Lompoc & santa ynez valley September 2020
THANK YOU TO OUR PARTNERS NatureTrack
The Cypress Gallery - LVAA 119 E Cypress Ave, Lompoc p. 805-737-1129 www.lompocart.org
Fostering a lifelong fascina on with nature
PO Box 953, Los Olivos p. 805-886-2047 sue@naturetrack.org www.naturetrack.org
Gallery Los Olivos
Standing Sun Winery
Lompoc Mural Society
Sugarless Treats, non-fattening jewelry and glass
2920 Grand Ave, Los Olivos p. 805-688-7517 gallerylosolivos@gmail.com www.gallerylosolivos.com
PO Box 2813, Lompoc p. 805-733-4282 www.lompocmurals.com
Lompoc Theater Project p. 805-380-6777 info@lompoctheatre.org
Vicki Andersen
www.vickiandersen.com
Neil Andersson
92 2nd St - Unit D, Buellton p. 805-904-8072 john@standingsunwines.com www.standingsunwines.com
Joellen Chrones p. 805-588-2261
Wildling Museum of Art & Nature 1511-B Mission Dr, Solvang p. 805-688-1082 info@wildlingmuseum.org www.wildlingmuseum.org
T&T Local Artisans Enterprise p. 805-680-8911 laegallery@gmail.com
www.neilandersson.com
The Lompoc Valley Art Association is closely monitoring the outbreak of corona virus and have as our top priority the health and safety of our visitors to the Cypress Gallery, artists, and our community. We are taking steps to comply with all mandates from our health officials. Please check our Facebook page often as things are changing swiftly. We will post updates in regards to our events and exhibits as they unveil.
Check out the Lompoc Valley Art Association Website at www.LompocArt.org
SUBSCRIBE HERE to MONTHLY eZINE
We are proud to count non-profit organizations and businesses as community partner members. Together, we advocate for each other, local artists, and collaborate on projects to create an enriching environment for the Arts Community within Lompoc and the Santa Ynez Valley.
Lompoc Art Hunt
September Featured Artist: Liz Poulin Alvarez Lompoc Valley Art Association
Gallery Los Olivos
Lompoc Mural Society
Visitfascination us online with at: www.wildlingmuseum Fostering a lifelong nature NatureTrack
Museum of Art & Nature Explore the online gallery and WildlingWildling Art at Home reception at www.wildlingm Upcycling: Toilet Paper Tubes photography-competition.
In our latest episode of Wildling Art From Home, learn how to make a natural loom with items from your own backyard! The Wildling’s assistant Jake Abraham walks through this easy step-by-step guide perfect for the whole family.
SOLVANG
LOMPOC Lompoc Mural Society Cypress Gallery Lompoc Art Hunt
Please note that this Zoom event attendees.
Wildling Museum of Art & Nature
All you need are large sticks, yarn or twine, and natural materials for weaving (we used found leaves and flowers) to get started! Watch our video to get started.
LOS OLIVOS
Gallery Los Olivos NatureTrack & NatureTrack Film Festival
For more museum video content, including more activities and past museum webinars, visit our YouTube channel: www.youtube.com/user/WildlingArtMuseum
Critters of the Tri-County Region New on the website! Check out our incredible photographer semi-finalists in our online gallery showcasing Critters of the Tri-County Region.
ON THE COVER
We look forward to celebrating our talented 2020 photography competition participants in a special Zoom reception on Friday, September 11th from 4 - 5 p.m.! Juror and professional photographer Nic Stover will be there to share remarks on his top award winners. Be sure to register for our awards reception to virtually toast to our winners!
Tom Chrones, Mission Foundation Member of the Lompoc Valley Art Association. All Artwork and Photos shown remain the sole property of the artist. No reproductions are permitted without express permission from the Lompoc Valley Art Association and/or the artist.
Lompoc Valley Art Association 119 E. Cypress Ave Lompoc, CA 93436 805.737.1129
The Lompoc Valley Art Association is a 501(c)(3) non-profit, supporting the arts within the Lompoc & Santa Ynez Valley through affordable opportunities for artists to show and sell artwork, collaborations with non-profits and businesses on programs and events, investment in higher education for high school art students through scholarships, and a variety of outreach avenues, such as this digital arts magazine, that bring greater awareness to the cultural heart beat of the area.
