We’ve come to experience Jasper and Banff in spring during the lull between the ski season finishing and the summer crowds descending.
Significant cuts to the federal workforce have created uncertainty around staffing levels at national parks in Montana. MTPR’s John Hooks shares the latest with host Elinor Smith.
Eastern U.S. Odyssey The Appalachian Trail, stretching over 2,100 miles from Georgia to Maine, is an iconic destination for ...
Climate change is accelerating the melting of the world’s mountain glaciers, according to a massive new study that found them ...
Follow in the footsteps of the Buffalo Soldiers, who guarded parks and created trails in Yosemite, Sequoia, and Hawai’i ...
Shutterstock Washington’s Got the Real Deal North Cascades National Park hides in Washington State with snowy peaks, blue ...
The plan will stay in place for at least seven years, regardless of whether grizzly bears lose their protections as "threatened" under the Endangered Species Act in that time.
A new fire management plan for Glacier National Park will incorporate prescribed burning and other forest treatments into the ...
Cuts to the federal workforce have hit home. According to a source at the Flathead National Forest, who provided information as they were not authorized to speak publicly, 38 probationary employees ...
The National Park Service faces a staffing crisis after losing 1,000 employees. We spoke to experts and laid-off rangers to ...
When Jack Carroll received an email Friday explaining that his position with the Flathead National Forest was terminated ...
Trump’s purge of federal employees is already harming the visitor experience at national parks across the country.