Follow The Water
Insights about WATER—science, stories, and positive action—from diverse voices.
Follow The Water Website
Follow The Water Website
Our Watershed: Community Photovoice in the Clackamas
Our Watershed: Community Photovoice in the Clackamas
This StoryMap highlights how community members care for and connect with Oregon's Clackamas River and watershed. Through photographs, reflections, maps, and findings, it shares how people experience and engage with the watershed, including everyday relationships with local waterways and the work of organizations fostering community through environmental stewardship. People described how they and their neighbors stay connected to the environment and how caring for the watershed builds community. They also voiced concerns about current challenges and optimism about what's possible. The photographs are a product of Photovoice - a visual participatory research method wherein photographs taken by participants are used to explore community experiences, promote empowerment, and generate shared knowledge. Both adults and youth representing the watershed took photographs and discussed them in group or individual interviews.
Follow the Water Video Series 💧
Follow the Water Video Series 💧
We work together to bring you insights about WATER—the science, the stories, and the positive actions we take—from diverse voices in our communities.
FTW's Partnership with students at PSU | Portland State University
FTW's Partnership with students at PSU | Portland State University
Portland State students aren't just studying water — they're helping tell its story. Through an ongoing partnership with the clean water outreach campaign, Follow the Water, PSU students are creating social media content that reaches well beyond the classroom. Now several years in, the collaboration...
Follow the Water Resources
Follow the Water Resources
Honoring our Rivers Student Art Anthology
Honoring our Rivers Student Art Anthology
East Fork Lewis River Reconnection Project
East Fork Lewis River Reconnection Project
Car tires are polluting the environment and killing salmon. A global plastics treaty could help
Car tires are polluting the environment and killing salmon. A global plastics treaty could help
In the 1990s, scientists restoring streams around Seattle, Wash., noticed that returning coho salmon were dying after rainstorms. The effects were immediate: the fish swam in circles, gasping at the surface, then died in a few hours.
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