Detail: Sherrie Chavez, Mustard Hills Entrance to Lompoc
LOMPOC MURAL SOCIETY www.lompocmurals.com BY KAREN OSLAND
Fields of Gold-When Lompoc was the Mustard Seed Capital of the World
Title: Fields of Gold-When Lompoc was the Mustard Seed Capital of the World Year: 2004
Location: 117½ South H St. (south wall) Master Artist: Colleen Goodwin-Chronister Description: This Mural depicts the mustard seed harvest in the Lompoc Valley around 1910. “Murals beautify cities and bring culture to the people.” Master artist Goodwin-Chronister The Fields of Gold Mural was the13th Mural In a Day. It was created during the Old Towne Faire held Saturday, September 19, 2004. This Faire was held from 1992 to 2005. The Faire was family oriented and featured food booths, a pinewood derby competition, bike rodeo, a pooch parade, dog show, farmers market, art show, arts and crafts, bed race, ice cream socials, antique car shows, and barbeques. When the Mural in a Day was part of the Faire, the event would officially start at 8 am when the volunteer artists and master artist began painting the Mural. They would complete the Mural at 5pm. The dedication of the mural was the traditional end to the activities of the Olde Towne Faire The artists were recognized with a certificate and the dedication was followed by a “We can’t believe we did it party.” Ann Thompson was the Mural in a Day Project Chair for the Fields of Gold Mural and the Participating Artists were: Vicki Anderson, Katrina Bishop, James Cochrane, Hal Dayton, Marti Post, Linda Gooch, Elizabeth Monks-Hack, Linda Lamb, Carol Olivieira, Russell Shinpo, Bill Smith, Nita Streetman, Nadi Spencer, Dee Sudbury, Ann Thompson, Mara Walton, Warren Chronister. The Master Artist was Colleen Goodwin-Chronister. Chronister was also the Master Artist for two other Lompoc Murals, Lompoc Vintage (2008) and Monarch Magic (2006).
Participating artists
To create a mural takes far more than just a day. An original 15inch by 48-inch scale painting was first painted by the master artist. It took her week to design the work and a week to draw it out. Larry Bishop then built and prepared the wall for the mural.
MURAL CONT...
Start of mural
Scaffolding
Almost done
Installing restored panels
Transparencies of sections of the original work were the made and a light projector was used to superimpose the painting images onto large wood panels. An outline of the murals images was then drawn onto the panels by the master artist. These were painted in with acrylic paint by the master and participating artists during the mural in a day event. The brightly colored backdrop on the12-foot by 38-foot mural has a deep blue sky and fields of yellow mustard. Inside the arched picture frame is the threshing equipment, bags of mustard seed, horse drawn carriage and equipment used to harvest the seeds. Master artist Goodwin-Chronister stated that “everything done inside the frame was done in brownish colors to depict a picture taken at the turn of the century” (Lompoc Record Sept 19, 2004.) An early Santa Barbara Newspaper article titled “How Lompoc’s Mustard Crop Is Prepared For The Market” describes the work required collect and bag the tons of mustard seed that were harvested every year. “The mustard is cut with an old-fashioned self-rake reaper and left in bunches to dry. A space about 10-feet square is cleared of the stubble and smoothed down until it is level and hard. Over this is spread a “mustard sheet,” or great canvas. The mustard is thrown on this sheet and a huge roller drawn by a span of horses is driven over it until the seed is all thrashed out. This process is kept up until a great pile of seed is collected in the center of the sheet, when all hands are called in and the sifting begins. This is sometimes done with a fanning mill but quite often a “hand shaker’’ is used. The cleaned seed is then put in bags holding about 100 pounds each. ( Santa Barbara Morning Press, Sunday, August 4, 1912) The Fields of Gold Mural was originally placed on the north wall of the building at126 South H St. Several years later it was removed at the property owners request. At that time there was no available wall on which to install the mural, so it was placed into storage.
