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Wild & Scenic Film Festival, video-on-demand, March 23, 2024!
Thank you for registering for the Wild & Scenic Film Festival video-on-demand!
This ticket is for video-on-demand access from 03/23/2024 to 03/27/2024
We rely on ticket sales to plan for this event, therefore we have a strict NO REFUNDS policy. Thank you for understanding.
We have received your payment and will be sending you your ticket shortly, with the video links sent on 03/23/2024
Wild & Scenic Film Festival, March 23, 2024!
Thank you for registering for the Wild & Scenic Film Festival!
We can't wait to see on March 23, 2024. Aspen Room, 2223 E 7th Ave C, Flagstaff - 7-10 pm. Doors open at 6pm.
This in-person ticket included video-on-demand access from 03/23/2024 to 03/27/2024
We rely on ticket sales to plan for this event, therefore we have a strict NO REFUNDS policy. Thank you for understanding.
We have received your payment and will be sending you your ticket shortly!
Read our recent and past newsletters!
Sign up for our newsletters here
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June 4, 2024, Wolf Pups and Summer Events
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May 2, Theia, Llave, and Wonder
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April 2, The new Lobo Family Tree
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March 1, Films for Wolves & Asha Update
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January 1, 2024, Remembering Anubis
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December 13, 2023, Asha is not ours to control: passive rewilding should be celebrated not halted
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December 2023, Lobo Youth Summit and Year-End Campaign
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November 8, 2023, Urgent Appeal, Let Asha Roam!
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November 2023, Remembering our lost lobos and #GvingTuesday
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October 2023, spooky season reminds us some people are afraid of wolves
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Big Lake Howliday Campout 2022 Registration Complete
Thank you for your Big Lake Howliday Campout 2022 Registration! You should receive a confirmation email shortly. The registration fee for the weekend includes four hot boxed meals per person and camp site space.
We are excited to be hosting the campout in person again this year, but in order to do so safely, we ask that each and every individual read and sign our Participant Agreement and Covid Release Form online before registering for the event. Parents and Guardians of minors will need to fill out the two forms for any participant under the age of 18 years old. If we do not receive your signed forms by the time the registration form closes on July 25th, you will not be considered a registered attendee and not allowed to participate in the campout. We take the wellbeing of our community, staff, and campout caterers very seriously. The Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project is a very small organization, with limited staff capacity, so we ask that all participants will voluntarily assist with enhanced santitation of shared spaces and mask wearing in enclosed congregated spaces in order to make this event a safe and fun weekend for everyone.
More detailed directions to the group camp site and the weekend agenda will be emailed to you a few days before the event.
We look forward to seeing you on July 29 - 31, 2022 at Big Lake!
Big Lake Howliday Campout 2018 Registration
Please use the scroll bar within the registration form to scroll down and answer all of the questions in the form. You will see a blue "Submit" button at the bottom of the form.
Registration Fee is $60.00 per person for the weekend
(which includes six meals and a camp site in the group camp ground. Additional donations and gratuity for our cooks at the campout are appreciated!)
Thank You for Your Order!
We have received your order and will send it out upon receiving payment. You will receive an email with your order summary with total. Please make checks payable to:
Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project
P.O. Box 233
Flagstaff, AZ
86002-0233
Many thanks from Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project!
Echo - The Grand Canyon Wolf
Echo
"because she came back to the Grand Canyon like an Echo does"
Echo is the name given to a 3 year old, female Northern gray wolf who traveled hundreds of miles from the area where she was captured and collared near Cody, Wyoming, to the North Kaibab Plateau by the North Rim of the Grand Canyon. She was sighted by many lucky residents, Grand Canyon National Park staff, and tourists visiting the area in northern Arizona where she roamed in October and November 2014. She had made an incredible dispersal journey, likely in search of a mate and a territory to call her own. But she was the first, and only wolf to be in that part of Arizona in over 70 years, so she traveled on, and met her tragic fate by the bullet from a hunter's gun near Beaver, Utah, on December 28, 2014.
Echo's story was an inspiration for us all. She came to the excellent wolf habitat of the Grand Canyon region, and hopefully marked a trail for other dispersing wolves to follow. This page is a dedication to her memory, and a tribute to her life.
Photos of Echo by AZGFD.
