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Get our founder Jon Young's new tracking book from our on-line store! Your purchase supports nature education.
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Summer Wolf Tracking Expedition in Idaho-Julia A Towne Summer
Wolf Tracking Expedition in IdahoJuly 26-August 1, 2009; 1:30 p.m. Sun. - 4:30 p.m. Sat. Backcountry, Idaho; Lead instructor: Emily Gibson. Instructor: Dave Moskowitz $875 ($50 discount to Tracking Club members, see below). Food and camping provided; Airport shuttle from Boise, ID available free Call to register: 425-788-1301 Join Wilderness Awareness School for an experience you won't soon forget.
Guided by skilled tracking instructors from Wilderness Awareness School, participants learn first hand about using the skills of a tracker to understand the activities of wolves and their relationships with other parts of the landscape in which they live. Field activities are complimented with information on wolf biology, current status and conservation of wolves in the western United States. Tracking GroupsThis course is ideal for beginning trackers and those with some prior tracking experience. Beginners leave with a solid set of technical skills, while students with some previous experience are able to apply and enhance their skills in a dynamic setting with mentoring from experienced instructors.New this year, our Advanced Wolf Tracking Expedition is the perfect choice for those who have attended the standard Summer Wolf Tracking Expedition in the past, and/or those who have graduated from our Wildlife Tracking Intensive, Residential Program, or Instructor Training Apprenticeship. Each day we split into small field groups based on interest and experience. Then we head out into the field to search for, study, and follow the tracks and sign of wolves. CommunityParticipants also share in a remarkable community experience created during the expedition. Our days start and end at a comfortable basecamp. Evenings offer a chance to relax, enjoy good food, re-live stories of the day's adventures, play music, and enjoy the starry skies!Our Tracking PhilosophyTracking lures us on an amazing journey into the world of nature, and encourages us to open all of our senses to its subtle clues hidden everywhere. At Wilderness Awareness School we teach tracking as an interpretive art--one that sharpens our awareness of nature and deepens our understanding of our place in the natural world.Trackers 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 plant ecology. Our curriculum prepares you to continue your exploration of the behavior and ecology of wildlife through tracking. On our Wolf Tracking Expedition, we always strive to stay "one day behind" the wolves, so that our presence does not disturb their natural activities. However, under the skilled guidance of the expedition's instructors, participants in past years have almost always been able to see and experience a rich diversity of fresh wolf tracks and trails, and sign (including feeding sign and kill sites/carcasses, scat, hair, etc. and sometimes even signs of previous den activity) that a let us know of the wolves are active in that area, and allow us to feel their presence. Some years the wolves seem to want to make their presence more fully known to us, through such actions as passing close by within easy sight of our group, or crossing right through our camp at night, or doubling back and walking over our tracks later the same day we are tracking them! Instructor Biography Emily
Gibson serves as Wilderness Awareness School's Adult Programs Coordinator,
Assistant Summer Camp Director, Adult and Youth Program Instructor, as
well as Outreach Coordinator. Before coming to Wilderness Awareness School,
Emily studied Wildlife Science at the University of Washington. She spent
two years as a research assistant studying the effects of urbanization
on songbird populations in the Puget Sound region.
After graduating from the Residential Program in 2005, Emily participated in the Instructor Training Apprenticeship and was an Apprentice Instructor with the Residential Program. She has also continued her study of tracking through two years of Wilderness Awareness School’s Wildlife Tracking Intensive. She is a team leader for the Cascade Wildlife Monitoring Project, and is certified as a Level II Track and Sign Specialist with CyberTracker International. David Moskowitz:
David has been studying the art of wildlife tracking for over a decade.
He
Course RegistrationCall to register: 425-788-1301NOTE: In addition to the adult expedition, we also
offer Teen Wolf Tracking
Expeditions for ages 13-18 |
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