Beth Pratt: The Wild Wonder of California—and Beyond
In this fun presentation, conservation leader and author Beth Pratt will share tales of wild wonder from California and beyond, sharing photos and videos from her extensive encounters with animals including pika, frogs, mountain lions, bears, and more! She’ll talk about how we all need to be a part of fostering a coexistence ethic with wildlife, and what we can do in our own backyard to help wild animals thrive. She’ll also give an update on the #SaveLACougars campaign and the efforts to build the wildlife crossing at Liberty Canyon, and share some exciting new visualizations of the project!
Beth will also lead participants through a couple of the exercises from her new book, I Heart Wildlife: A Guided Activity Journal for Connecting with the Wild World. Be sure to come with questions about your wild neighbors!
Admission to this event is free. If you wish to donate to support the Wildling Museum’s digital programming efforts, click here to donate what you wish. Support at all levels is greatly appreciated!
Please email info@wildlingmuseum.org or call (805) 686-8315 with any questions.
The Wildling Museum’s Zoom lecture series is sponsored by Montecito Bank & Trust.
About Beth Pratt:
A lifelong advocate for wildlife, Beth Pratt has worked in environmental leadership roles for over twenty-five years, and in two of the country’s largest national parks: Yosemite and Yellowstone. As the California Regional Executive Director for the National Wildlife Federation, she says, “I have the best job in the world—advocating for the state’s remarkable wildlife.” Beth leads the #SaveLACougars campaign to build the largest wildlife crossing in the world in the Los Angeles area to help save a population of mountain lions from extinction, and her conservation work has been featured by The New Yorker, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, BBC World Service, CBS This Morning, The Los Angeles Times, Men’s Journal, and NPR.
Her new book, I Heart Wildlife: A Guided Activity Journal for Connecting with the Wild World, was released in August, and she is also the author of When Mountain Lions are Neighbors: People and Wildlife Working It Out In California, published by Heyday Books. She has given a TEDx talk about coexisting with wildlife called, “How a Lonely Cougar in Los Angeles Inspired the World,” and is featured in the documentary, The Cat that Changed America. Beth spends much of her time in L.A., but makes her home outside of Yosemite, “my north star,” with her five dogs, two cats, and the mountain lions, bears, foxes, and other wildlife that frequent her backyard.