Verizon and Sprint Users – Eco-Wireless partners with Freedom to Roam
Eco-Wireless will donate 20% of your rate plan purchase to Freedom to Roam. So, if you or your business is looking at a new Verizon or Sprint phone or plan, please give them a look. All national sales and promotions are honored. Couldn’t be easier. www.ecowireless.mobi
Previous News Stories
- June 14, 2010Trees shift upward as climate warms, data show
Just as wildlife is adapting to a changing climate by shifting ranges and territories, so are trees
- June 11, 2010Colorado Passes Bill to Reduce Roadway Speed in Wildlife Crossings
“As wildlife move in response to climate change and increasing habitat fragmentation, one of the first barriers they will confront are roads…”
- June 9, 2010Denver Post Covers FTR Event with Colo. and New Mexico Governors
Denver Post Covers FTR Event with Colo. and New Mexico Governors
- June 9, 2010Associated Press Picks Up FTR Event with Western Governors
Governor’s Bill Ritter (Colo.) and Bill Richardson (N.M.) help FTR unveil Beyond Season’s End.
- April 22, 2010FTR Speaking at Telluride Mountain Film Festival
Freedom to Roam will be at Telluride’s 2010 Mountain Film Festival!
- April 19, 2010Lynx sets 1,200 mile record
Lynx makes an extraordinary journey of 1,200 miles – from Silverton, Colorado to Nordegg, Alberta, Canada.
- April 14, 2010Canadian Feds giving $1 million for wildlife research
The project will study wildlife and transportation across the Trans Canada Highway. Check out the article here: http://www.banffcragandcanyon.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=2532249
- April 13, 2010Canadian wildcat makes 2,000-kilometre trek home
Check out this story about the amazing journey of a lynx that made it back to Canada after being re-homed in Colorado…http://www.canada.com/technology/Canadian+wildcat+makes+kilometre+trek+home/2784693/story.html
- March 31, 2010Monarch butterflies, battered by the weather, no longer rule
Due to rough weather the Monarch butterfly population could be down by as much as 50%. Read more here:
http://www.usatoday.com/tech/science/environment/2010-03-30-Monarchs30_ST_N.htm
- March 23, 2010Scientists study whale migration
With climate change transforming the Arctic, biologists are scrambling to understand the impact on gray whales and other creatures living in the region. See the full story at: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=whales-head-north