your
fundamental animal tracking skills.
NatureSkills
Weeklong - July 12-18, 2009
Explore the natural world with Wilderness Awareness School’s most
experienced instructors as we learn fundamental tools for connecting
with and studying nature. In the classroom and in the field, this holistic
program teaches widlife tracking, birding, wilderness survival techniques,
edible and medicinal plants, and exploring the natural world.
Summer
Wolf Tracking Expedition - July 26 - August
1, 2009
Explore remote and beautiful Idaho backcountry, learning first-hand
about the ways of the gray wolf and their ecosystem. Learn through immersion
in this diverse landscape, as we discover and follow the tracks and
sign of wolves and other wildlife on the edge of the largest designated
wilderness area in the continential United States! This course is ideal
for both beginners and students with prior tracking experience.
Wildlife
Tracking Intensive - Sept. 2009 - June 2010
The Wildlife Tracking Intensive, our most in-depth tracking course,
meets one weekend per month from Sept. - June, and provides in-depth
training for both beginner and advanced students. Visiting a diversity
of habitats from the coastal dunes of Oregon to the high deserts of
eastern Washington, participants have the opportunity to study and track
a great variety of wildlife species. From snow tracking elusive lynx,
bobcat, and cougar in the Cascade Mountains to trailing mink, otter,
and bear along riparian sandbars in the Puget Sound, this wildlife tracking
course is packed with adventure, challenge, and quality instruction.
Kamana Home
Study Course - At your own pace
The Kamana Naturalist Training Program, developed and refined for
over twenty years, is a comprehensive independent study course that
covers the naturalist background needed to engage in the wilderness
arts - including wildlife tracking, bird language, survival and primitive
living skills, traditional herbalism, and naturalist mentoring. Begin
with Kamana One: Exploring Natural
Mystery. During this short course you will experience two weeks
of awareness exercises and six areas of ecological study using a field
guide and audio series narrated by Jon Young. Begin to see the world
through "native eyes."
Wilderness
Awareness Residential Program - Sept. 2009-June
2010
Our core intensive course is nine months of thorough grounding in
every aspect of our curriculum, spent as part of a supportive community
of fellow learners. At the Residential Program, you will develop the
eyes, the ears, and the awareness with which to help our culture move
forward into the future in a healthy and sustainable way.
Volunteer Wildlife Tracking Opportunities
Cascade
Wildlife Monitoring Project - Training in November
or December, and then Surveying Jan. - March
In this environmental stewardship project, teams of volunteers carry
out snow tracking surveys throughout the Winter to search for and document
the presence of wildlife in key areas along Interstate 90, including
rare and sensitive forest carnivores such Marten, Lynx, and Wolverines.
Information gained from these surveys may be invaluable in helping protect
wildlands from imminent development and direct the future construction
of wildlife crossings of the interstate.
Some articles of interest from our NatureSkills.com
site:
Tracking
Our Natural Roots - by Dave Moskowitz
Animal
Tracking Guide - What to Take with You - by Clint Hollingsworth
Animal
Tracking Basics: Slow Harmonic Gait - by Jon Young
Registration Information
Calendar
Scholarship Information