Email Bulletin

 

Action Alert

White River Wild

The White River Wilderness Coalition – an alliance of local and regional groups, and concerned citizens like you – is leading the Hidden Gems Wilderness Campaign, seeking designation of major new wilderness additions on the White River National Forest and nearby  Bureau of Land Management lands.

Our proposal would create several brand-new, standalone wilderness areas, while significantly enlarging our existing wildernesses. Please join us as we work toward this bold and exciting vision!

The White River National Forest is a landscape of national importance, located right here in our own backyard. It’s the country’s most visited national forest, and along with nearby BLM lands it straddles an ecologically vital portion of the Upper Colorado River watershed. These public lands contain a critical stretch of a continent-scale wildlife migration corridor while providing core habitat for Colorado’s recently reintroduced lynx population. 

Most of the existing designated wilderness in Colorado is of the high-elevation, “rock and ice” variety. Still unprotected are the Hidden Gems targeted in this campaign, which exist at the more ecologically diverse middle elevations and provide some of the most important habitat for imperiled species. Designating these areas as wilderness will add valuable biodiversity to our nation’s wilderness legacy.

In addition, areas such as Spraddle Creek (near Vail), Thompson Creek (near Carbondale), Hoosier Ridge (near Breckenridge) and Hunter Creek (near Aspen) are important recreation spots for those communities. Help us bring wilderness down from the peaks to our backyard.

Help us bring wilderness home.

If you would like to help us get an Act of Congress to designate more Wilderness for its economic, ecological, or recreation values, please register your name and email in the Email Bulletin field to the left. You can also directly contact the campaign organizers, Sloan Shoemaker(sloan@wildernessworkshop.org), Lisa Smith (lisa@cecenviro.org) or Clare Bastable (bastac@cmc.org).