Resilient Recreation – Partners & Public Lands Seminar Series
Event description
Resilient Recreation: Exploring a Community Driven Approach to Recreation Management
Date: Wednesday, April 16
Time: 7:00 p.m.
Location: Montana Natural History Center
Cost: Free! But please register
PARTNERS & PUBLIC LANDS SEMINAR SERIES: Conversations with BLM Missoula Field Office
Featuring BLM speakers and Marley Held-Wilson and Clancy Jandreau of the Blackfoot Challenge
Whether you’re floating the Blackfoot River, finding a place to hunt on opening weekend of hunting season, or taking the family camping – recreation is a benefit we all enjoy. BLM is working with our fellow land management agencies and Blackfoot Challenge to understand public land uses and how best to respond to impacts from recreation. Come learn how you can be part of a community driven approach to recreation stewardship, and the work Blackfoot Challenge is doing to understand the community’s vision for public lands!
Enjoy a complimentary beer with the lecture!
The Missoula Field Office, Bureau of Land Management is excited to announce the “Partners & Public Lands” seminar series! Hosted by the Montana Natural History Center, staff from BLM will be teaming up with our partners to share some of our common treatment activities and deep dive into the “why” behind these land restoration actions. In this 4-part series, we’ll share about forest management, riparian treatments, recreation management, and BLM’s new co-stewardship partnership with the Confederated Salish and Kootenai tribes.
February 12 – Counting Bunny Poop – How Forest Thinning Treatments Impact Wildlife Habitat; with special guests from The Nature Conservancy and University of Montana
March 19 – Busy Beavers – Using Low Tech Stream Restoration Techniques to Restore Riparian Areas; with special guests from Trout Unlimited and others TBA
April 16 – Recreation Resiliency – Exploring a Community-Driven Approach to Recreation Stewardship; featuring Blackfoot Challenge
May 21 – Tribal Reconnections – Sharing BLM & CSKT’s Tribal Co-stewardship Partnership and what this means for land management; featuring partners from the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribe
Tickets for good, not greed Humanitix dedicates 100% of profits from booking fees to charity