Mustard harvest, left side of mural
Cleaning mustard seed 1911, right side of mural
Mustard harvest, full crew and families
Restoration 2010. Ann Thompson
In June 2009, the space on the south side of the Roskowski building at 117½ South H St became available. The mural was removed from storage and placed on this wall, which is across the pocket park from the Price of Freedom mural. Several panels of the mural had deteriorated while in storage and needed to be repainted. Artist, Ann Thomson the Mural Society’s official curator spent hours mixing paints to be an exact match of original colors of the mural and several months working up on a scaffold to restore this Mural. The mustard plants that were grown for their seed, are not native to California. It is thought that these plants were first brought by the Franciscan Fathers after 1769. If so, they were planted in the Mission kitchen gardens and grown for their seeds to flavor food. The type of mustard that was grown at the Mission is called Black Mustard (Brassica nigra). Each plant produces thousands of seeds, grows well in poor soil, and spreads rapidly. The farmers, who settled in the Lompoc Valley in 1875, found this mustard growing abundantly on the surrounding hillsides and called it “wild mustard”. Early newspaper accounts give vivid descriptions of this early California landscape: “The mustard will attain a height of from twelve to fifteen feet, with a stalk from one and a half to two and a half inches in diameter. To those who do not know the nature and growth of weeds in California the above statement may appear somewhat incredible, but what will strangers say when told that horses have been securely tethered at night with a thirtyfoot rope attached to the stalk of the mustard close down by the root?” ( Santa Barbara Weekly Press, June 16, 1877) “We have passed through a country covered with broad acres of rich farming lands, passed acres and acres of strong, deep, soil, covered with nothing but crops of wild mustard —soil so rich that the mustard has grown up like a forest, shooting up ten, fifteen, and sometimes sixteen or eighteen feet high, and so dense that could our wagon have been
MURAL CONT...
Mustard and barn
Bill Moreson, Wild Mustard
driven even for a few yards into it, it would have been completely hidden from the passer by.” (Santa Barbara Weekly Press July 6, 1878) In1908, an article titled “Cloth of Gold” was printed in the New York Evening Post. It described the view from a train as it went from Point Conception north, to the Surf Station. “I observed rivers and fields of gold. The golden river is the mustard in bloom. Its tufts of blossoms rise, according to season , to a height of from four to six feet. A sold mass of brilliant golden yellow -the most beautiful thing to be seen in California.” (Holder, 1908) Chinese workers took advantage of this wild crop of Black Mustard in the early 1870’s. The Santa Barbara Morning Press reported in August 1876 that Chinese “are gathering mustard seed from some of the wheat fields. They have accumulated several tons. Hundreds of tons might be gathered”, and “Hundreds of acres now ready for the sickle.” The mustard that was deliberately planted by Lompoc Valley farmers was White Mustard (Sinapis alba). However, this mustard was usually referred to as English Mustard or Yellow Mustard. One of the earliest references to English Mustard in the Lompoc valley was in a May 1878 article in the Santa Barbara Morning Press. It reports that” fifty-five acres in the Lompoc /Santa Rita area has been planted to English mustard” and that “John Ball has planted eighty acres of barley, beans, corn and English mustard”. By 1880, English mustard had become one of the Lompoc Valleys principle crops. A 1908 article reported that “Mustard was cultivated and planted by the square mile” and about two thirds of the mustard seed used in this country is raised in the Lompoc Valley. (Holder, 1908) From 1880 into the 1930’s Lompoc produced 90 percent of the mustard seed grown in the United States. Over six thousand acres were planted in mustard, producing seven million pounds of seed. (Lompoc Record Feb. 15, 1951) Mustard plants and Mustard seeds are the centerpiece of two persistent myths, one is local to the Lompoc Valley and the other to California. Myth number one is that during World War One, mustard grown in the Lompoc Valley was used to manufacture deadly mustard gas. Mustard gas was made from a variety of chemicals one of these is sulfur mustard. None of the chemicals were made from any part of the mustard plant including the seeds. The term "mustard gas" comes from the fact that the gas originally had a mustard like smell. ( HISTORYNET) The second myth has several variations, but the basic story is that the Franciscan Fathers scattered mustard seeds along the trail between missions so when the plants grew “the bright yellow flowers “ would help them find their way. The bright yellow flowers would only have been visible during late spring and early summer and since mustard spreads rapidly and soon covers hundreds of acres any clearly marked path would have disappeared after one season. In addition, none of the diaries written by the Fathers mention this method of marking a trail.
