NATIONAL PARKS BLOG

News And Updates From America's National Parks

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‘Tis The Season To Celebrate The Holidays With Our National Parks!

By on 12/15/2011 in Park News

There are so many great ways to visit, share and support America’s iconic, national treasures during the holiday season. Here are a handful of our suggestions:

  • Give The Gift Of The Parks - Thanks to the generosity of the National Park Foundation board, all year-end gifts (between now and December 31) will be matched up to $75,000! That means your gift will be matched dollar-for-dollar. Pretty incredible, right?! And when you make a donation to NPF, we’ll send you a special printable certificate to include in a stocking or under your Christmas Tree.  I also recommend you check out our gift guide to shop for more gifts that give back to our national parks.
  • Hooray For The Holidays! – Now listen up, this is the part where we thank YOU and give back to YOU! From December 19 through December 23, you could win the ultimate national park prize pack including a free annual pass to America’s nearly 400 national parks and roundtrip airfare to any national park destination Southwest Airlines can take you to, outstanding outdoor gear, NPF apparel, and more! Join us at today at www.facebook.com/nationalpark and learn more about Hooray for the Holidays!
Hooray for the Holidays!
  • Watch The 2011 National Christmas Tree Lighting From President’s Park On-Demand! Let us bring the spirit of the season to you with the Lighting of the National Christmas Tree at www.thenationaltree.org or by checking local PBS listings for airdates and times. Promise you won’t be disappointed as you watch President Barack Obama, First Lady Michelle Obama and their family, along with a star-studded list of performers including Big Time Rush and Ellie Goulding, OneRepublic, Rodney Atkins, Marsha Ambrosius, Kermit the Frog and host Carson Daly having a wonderful time together at the 89th National Christmas Tree Lighting!

Are You Up For the Parks Climate Challenge?

By on 10/27/2011 in Park News

Following the success of last week’s Electronic Field Trip (EFT) to Arizona’s Saguaro National Park, we are excited to announce the launch of another innovative program - the Parks Climate Challenge!

Similar to the EFT program (which in the past four years alone has engaged more than 400,000 people across the country and around the world!), this new online program combines the use of national parks as engaging classrooms with unique web-based technologies so that teachers have the tools they need to teach the powerful lessons of climate change in a way that students will find fresh, new and interesting!

Parks Climate Challenge offers teachers a platform from which to develop curriculum and engage with other teachers around the country to find out how students best learn first-hand about the issues of climate change through the lens of national parks. The program encourages teachers to develop hands-on service projects with their students through a national park experience either within or outside the boundaries of a national park.  Take a moment to learn more at www.parksclimatechallenge.org!

We think this program model can be replicated nationally. What do you think?

Climate Change In Our Parks

By on 08/20/2010 in Park News

Program Director, National Park Foundation

I just read an article by Philippe Cousteau, CEO of EarthEcho International, about his recent trip to Yellowstone National Park. Click here to see HuffPo commentary.

Cousteau writes about what he’s observed and learned while in Yellowstone. One sentence, in particular, jumped out at me, “Other challenges are threatening the parks as well. A familiar refrain I heard over and over from guides and rangers alike was the concern over the effects of an increasingly volatile climate.”

I was struck by this sentence because I’m working on NPF’s upcoming Electronic Field Trip (EFT) to North Cascades National Park, which will focus on climate change. NPF picked North Cascades for the EFT because it is home to over 300 glaciers. And many of these glaciers have shrunk dramatically during the last century thanks, in part, to global warming.

The upcoming EFT, which will air on October 13th, will use North Cascades as a medium for explaining climate change and its impacts. I think some of the kids will be surprised to learn that the glaciers are not only wonders of the natural world, but they provide an important source of water for the plants, animal and people that live in the region. As the glaciers shrink, a water supply is diminished.

I hope our EFT is successful in teaching thousands of children about climate change, and motivating them to take action to help mitigate the human-caused impacts on the climate.

To learn more about our upcoming EFT click here!