Read News Articles and Press Releases about her Life:
Wolf-like animal seen roaming in northern Arizona (October 30, 2014)
Gray Wolf Spotted in Grand Canyon for First Time in Decades? (November 1, 2014)
Gray wolves return to Grand Canyon? (November 15, 2014)
Press Release: DNA Tests Confirm First Wolf in Over 70 years is Living near Grand Canyon's North Rim (November 21, 2014)
News Release: Canid North of Grand Canyon Confirmed to be a Rocky Mountain Gray Wolf (November 21, 2014)
Gray Wolf Near Grand Canyon's North Rim Endured Long, Harrowing Journey
(November 24, 2014)
Press Release: Grand Canyon Wolf Named "Echo" in World-wide Contest (December 11, 2014)
Hoooowl no! Canyon wolf may have been killed (December 30, 2014)
OPINION: Who has lived long enough to listen objectively to the howl of a wolf?
(December 31, 2014)
Press Release: Confirmed - Echo, the First Wolf in Over 70 years at Grand Canyon, Is Dead (February 11, 2015)
Wolf killed in Utah was animal from rare Arizona sighting (February 11, 2015)
Lessons From the Brief, Lonesome Life of Echo the Wolf (February 18, 2015)
Opinion: The wolf's journey ends in Utah (March 8, 2015)
Press Release: Investigation Complete for Wolf Killed in Utah (July 9, 2015)
No charges against Utah cougar hunter who killed Echo the wandering wolf: "I had a shot and took it." (July 9, 2015)
Utah hunter who killed gray wolf won't be charged (July 9, 2015)
Op-ed: Hunter's story of wolf killing is highly dubious (September 5, 2015)
The Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project is excited to help support the work of artists, Sky Black and the Mural Mice, R. E. Wall and Margaret Dewar, as their fiscal agent for fundraising to paint Phase II of the Sound of Flight Mural on the Orpheum Theater in downtown Flagstaff, Arizona. Phase II of the mural will feature a Grand Canyon scene with the Grand Canyon wolf, Echo, standing on the rim of the canyon. Echo's memory will continue to be honored for many years to come and help raise awareness for wolf recovery in the Grand Canyon region as a permanent part of this mural. Read the Mural Mice Newsletter for more information about the Sound of Flight Mural project.
Visit the Sound of Flight website
Mural Dedication Ceremony
Saturday, November 7, 2015 from 2:00 - 5:00 pm
at the mural wall on the east side of the Orpheum Theater
15 W. Aspen Ave., Flagstaff, AZ
Read the Public Service Announcement about the Mural Dedication.
Join the Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project at the mural dedication ceremony as we celebrate the artists and their amazing mural with an afternoon of food, refreshments and entertainment.
Special thanks for the funding provided by the BBB Revenues from the City of Flagstaff and the Flagstaff Arts Council to the Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project on behalf of the Mural Mice for the fabulous Phase II of the Sound of Flight Mural!
The Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project was happy to be a part of the Mural Benefit Party on June 19, 2015 at 7:00 pm at the Orpheum Theater!
Your Donation was Cancelled
Your donation to the Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project was cancelled. We assure you that Paypal did not charge your credit/debit card or take any money from your Paypal account. You do not need to set up a Paypal account to make an online donation through our website. If you have any questions about making a donation, please feel free to contact us at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or (928) 202-1325. We are grateful for your interest in supporting the Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project!
Donations may also be mailed to us at:
Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project
P.O. Box 233
Flagstaff, AZ 86002
Return to our Donate Now page.
All contributions to the Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project may be considered tax deductible. The GCWRP is a 501(c)3 tax exempt organization and our federal tax identification number is 47-1110067. Please consult with your tax advisor. Thank you.
Thank You for Your Donation
Thank you for your donation to the Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project. We deeply appreciate this contribution and your support of our mission to restore wolves and ecological health in the Grand Canyon region!
All contributions to the Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project may be considered tax deductible. The GCWRP is a 501(c)3 tax exempt organization and our federal tax identification number is 47-1110067. Please consult with your tax advisor. Thank you.
Thank You for Your Order!
We have received your order and you should receive confirmation of payment from Stripe via email as well as an invoice from us describing your order. We will ship your order as soon as possible. Thanks for helping the Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project.
Order Complete
Thank you for your order. An invoice was emailed to you. Please send payment to the address below:
Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project
P.O. Box 233
Flagstaff, AZ
86002
If you have any questions or concerns, please contact us :)
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. - (928) 202-1325
Art and Photo Credits
Terms & Conditions
Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project maintains this website (the "Website") for your information and communication. Please feel free to browse the Website. Your access to and use of the Website is subject to the following terms and conditions ("Terms") as well as all applicable laws. By accessing and browsing the Website, you accept, without limitation or qualification, the Terms and Conditions and our Online Privacy Policy. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE WITH THESE TERMS, DO NOT USE THIS WEB SITE .