I did find a second legend regarding the origin of the mustard plants in California that I personally find more reasonable and satisfying. It is titled the “Two Worst Pests, Malva and Mustard”, and was printed in a Santa Barbara Newspaper in 1878. “There is an old tradition current in Southern California concerning our two worst pests, malva and mustard. It is said that thirty years ago, after the discovery of gold in California, and its transfer from Mexican to American form of government, the Mission fathers, who had so long ruled the land according to their will, found themselves not only stripped of all political authority, but also of a great portion of their revenue, and the majority of them determined to leave the land in a body. It is said that 44 of these priests assembled at one of the Missions in Southern California, and after arranging their affairs in regard to the Missions as best they might, they started to journey on foot to Mexico, but ere they departed they left a curse on the land which they declared had been seized by the despoilers of their holy church; and as a lasting curse to the rich soil they sowed malva and mustard seed in the rich valleys, all the way from San Luis Obispo to San Diego. Such is the legend now told (and believed by some to be true) of the origin of the malva; and it is truly a curse, and should be avoided when possible” (R. Lyon. Santa Barbara Weekly Press, April 20, 1878) References: https://www.colleengoodwinchronister.com/home HISTORYNET https://www.historynet.com/poison-gas-comes-to-america.htm. Accessed Sept. 1, 2020 Holder, Charles, Article in The Evening Post, New York, June 13, 1908, “Cloth of Gold”. Jepson Flora Project (eds.) 2014. Jepson eFlora, http://ucjeps.berkeley.edu/IJM.html, accessed on August 15, 2020. Lompoc Record Feb. 15, 1951 Lompoc Record, Wed. September 15, 2004 Lompoc Record Tues. Jan 12, 2010 Lyon, R. Santa Barbara Weekly Press, April 20, 1878 Prance, Ghillean 2005 The Cultural History of Plants. Sir Ghillean Prance Consulting Editor and Mark Nesbitt, Scientific Editor. Routledge, New York, and London.
C a l i f o r n i a L a n d m a r k s Local Artist:
Liz Poulin Alvarez
Cypress Cypress Galler Gallery, y, 119 119 E. E. Cypress Cypress Ave. Ave. September September 1-28, 1-28, 2020 2020
THE CYPRESS GALLERY
119 E. Cypress Ave, Lompoc • Open Tue–Sun, 12-4PM www.lompocvalleyartassociation.com
BLUE SKIES • A WALK THROUGH THE CYPRESS BY ELIZABETH MONKS HACK I’m looking for blue skies, nothing but blue skies this month! We’ve had gloomy gray, smoky gray, smoky brown and particle pink too often this summer. I’m very happy to report there are currently blue skies in the Cypress Gallery, along with sunlit trees and flowers and fields of gold. Featured artist Liz Poulin Alvarez generously bestows them upon us in her show “California Landmarks,” a collection of places she has visited and interpreted through the art of painting. Using plein-air techniques and a variety of media, Alvarez has created an expressive world of light, color, memory and emotion. Her broad, expertly placed brush strokes magically coalesce before our eyes, into oceans, trees, hills and architecture. Alvarez has years of fine art education and practice that inform her skill. A graduate of the prestigious Rhode Island School of Design, she earned an MFA from the Whitecliffe College of Art and Design in New Zealand. The paintings display impressionist accuracy and freshness of vision, but her style Liz Poulin Alvarez, Montana de Oro: Picnic in June never displaces her involvement with time and place. In the brilliant “Eastern Sierra Juniper” we feel as if we stand before a twisted tree bathed in sunlight, experiencing it the way the artist has felt it. Alvarez composes her subjects with an immediacy that involves the viewer, and a sense of joy pervades many of the works. The tiny beach umbrella in the foreground of “Montana de Oro: Picnic in June” invites us for a walk along the shore, and I definitely wanted to join the table in “Solvang: Picnic in the Park.” Alvarez is currently teaching art at Lompoc High School; how fortunate for her students! In the main gallery, feast your eyes on the azure heavens in Neil Andersson’s large oil “Fields and Blue Sky.” Your mood will be set on good for the day. Betsee Talavera has contributed charming, intimate gouache paintings of our local landscapes, of which “Jalama Needle” is my favorite. The lovely photograph by Lynda Schiff, “Top of the Morning” is a worm’s eye perspective of redwood trees soaring into blue, sun-pierced sky. Julia Nash often creates haunting works, and her “The Rogue” is no exception, depicting a large-eyed gentleman in a yellow straw hat, set against a cobalt blue background. And if you are so ready for the month of fall, two watercolors have been created for you. Rosalea Greenwood’s “Fall Colors” and Diane Atturio’s “English Ivy” depict sensitively painted leaves placed on a dark background. Fine art craft is also in abundance in the gallery this month. Glass painter Kristine Keely has created several exceptional art pieces, including the magnificent glass wall sculpture “Red Poppy.” Work by gourd artist Tammy Evans is a visual oracle of fine carving, embellishments and Native American themes.
