by Adventure Scientists | Jan 15, 2014 | camera trap, montana, snow, students, wolverine
Snow, Camping and Kids – Weekend in the Woods with Arrowhead Middle School ASC guide and intern Julia Johannesen grew up in the “Natural State” of Arkansas and holds a B.S. in Human & Environmental Sciences and a Masters degree in Sustainable...
by Adventure Scientists | Nov 18, 2013 | citizen science, montana
Charles Scott and Family Finish the Lewis & Clark Trail Charles Scott is an author, family adventurer and United Nations Climate Hero based in New York City. Charles is travelling across the US on the famed Lewis and Clark Trail by bicycle this summer...
by Adventure Scientists | Oct 8, 2013 | camera trap, conservation, montana
Catching Wildlife in a Lens: Camera Trapping Top 10 By Kim Hightower Your fingers begin to freeze instantly as you remove your gloves and mount the camera onto the lower trunk of the tree. The wind blows and you’re enveloped in a cold, sparkling-white powder as...
by Adventure Scientists | Aug 21, 2012 | adventure, climbing, conservation, montana
The Boulder Pass Trail in Glacier National Park. Photo Courtesy of Dylan Jones As a traveling rock climber road tripping to America’s greatest climbing destinations, our ropes don’t often take us to areas where relevant data for ASC studies can be...
by Adventure Scientists | Sep 21, 2011 | adventure, adventurers and scientists for conservation, montana
After brushing up and learning a few new skills, like hair identification and scat ID, we were off to the field to put them into practice. Scouring fence posts, tree rubs, barbed wire and berry patched, we fine-tuned the difference between black cow hair and black...
by Adventure Scientists | Sep 21, 2011 | adventure, adventurers and scientists for conservation, hiking, montana, science
After mild adjustments and a bit of quality control, I managed a sleeping bag bunged to the handlebars, a red duffel bag strapped to the rack, and my blue day pack secured to my waste. I was off to track grizzly bears in the Centennial Mountain Range. Ten of us met up...