posted Mar 14, 2018
This mission of Great Rivers Greenway District is connecting the St. Louis region with greenways so people can explore their rivers, parks and communities, making it a vibrant place to live, work, and play.
posted May 10, 2021
The Great Shasta Rail Trail Association is a 501 (c)3 non-profit organization, formed to own and manage the Great Shasta Rail Trail.
posted Apr 7, 2020
The Great Springs Project envisions a national park-scale corridor of protected lands between the densely urban areas of Austin and San Antonio over the Edwards Aquifer recharge and contributing zones. This green corridor will be connected by a network of trails, linking four of Texas’ Great Springs: Barton Springs, San Marcos Springs, Comal Springs, and San Antonio Springs. The Great Springs Project envisions unifying existing local efforts to address the most critical water, land, wildlife, and public health challenges facing the Central Texas region
posted Aug 28, 2020
Great Swamp Watershed Association is dedicated to protecting and improving the water resources of the Passaic River region, from the Great Swamp headwaters to Newark Bay, for present and future generations. Through education, advocacy, science, land preservation, and stewardship, in collaboration with partners, we work to instill our communities with an awareness of water’s effect on health and the beauty of the environment, from source to sea.
posted Dec 29, 2017
Development of a major resource for planning, designing, constructing, maintaining, and managing OHV recreational trails and trail systems.
posted Feb 4, 2022
The Great Western Trail Authority is a local government entity, created by an Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) between the towns of Windsor, Severance & Eaton to accept the donation of the abandoned Great Western Railway between the towns under the “railbanking” provisions of the 1983 amendments to the National Trails System Act. The Authority’s ongoing responsibility is to plan and construct a public trail on the right-of-way, maintain the trail corridor, and seek funding for the trail through grants and contributions.
posted May 18, 2022
Great Works Regional Land Trust is a member-supported organization providing conservation options to landowners and programs for community members, including sixteen preserves with hiking trails. Since 1986, Great Works has conserved over 7,000 acres of natural, historic, agricultural, forestry, scenic and recreational resources in the southern Maine communities of Eliot, South Berwick, Berwick, North Berwick, Wells and Ogunquit.
posted Oct 29, 2020
GARNA, through community collaboration, inspires a conservation ethic by providing educational opportunities and experiences so that those who live, work and play in the Upper Arkansas Valley are motivated to take care of the natural resources and leave a legacy of responsible use of the natural environment. GARNA accomplishes this mission through formal partnerships with natural resource agencies and work with local, like-minded organizations.
posted Mar 6, 2023
Dayton, Ohio is “The Outdoor Adventure Capital of the Midwest” and home to Ohio's first National Water Trail, the nation's largest paved trail network, and Five Rivers MetroParks who protect nearly 16,000 acres of land with 90 percent of it in its natural state. The Great Miami Riverway is a 99 mile corridor of connected communities where you can surf the river, cycle the bike trail, and find your way through charming downtowns in southwest Ohio.
posted Jul 6, 2023
Greater Hells Canyon Council is a grassroots conservation organization founded in 1967 (as Hells Canyon Preservation Council) to stop Hells Canyon and the Snake River from being dammed. Not only did we stop the dam, our advocacy helped to create the Hells Canyon National Recreation Area. Our work now focuses on public lands management in the entire Greater Hells Canyon Region. We cover such diverse issues as logging, grazing, recreation, mining, species protection, wildlife connectivity, and more.