Lynda Schiff, Top of the Morning
So whether or not you are in love, blue skies are here to stay, at least for the month of September. Along with masterful art we offer artistic gifts and cards to brighten your day. Cypress Gallery has been made as safe as possible for visitors, with all recommended requirements and restrictions in place. Our gallery hours have been reduced to Saturdays and Sundays during the month of August. Call for special appointments. The Cypress Gallery is operated by members of the Lompoc Valley Art Association, a 501c(3) non-profit organization committed to expanding and supporting access and exposure to the arts in the Lompoc and Santa Ynez Valley. Find us online at: <https://lompocart.org> <www.facebook.com/CypressGallery/> and our eZine at <https://issuu.com/ santaynezvalleyarts>
CYPRESS GALLERY EXHIBITING NOW
Here are a few selections of artwork for show and sale currently at the Cypress Gallery.
Liz Alvarez, Montana del Oro. Oil $500
Liz Alvarez, Solvang Spring Fields. Oil $199
Liz Alvarez, Montana del Oro. Oil NFS
Liz Alvarez, Nojoqui Road. Acrylic $600
Liz Alvarez, Eastern Sierra Juniper. Oil $500
Liz Alvarez, Live Oak. Acrylic $150
Liz Alvarez, Solvang Santa Inez Mission. Acrylic $400
Kathy Badrak, Untitled. Mixed media $275
Lee Hill, Fishing Hole. Acrylic $160
Neil Andersson, River View Park. Oil $375
Kristine Kelly. Various works of glass
Neil Andersson, Field with Blue Sky. Oil $1450
Betsee Talvera, High Surf Advisory. Acrylic $350
Tom Chrones, Mission Foundation. Photo $85
Tom Chrones, Lompoc Sweet Peas. Photo $85
Chris Jeszeck, Happy Trails. Acrylic $90
Rosalea Greenwood, Fall Colors. Watercolor $375
Kristine Kelly, Sierra Sunrise. Glass $175
Kristine Kelly, Red Poppy. Glass $225
Diane Atturio, English Ivy. Watercolor $350
Tammy Evans, Quiet Grace. Gourd $800
Tammy Evans, Bear Pot. Gourd $210
Vicki Andersen, New Chinese Gate. Acrylic $950
Vicki Andersen, Capistrano Bougainvillea. Acrylic $800
Claudette Carlton, Out to Pasture. Watercolor $165
Lynda Schiff, Top of the Morning. Photo $125
Bill Morson, Harvest Time. Metal print $160
Julia Nash, Girl Meditating. Oil $400
Carol Kemp, Angel Eyes. Watercolor $525
Toni Zybell. Various gift items
Joellen Chrones
Sugarless Treats, non-fattening jewelry, glass And more
Joellenâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s work is available when The Wildling Museum in Solvang opens,
The Cypress Gallery, 119 East Cypress Avenue, Lompoc (open now Sat. 11 to 5 and Sun. 2 to 5), T & T Gallery in Los Alamos. (open Wed. through Sun. 11 to 6). Or contact
me to order and ship. Items are one of a kind. If you have a question about any of my work, contact me directly at 805-733-2801 or 805-588-2261.
Neil Andersson landscape paintings
"Botanical Garden II" oil on panel 10" x 10"
neilandersson.com gallerylosolivos.com lompocart.org
jeffreymoosegallery.com americanartco.com
Vicki Andersen vickiandersen.com My work can be seen at:
Cypress Gallery, 119 E. Cypress Ave., Lompoc, CA Gallery Los Olivos, 2920 Grand Ave., Los Olivos, CA Alexander& Wayne/Arthur Earl wine tasting rooms, 2922 Grand Ave., LosOlivos, CA My studio by appointment -(805)588-3459 Follow me on:
Instagram - @vickiangelo Facebook - @VickiAndersenArt
SAVE THE DATE FOR THE RETURN OF THE GREAT LOMPOC ART HUNT! OCTOBER 28–30, 2020
Art
Art Hunt is Happening!
