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White Mountain Tribe Offers Wilderness Tours

White Mountain Tribe Offers Wilderness Tours

A Mexican wolf in New Mexico. USFWS-Jim Clark

A chance to see or hear endangered Mexican gray wolves in the wild is a highlight of the tour.

WHITERIVER, Ariz. – Eastern Arizona’s White Mountain Apache Tribe will offer week-long eco-tours starting in June, featuring opportunities for people to view wildlife while learning about tribal history and culture.

Howling with the wolves and learning traditional campfire cooking will be included. Tribal biologist Krista Beazley says the tours emphasize an Arizona wilderness experience.

“Wildlife viewing: early mornings, late in the evenings. Do some wolf howlings. We also wanted to incorporate the cultural aspects of the White Mountain Apache Tribe. We have elders come up, tell traditional stories, traditional songs. We also have horseback riding.”

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Listen to Apache wolf biologist Krista Beazley and Defenders’ Craig Miller on the Public News Service.

Other cultural experiences include a sweat lodge, traditional crafts and survival skills. Beazley says the tour emphasizes the sacred connections that Apaches see among the human soul, the land and all living things – with special reverence for the endangered Mexican gray wolf.

Beazley, who was raised on tribal lands by her grandmother, says elders told her about the cultural connection between wolves and the tribe, and how warriors used to sing wolf songs before battle.

“They highly respected these wolves, in the way they travel and the way they hunted. In the past they used to try to imitate the wolf. And there was even a wolf song. They would sing the wolf songs so they can be like the wolf.”

She says proceeds from the wilderness journeys benefit the tribe’s wolf-management program, which helps to ease conflicts between the wolves and tribal cattle ranchers, paying for things such as fencing, habitat protection and occasional livestock losses.

Craig Miller, Southwest Representative

Craig Miller, Defenders of Wildlife southwest representative, says tribal lands can be a gateway to Mexican wolf recovery in the ongoing federal reintroduction program.

“The tribal lands are situated right between the current Blue Range wolf-recovery area – where wolves live in Arizona and New Mexico – and the future of wolf recovery, which is through the Grand Canyon eco-region.”

– Doug Ramsey, Public News Service — AZ

Details on Apache Wilderness Journeys can be found online at naturalistjourneys.com.

View this story on the Public News Service’s website and access an audio version of this and other stories.


Check out this video for a preview of the tours.

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Sign Up Today: Apache Wilderness Journeys

Sign Up Today: Apache Wilderness Journeys

Have you ever wondered what it would be like to live in a time before television, smart phones, traffic, deadlines and all the other pressures of modern life—to slow down and experience a deeper connection to the world around you?

Here’s your chance. The White Mountain Apache Tribe is now offering a unique culture, wildlife and wilderness tour that will take you on a 6-day/5-night journey into the heart of the Southwest and on a mission to see the rarest wolf in North America—el lobo, or the Mexican gray wolf—in the wild.

Mexican Gray Wolf

A chance to see the endangered Mexican gray wolf in the wild is a highlight of the trip.

Join Apache guides on expeditions into the Tribe’s remote, lush forests for a chance to hear or see endangered lobos and learn about efforts to restore other imperiled wildlife such as Mexican spotted owls and Apache trout.

  • Experience firsthand the Apache way of life through crafts, storytelling and traditional meals (vegetarian options available)
  • Sleep safely and comfortably in furnished cabins
  • Gain insight into centuries-old traditional ceremonies
  • Connect with wildlife through Apache culture and help save something wild

Checkout Defenders editor Heidi Ridgely’s first-hand account of the tours in our latest issue.

Sign Up Today

Sign up today and learn more at Naturalist Journeys! The tours are filling up fast. The Apache have scheduled only two trips this year, and there are just a handful of seats left open for the Jun. 5-10 expedition.

Ranked by National Geographic Adventure in the top 25 of adventure-travel companies, Naturalist Journeys, the Arizona-based travel and conservation-oriented tour operator, is helping to coordinate registration for the trip and is on hand to answer any logistical questions you potential explorers may have.

Learn more about Defenders’ work with the White Mountain Apache and Mexican gray wolves.

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Wolf, (c) Gary Schultz, NGSDefenders of Wildlife leads the pack when it comes to protecting wild animals and plants in their natural communities.

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