- You should assume that everything you see or read on the Website is copyrighted unless otherwise noted and may not be used except as provided in these Terms and Conditions or in the text on the Website without the written permission of Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project. You may download material displayed on the Website for non-commercial, personal use only provided you also retain all copyright and other proprietary notices contained on the materials. You may not, however, distribute, modify, transmit, reuse, re-post, or use the content of the Website for public or commercial purposes without Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project's written permission. Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project neither represents nor warrants that your use of materials displayed on the Website will not infringe the rights of third parties not owned or affiliated with Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project.
- While Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project uses reasonable efforts to include accurate and up to date information on the Website, Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project makes no warranties or representations as to its accuracy. Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project assumes no liability or responsibility for any errors or omissions in the content of the Website.
- Your use of and browsing the Website are at your own risk. Neither Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project nor any other party involved in creating, producing, or delivering the Website is liable for any direct, special, incidental, consequential, indirect, punitive damages, or any damages whatsoever arising out of your access to, or use of, the Website. Without limiting the foregoing, everything on the Website is provided to you "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, OR NON-INFRINGEMENT. Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project also assumes no responsibility, and shall not be liable for, any damages to, or viruses that may infect, your computer equipment or other property on account of your access to use of, or browsing in the Website or your downloading of any materials, data, text, /images, video, or audio from the Website.
- The links within the Website will let you leave Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project's Website. The linked websites are not under the control of Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project, and Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project is not responsible for the contents of any linked website or any link contained in a linked Website, or any changes or updates to such websites. Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project is providing these links to you only as a convenience, and the inclusion of any link does not imply endorsement by Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project of the third party websites.
- You will indemnify Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project for any cost, expenses, attorney fees and other losses as a result of your unauthorized use or misuse of the Site and the content on the Site.
- We are not responsible for breaches or lapses in online security and do not assume liability for improper use of any of your personal information obtained by a third party as a result of this breach or lapse.
- Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project may at any time revise these Terms and Conditions by updating this posting and may also make changes to the content or any links at anytime. You are bound by any such revisions and should therefore periodically visit this page to review the then current Terms and Conditions.
Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project's Online Privacy Policy
For information to Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project's Online Privacy Policy please click here.
How To Contact Us.
If you have questions about this Online Privacy Policy or this Website, please contact the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. or click here to go to our Contact Us page.
Privacy Policy
We have created this statement to demonstrate our firm commitment to your privacy. We do not collect personally identifying information about you when you visit our site, unless you choose to provide such information to us. Providing such information is strictly voluntary. This policy is your guide to how we will handle information we learn about you from your visit to our Website.
- Reading or Downloading
We collect and store only the following information about you: the name of the domain from which you access the Internet (for example, aol.com, if you are connecting from an America Online account, or nau.edu if you are connecting from the Northern Arizona University domain), the date and time you access our site, and the Internet address of the Website from which you linked to our site.
We use the information we collect to measure the number of visitors to the different sections of our site, and to help us make our site more useful to visitors. - Online Profile Updates and Donations
If you complete a volunteer or contact form and share your personally identifying information, this information will be used only to provide you with more targeted content. We may use your contact information to send further information about our organization or to contact you when necessary. You may always opt-out of receiving future mailings; see the "Opt Out" section below. - Sending us an Email
You also may decide to send us personally identifying information, for example, in an electronic mail message containing a question or comment, or by filling out a Web form that provides us this information. We use personally identifying information from email primarily to respond to your requests. We may forward your email to other employees who are better able to answer you questions. We may also use your email to contact you in the future about our programs that may be of interest.
We want to be very clear: We will not obtain personally identifying information about you when you visit our site, unless you choose to provide such information to us. Providing such information is strictly voluntary. Except as might be required by law, we do not share any information we receive with any outside parties.
If you sign up for one of our email lists, we will only send you the kinds of information you have requested. We won't share your name or email address with any outside parties. - Postal Addresses
If you supply us with your postal address online you may receive periodic mailing from us with information on new products and services or upcoming events. You may also receive mailings from other reputable and like-minded nonprofit organizations. You can, however, have your name put on our do-not-share list by emailing the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. - Kids and Privacy
For children who visit our site, special rules apply. We do not request personal information about children, such as first and last name or street address and city. When kids send email to us, their online contact information (email address) is not used to re-contact them and is not maintained in retrievable form. - Opt-Out or Change Your Contact Information
Our site provides users the opportunity to opt-out of receiving communications from us through email and text request or via our marketing system. You may choose to receive only specific communications or none at all. You may also update your contact information previously provided to us by contacting our This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.. You can not remove yourself from our database, but you can prevent unwanted communication.
Use of Links
Throughout our Web pages, we provide links to other servers which may contain information of interest to our readers. We take no responsibility for, and exercise no control over, the organizations, views, or accuracy of the information contained on other servers.
