Save the Redwoods League Announces Fourth Season of Podcast “I’ll Go If You Go”
onExpanded season showcases emerging environmental leaders from diverse backgrounds and their careers among California’s redwood and sequoia forests
Expanded season showcases emerging environmental leaders from diverse backgrounds and their careers among California’s redwood and sequoia forests
Ever spent your day staring at a computer screen and wondered, “What it would be like to work outside in a redwood forest instead?” Season 4 of the League’s acclaimed podcast I’ll Go If You Go explores this question, delving …
As we approach the end of 2023, we find ourselves contemplating yet another remarkable year at Save the Redwoods League. Our gratitude extends to our wonderful partners, members, and supporters who make possible the essential efforts of safeguarding and restoring …
Media Contact: Robin Carr, Landis Communications Inc. Email: [email protected] | Phone: (415) 766-0927 Download the full press release Season three features guests who are creating space for everyone to connect with nature and each other San Francisco, Calif. (January …
Watch this fun video to get to know our podcast host and a special guest we all know and love.
To be a naturalist or an artist—or of course both, like Clay Anderson—requires paying attention; to the world around you and how you respond to it. Nature journaling is one of the ways you can do that.
Certified forest bathing guide Juan Lazo Bautista took us into the redwoods and explains how this immersive nature experience works, including a meditation, tools, and practices to help guide you on your journey.
She’s a bonafide nature nerd. She plays flute and drums. And she loves Kate Bush.
Save the Redwoods League today launches the second season of its groundbreaking podcast, “I’ll Go If You Go,” taking listeners on an audio adventure tour through California’s iconic coast redwood and giant sequoia forests.
Save the Redwoods League launched an outreach program in 2019 to cultivate meaningful and reciprocal relationships with communities that have historically been marginalized or underrepresented in the redwoods.