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Basin Blog2025-04-04T12:46:48-05:00
Fox-Wolf Watershed Alliance offers a variety of e-newsletters, blog posts, and printed publications for diverse audiences. Join the over 5,000 subscribers who receive monthly e-newsletters or occasional emails.
  • Watershed Moments is a quarterly publication sharing the stories of lives impacted by our work.
  • The Winnebago Waterways and Keepers of the Fox e-newsletters report on topics within their geographic areas.
  • The Basin Buzz is a semi-annual printed newsletter that focuses on soil health and conservation agriculture.
  • Many of the stories from these sources are posted here on our blog or are linked on our social media pages.

Recent Articles

Free Webinar: Strategies to Manage Invasive Species on Your Property

By |February 14th, 2025|

Invasive Species? Horticultrist Melinda Myers Can Help! Managing invasive plants on your property can be overwhelming. We will discuss various strategies to help you manage these unwanted plants. Preventing their introduction into your landscape [...]

Protecting Our Waters: Fox-Wolf’s Chloride Monitoring Program

By |January 31st, 2025|

Help Protect Our Waters: Fox-Wolf’s Chloride Monitoring Program Did you know that just one teaspoon of salt can permanently pollute five gallons of freshwater? Unlike other pollutants, chloride from road salt doesn’t break down—it [...]

Water Hyacinth Instead of Plastic Bags? Invasive Species Used to Regrow Forests

By |January 17th, 2025|

Startup Company Finding Ways to Deal with Invasive Plant Original Story: Tom Page, CNN Lake Naivasha, northwest of Nairobi, Kenya is becoming increasingly unnavigable. Water hyacinth, the world’s most widespread invasive species, is blanketing [...]

Re-Engineering the Great Lakes Ecosystem – Free Event to Glimpse Into the Great Lakes

By |January 10th, 2025|

All Too Clear - Award Winning Documentary Team To Hold Event in Our Backyard TVO Original, All Too Clear uses cutting-edge underwater drones to explore how quadrillions of tiny invasive mussels, known as quaggas, are [...]

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