Creating a text link from your Website to our site does not require permission. If you have a link you'd like us to consider adding to our Website, please send an email to the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. with the subject "Link request."
Use of Text and Images
If you would like to publish information that you find on our Website, please send your request to Public Relations. Where text or images are posted on our site with the permission of the original copyright holder, a copyright statement appears at the bottom of the page.
Information about using our logo and images is available from our Director's Office.
Accessibility
This Website is designed to be accessible to all visitors. We welcome your comments. If you have suggestions on how to make the site more accessible, please contact us the This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..
Changes to the Privacy Policy
If we make material change to this privacy policy, we will post the change at least fifteen days before the change takes effect and the change will apply only to information that we receive thereafter. This privacy policy takes effect on January 1, 2009.
Questions About our Policies
If you have any questions about this privacy statement, the practices of this site, or your dealings with this Website, you can contact us at:
Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project
P.O. Box 233
Flagstaff, AZ 86002
(928) 202-1325
Email: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.
2005-2007 Project Update
What we did in 2007
- Hired new Project Coordinator, Paula Lewis. We thank Nicole Corbo for her dedication and commitment over the last several years.
- Flagstaff hosted the Defenders of Wildlife Annual Wolf Conference
- Met with Dr. Tuggle, US Fish and Wildlife Service Regional Director of the Southwest to discuss the current issues facing the Mexican gray wolves in the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area
- Several Letters to the Editor in the Arizona Daily Sun were published by Grand Canyon Wolf Recovery Project's dedicated volunteers and members
- Met with Steve Martin, Superintendent of Grand Canyon National Park
- Hosted our very first "Wolves Without Boundaries" Fundraising event.
- Op-ed Article in Arizona Daily sun by Paula Lewis, Project Director of GCWRP
- Educated over 300 students both at high school level and at NAU
- Attended several community related events
- Participated in the National Environmental Act Policy (NEPA) scoping process with the US Fish and Wildlife Service. Over 100 community members showed up to support Mexcian gray wolf recovery! Thank you!
- Continued with our Summer Campaign and raised awareness of our work towards wolf recovery in the Grand Canyon.
What we did in 2006
- Worked with almost 40 volunteers, who dedicated their time on the north and south rims of Grand Canyon and helped educate the public about the importance of wolves.
- Engaged the public and sent over 1,000 post cards to the Southwest Regional Director for the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service.
- Presented at the Grand Canyon National Park Service Interpretive Ranger Training in the spring.
- Attended public meetings and submitted comments to USFWS and AZGFD, regarding Mexican gray wolf recovery and the final 5-Year Review Document and proposed changes to the Standard Operating Procedures.
- Organized tabling events and presentations throughout AZ to raise awareness about the history and future potential for wolves in the Grand Canyon Ecoregion.
- Worked with Defenders of Wildlife to host an Endangered Species Act activist training event in Flagstaff.
- Presented at the 2006 Bioneers Conference in Flagstaff.
- Featured in the December edition of Mountain Living Magazine.
- Updated and improved our website!
What we did in 2005
- GCWRP became an official coalition through the creation of a cooperative agreement between the member organizations.
- Designed, printed, and began distributing our brochure with a generous grant from the Fund for Wild Nature.
- Instituted a state-wide poll through the Social Research Laboratory at Northern Arizona University, which found that 81% of those polled support wolf migration to northern AZ.
- Organized tabling events in Flagstaff, AZ to raise awareness and generate letters to oppose politically fueled, proposed changes to wolf recovery efforts in the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area.
- Attended public meetings and submitted comments to USFWS and AZGFD, regarding a one year proposed moratorium on new releases of wolves to the Blue Range Wolf Recovery Area and proposed changes to the Standard Operating Procedures.
- Worked in conjunction with Northern Arizona University to promote a slide show and lecture given by Doug Scott of Yellowstone National Park, to highlight the findings discussed in his book, Decade of the Wolf.
- Continuing work on proposals for roadless areas to be submitted to the Forest Service for the 2006 revision of their management plan for the Mogollon Rim.
- Visited public schools in Flagstaff, Arizona during National Wolf Awareness Week (Oct.16-22) and distributed information to local businesses and governmental agencies in an effort to raise awareness.
- Met with Grand Canyon National Park officials and members of the Grand Canyon Trust to discuss the landscape for wolf recovery in the Grand Canyon Ecoregion.
- Organized and attended NGO Wolf Summit, which included members from organizations working toward wolf recovery in AZ, UT, CO, and NM, in order to develop a comprehensive plan for recovery to the western US.