Blog posts from around the country
Angeles Chapter
Open weekend at Harwood Lodge available to all Sierra Club members, who may bring 2 non-member guests..
Angeles Chapter
There are over 30 artworks in Downtown Burbank. We will walk past 32 of them on this 2 mile rt walking tour. See the link for the Burbank Art Tour Guide. Optional lunch after at the Granville Café.
Colorado Sierra Club
At critical moments in time, you’ve stepped up so that together, we can defend Coloradans’ rights to clean air and clean energy, and defend our public lands and the safety of our communities. This is one of those moments.
Wisconsin Chapter
The Sierra Club Wisconsin Chapter’s book club is back again for 2026 with plenty of great reads. The Book Club meets on the 2nd Tuesday* of every other month, from 6:30 to 7:30 online.
Hoosier Chapter
Welcome to the latest from the Southwest Indiana Network of the Sierra Club Hoosier Chapter.
In this newsletter:
🥾 Join us on the trail: Howell Wetlands Earth Month Outing
🧣Tales from the Trail: Embracing the Cold and Moving Beyond Coal
⚡️Indiana…
Observations in Sam Houston National Forest at Big Creek Scenic Area and About the Sabine Wake-Robin
By Brandt Mannchen - At the end of February, on behalf of the Sierra Club, I visited Big Creek Scenic Area and Compartment 96 where a unique and rare plant, the Sabine Wake-robin (Trillium gracile), lives.
Houston Group / Lone Star Chapter / Texas
By Brandt Mannchen - In February, I hiked the 25-acre Peckinpaugh Preserve and the 2,100-acre Spring Trails Preserve in Montgomery County, Texas.
Houston Group / Lone Star Chapter / Texas
On March 14, 2026, the Houston Sierra Club hiked 2 miles in Jones State Forest. This 1,700-acre state forest was created in 1926 and is managed by Texas A&M University (Texas Forest Service).
Houston Group / Lone Star Chapter / Texas
The Houston Sierra Club and its Bay Area Sierra Club subgroup visited and enjoyed wetlands, wildflowers, ponds, and walking trails at Exploration Green.
Houston Group / Lone Star Chapter / Texas
Peach Creek Woods has become the Houston Audubon Society’s 18th nature sanctuary. One of our own, Tom Maddux, has come through again.