Ar
t
Art
Lompoc Valley Art Association is sponsoring a community event October 28 through October 30, 2020. We are pleased that the Art Club from Lompoc High School will be joining us in hiding the art pieces. We invite the community to “find” over 200 pieces of artwork that will be “hidden” throughout the community of Lompoc. Participants can keep the artwork that they find. Social media will be used to give people clues as to where the art pieces can be found. The event will consist of 3 days of finding the art Guidelines – Open to everyone – all ages. Participants are not limited to the number of art pieces they can find and keep. A picture of each artwork and a clue as to where it can be found will be posted to the Cypress Gallery Facebook event page Lompoc Art Hunt. So, make sure you register on the event page before the Hunt starts. Different pics of art work will be “hidden” throughout the 3 days of the event. Keep checking back during each day for new clues! They will not be hidden in private residences and each art work will be in plain sight. Each art work will have a tag stating “I’m Yours” Find your art and post back in the Facebook Art Hunt event that you found it!
Visit us online at: www.wildlingmuseum.org/virtual-visit
Wildling Art at Home Upcycling: Toilet Paper Tubes In our latest episode of Wildling Art From Home, learn how to make a natural loom with items from your own backyard! The Wildlingâ&#x20AC;&#x2122;s assistant Jake Abraham walks through this easy step-by-step guide perfect for the whole family. All you need are large sticks, yarn or twine, and natural materials for weaving (we used found leaves and flowers) to get started! Watch our video to get started. For more museum video content, including more activities and past museum webinars, visit our YouTube channel: www.youtube.com/user/WildlingArtMuseum
Critters of the Tri-County Region New on the website! Check out our incredible photographer semi-finalists in our online gallery showcasing Critters of the Tri-County Region. We look forward to celebrating our talented 2020 photography competition participants in a special Zoom reception on Friday, September 11th from 4 - 5 p.m.! Juror and professional photographer Nic Stover will be there to share remarks on his top award winners. Be sure to register for our awards reception to virtually toast to our winners!
Explore the online gallery and register for our Zoom reception at www.wildlingmuseum.org/news/2020photography-competition. Please note that this Zoom event is limited to the first 100 attendees.
GALLERY LOS OLIVOS
GALLERY LOS OLIVOS REOPENS SEPTEMBER 3! Welcome back to Gallery Los Olivos. Our first live exhibit since March opens September 3- 28th We reopen with an exhibit â&#x20AC;&#x153;Simple Pleasuresâ&#x20AC;? showcasing oil painter, Cheryl Ambrecht and jewelry artist Patricia Watkins. Cheryl Ambrecht is an accomplished oil painter exhibiting a must -see palette of still life, florals, and plein air. Patricia uses materials of lasting quality in her creations in sterling, silver, and gold filled, and gemstones like pearls, jade, jasper, agates and Czech beads. Her style is unique and classical. Patricia will be at the Gallery 10- 5pm September 12, 20th and the 26th The Gallery is following Santa Barbara County guidelines for covid safety and information regarding precautions are posted on our front doors. Gallery Los Olivos 2920 Grand Ave Los Olivos www.GalleryLosOlivos.com 805 688-7517 The Gallery is open Thursday- Monday 10 - 5pm Closed Tuesdays and Wednesdays
Since 2011 NatureTrack has made
learning outside, where science literally comes alive, a reality for teachers and their students throughout Santa Barbara County. This Los Olivos based 501(c)3 nonprofit was providing 1/2-day field trips to K-12 students at NO COST to schools. Then COVID-19 hit and the world as we know it changed, but the mission of NatureTrack has not.
NatureTrack has pivoted operations from field to film and continues to foster a lifelong fascination with nature through the use of virtual hikes and activities that motivate kids to get outside, when and where it's safe, to explore nature in their own "backyard". We all have been "Called-to-Action" these last few months; NatureTrack is no exception. When future generations look back at 2020 they will find our commitment to the students and the environment never waivered.
I didn't know nature could be that FUN!!! 3rd grader, Los Berros Elementary
Your donation today, will help us "track" by film or field into tomorrow! By the way, come "track" with us; volunteer and enjoy nature like never before.
B E C A U S E N AT U R E W I L L
BLOW YOUR
MIND VIRTUALLY Exhilarating Adventures
Igniting passion for nature through film
OCTOBER 9-18, 2020 P U R C H A S E PA S S E S & T I C K E T S
BY CLICKING HERE
Compelling Stories Astounding Documentaries
Carol Kemp, Angel Eyes