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FOUR WAYS YOU CAN HELP support Nature Labs!
June 10, 2018 By  Ghost Bear With  0 Comment
In  Field Trips  /  Stories from the Field

1. Buy a raffle ticket and win great prizes!

Tickets are $25 for one and five for $100 – with only 400 tickets being sold! The grand prize? A full day, personalized field trip in the Canadian Rockies. There are also four framed prints to be won and 10 canvas wrap prints. Winners will be announced on June 15th and contacted via email.

2. Join us in the field!*

With all $500 donations made during this campaign only, we will be offering you a full day, personalized and private Field Trip into the Canadian Rockies between June 15th and July 15th.

3. Shop with meaning!

By purchasing any item from our store, know that 100% of the proceeds will support this campaign for Nature Labs. And until June 15th, all 16” x 24” limited edition prints are on sale for only $250 dollars.

4. Share this post!

Nature Labs is a grassroots effort and so too is this fundraising campaign. Help us beat the algorithms by spreading the word across social media, by email and in conversations with friends and family. Every dollar counts.

In supporting Nature Labs, let’s create lasting systems change: a society where millions champion nature literacy in the classroom and millions more act with a foundation of nature knowledge that, in turn, fosters a better balance between the needs people and the environment.

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    “There are an awful lot of scientists today who believe that before very long we shall have unraveled all the secrets of the universe. There will be no puzzles anymore. To me, it’d be really, really tragic because I think one of the most exciting things is this feeling of mystery, feeling of awe, the feeling of looking at a little live thing and being amazed by it and how it has emerged through these hundreds of years of evolution and there it is and it is perfect and why.”⁠
    Wrestle-mania on now in a nature retreat near you.⁠
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    We had a great blizzard of a morning with this bighorn ram. Bighorn sheep usually travel to south facing slopes during the winter months. The snow fall is lighter and allows them to more easily reach the forbs and minerals that make up their diet.⁠
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