Volunteers build a human-made beaver dam in Utah.
The views around Moab, Utah are striking — snow-capped peaks tower over the red rock country below. Snow on the La Sal Mountains feeds alpine lakes, wetlands, and streams that support diverse communities of native plants and animals, from leopard frogs to black bears. However, some critters are missing – beavers. Beavers used to call these alpine lakes home, but their populations have declined dramatically. When beavers build dams, water pools behind the dams, creating wetland habitat for many animals.
On this trip, we will construct look-alike beaver dam structures, also known as beaver dam analogs. These human-made dams provide some of the same benefits as beaver dams, and sometimes, reintroduced beavers even take them over. The pools we construct will lift the water table and help willow and aspen grow. Wetlands and streams support the greatest variety of plant and animal life, and in a water-scarce landscape like Utah, these lush habitats are crucial.
Many of our trips are family friendly! Please see our FAQs for more information or email us with questions about particular trips.
Membership is optional, but we ask that participants who are comfortable financially become members of the Grand Canyon Trust with a $25 donation. Members receive a subscription to our biannual print magazine, The Advocate. Please contact us if you have any questions. You’ll also need to submit your volunteer application form to secure your spot on the trip.
NOTE: This trip is currently full. Sign up for a spot on the waiting list.
We’ll fuel up with coffee and breakfast in the mornings and spend our days building beaver dams in the wetlands. We’ll return to camp in the evenings for free time, appetizers, dinner, and stargazing. We’ll hear from a U.S. Forest Service partner and Trust staff about conservation work and ways to stay involved after the trip. On the last day, we’ll finish work if necessary, break camp, pack up, and head home.
We will be based at a campground in the mountains near Moab, Utah. We will have a pit toilet and a camp kitchen.
The Trust provides: All meals, water, snacks, field equipment, tools, and training.
Participants provide: Personal transportation to the site, individual camping gear, coffee mug, lunch container, work clothes, work gloves, wide-brimmed hat, sunglasses, rain gear, and clothes for warm days and cold nights. Please come prepared.
Our gear packing list will help you prepare. We can loan some items on a first-come, first-served basis — contact us for details.
Curious about logistics, the food you'll eat during the trip, or the difficulty of the field work? Check out the frequently asked questions ›
When you volunteer for the Trust, we make it worth your while. From eating good food, to learning new skills, find out the perks of volunteering.
Our top priority is the safety and comfort of our trip participants. Precautionary measures that will be followed on trips to avoid the spread of communicable diseases will be communicated in pre-trip emails. If we feel that a trip cannot be safely conducted due to public health conditions, or for any other reason, we will cancel the trip with as much notice as possible. Contact volunteernow@grandcanyontrust.org with any questions.
The Grand Canyon Trust is committed to justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion at every level of our work. The conservation field and the Colorado Plateau have their own histories of racial injustice and exclusion and as a largely white organization, we know we have work to do. We are actively working to make the conservation field and the Colorado Plateau more just, equitable, diverse, and inclusive. Read the Grand Canyon Trust’s justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion statement ›