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Related Links
HADD/USA isn't the only one interested in
making our planet's trails Faex-free. Check out these
links below for more information and ideas on how you can help keep your hiking firmly on
the ground and not softly in the, uh, muck.
HADD/USA welcomes any suggestions you may
have for links we should include here. If you operate a Web site you think may be
suitable, perhaps we could trade links -- we'll list your site here and you list
HADD/USA
on your site. We don't want to provide pages with hundreds and hundreds of
links just because -- we want to provide only those links we've visited and personally
feel are very good. If you're looking for hundreds and hundreds of links, you'll
most likely find them by checking our selected links below.
All about films: sites to watch movies for free .
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National
Resources
Defense
Council We've
been linked from the NRDC page, and there are two points here. First, their site is
fantastic, and we strongly urge you check them out. Second, they liked us!
Rita Barol, the Managing Editor of NRDC Online, had nothing but good to say:
"I thought you'd like to know
that your site is featured as a link on NRDC Online, the website of the Natural Resources
Defense Council. Unlike many sites, which indiscriminately post seemingly endless
numbers of links, NRDC Online's links are carefully chosen to reflect the best the web has
to offer students and the rest of us on issues of environment, sustainability and related
politics. We think your website is terrific and hope that you will agree that you are in
very good company in our guide." Services-board of bulletins - web design templates . Templates and modules for CMS Opencart.
NRDC uses law, science, and the support of more than 350,000
members nationwide to protect the planet's wildlife and wild places and to ensure a safe
and healthy environment for all living things. Show your support of NRDC and their
goals, and show your support of HADD/USA, by stopping by. Click on
their logo to check them out. |
earthsystems.orgWhat a site full of information!
With such resources as their
Virtual Library, with links and references to myriad organizations -- such as
HADD/USA!
-- and a Virtual Shopping Center for the Environment, earthsystems.org is laced with
information that will keep your hand on your mouse and your eyes on your monitor screen
for hours on end. This is possibly the most thorough and informative sites of its
kind anywhere in the world. Be sure to check it all out, but don't miss their own
history of how earthsystems.org was started. Custom research papers Buy Term Paper. |
Mining Co.
Guide to Walking
Hiking & Walking HomepageWendy
Bumgardner visited HADD/USA's Web site and told Lucy Pearson, "You
made my day, I love your organization!" Wendy, like most of us, can laugh with
us at the humor we see in our situation, but undoubtedly Wendy sees beyond the
giggles. A consummate hiking professional, Wendy has a lot to say on the subject of
the great outdoors, and we encourage you to stop in and see what she's got to talk
about. You can check out two sites Wendy has designed and maintained for yourself! |
Earthline"An Ecological Directory BRINGING OUR EARTH AND IT'S PEOPLE
TOGETHER," proclaims Earthline's home page. There are extensive links to, it
appears, just about everything! If you're a true "browser" and want to
peruse ecological links, here's a good place to start. |
| Sierra
Outdoor Guides -
visit "Your best
single source for outdoor information on California's High Sierra. Where to go, what to
do, and how to do it! Reliable outdoor guides and cookbooks since 1963."
That's the start of what you'll see on this page when you land there -- but be sure to
look beyond that. Everything you wanted to know about California's High Sierra but
were afraid to ask is contained within. Happy site-hiking. |
Bob and
Brian's Appalachian Trail Thru-Hike pageThis
is a great site that tells us, first-person, what it's like to attempt a
"thru-hike" of the Appalachian Trail. For those of you wondering, a
thru-hike of the AT is when someone attempts to hike the entire Trail nonstop, start to
finish -- a process we learned from Bob and Brian typically takes five to six
months. This is well worth the stopover, so be sure to click on their logo to the
left and check out Bob and Brian -- and you might wish to tell them HADD said hello! |
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