BioBlitz 2023
Join us at BioBlitz! Discover the biodiversity that thrives within the city limits. Help us count as many species as possible and enjoy guided walks with local naturalists.
Have fun with us!
Join us at BioBlitz! Discover the biodiversity that thrives within the city limits. Help us count as many species as possible and enjoy guided walks with local naturalists.
Discover the wonders of winter through hands-on experiments that showcase how animals survive frigid temperatures, snowy landscapes, and seasonal shifts.
Ever wonder how bats navigate at night? Come find out and learn about other fascinating facts of flying critters with science educators at Walla Walla Public Library.
Why and how do beavers build dams? Investigate this question along with other natural systems and hypothesize why and how they exist with science educators at Walla Walla Public Library.
Join us at Walla Walla’s second annual Bioblitz! Discover the biodiversity that thrives within the city limits. Help us count as many species as possible and enjoy guided walks with local naturalists.
Celebrate our beautiful planet by practicing Leave No Trace principles, crafting from recyclables, and planting your own pollinator friendly garden
Did you know beavers built a dam twice the width of Hoover Dam? Engineers are constantly inspired by nature. Investigate these natural systems and hypothesize why and how they exist. Let nature inspire your experiments!
Did you know fossils of almost the entire evolution of the horse can be found in the Pacific Northwest?Also, that the site of some of the oldest human remains in North America have been found in the area? Learn to piece together the stories and actions of the past by inspecting cool rocks, sediments, and fossils.
Prepare to get wet as we explore the wonders of H2O. You will examine the unique critters and plants that call the Walla Walla Watershed home.
Join us at Walla Walla’s first annual Bioblitz! Discover the biodiversity that thrives right outside Walla Walla’s city limits at Rooks Park. Discover as many species as possible and enjoy guided walks with local naturalists. This event is free and open to the public.
Did you know pollinators, including bees, bats, butterflies, beetles and other small mammals are responsible for one out of every three bites of food we eat? Come learn more about why these species are so important to the ecosystem and us.