EVENTS
To increase awareness and understanding of coyotes, wolves, bears, bobcats and other North American carnivores, Project Coyote representatives and advisory board members provide presentations, workshops, film screenings, and innovative educational events throughout the year nationwide — from California to New Hampshire and points in between! Check the calendar below for an event near you.
Events range from Project Coyote-sponsored programs to conferences where one of our representatives or advisory board members is a guest speaker, session organizer or moderator.
We also provide public screenings/post-film discussions of various films and documentaries including American Coyote ~ Still Wild at Heart, Cull of the Wild ~ The Truth Behind Trapping, and more.
If you are interested in having one of our representatives or advisory board members speak at a particular function or before your community and/or provide a film screening/discussion, please contact us at info@projectcoyote.org.
What: “Coyotes in Our Midst” – Learn about coyote behavior, biology and the beneficial role they play in our urban ecosystems. A short film will be shown then discussion about how to avoid conflicts between domestic animals and coyotes in urban and rural areas. Lots of tips and tools for coexisting.
Date & Location: July 9th at Castlewood Canyon State Park, located at 2989 Colorado Hwy 83, near Franktown, CO. Phone 303-688-5242 for directions
Time: 10:00 a.m. until noon
ach year, Teranga Ranch organizes a big community event that centers around animals. There are wildlife presentations, animal adoptions, and outreach booths run by animal organizations. There is also arts and crafts vendors, a carnival and live music.
This year we will be doing a special Ecosystem Engineer Bracelet, where children can ‘earn’ wildlife charms made by Mike Warner of Wildbryde jewelry by learning how beavers help other species. The free activity will be available for the first 150 children. Don’t be late as this is always our most popular event of the day!
Be sure to visit the new Beaver Mural recently completed by artist Mario Alfaro. What else happens at a beaver festival? This article from the National Wildlife Foundation should give you an idea. Or maybe you should just come see for yourself. Already been to a beaver festival? Come again! You won’t believe how much we’ve grown.
Please join San Francisco Animal Care and Control, San Francisco Recreation and Parks, and Project Coyote for an informational talk and workshop.
This meeting will be held in the Buena Vista Park sitting area located on the SE perimeter of the park, directly across from Buena Vista Ave from the Buena Vista Manor House (399 Buena Vista Ave East).
Download the PDF with more details here.
What: “Living With Coyotes”
Date and Location: August 27th at the City of Albuquerque Elena Gallegos Open Space Amphitheater in the foothills of the magnificent Sandia Mountains
Time: 7:00 p.m.
You can enjoy the stunning sunset while learning about coyote behavior, biology and the beneficial role they play in our urban ecosystems; how to avoid conflicts between domestic animals, and why lethal control does not work. We’ll have plenty of tips and tools for coexisting and literature for you to take home.
Please join us for an educational forum about coexisting with coyotes, highlighting the partnership between Project Coyote, Marin Humane Society, and Marin County Parks. These agencies came together and created the Marin Coyote Coalition to help coordinate the ways in which all of our local agencies respond to concerns about coyotes. One of the most important elements of this coalition has been educating residents about properly coexisting with coyotes.
Please join Chris Schadler as she presents “Becoming Wolf: Eastern Coyote in New England” at the Hollis Conservation Commission Lawrence Barn, Hollis NH at 2pm.
Please join Chris Schadler for the AMC Fall Hiking Week, as she presents her speech on “Becoming Wolf: Eastern Coyote in New England”. The event will be held in the Evergreen Room.