
What makes a great nature photograph?
The 2025 Colorado Outdoors Photo Issue is here and brimming with stunning photos of Colorado’s diverse wildlife, landscapes and recreation. Get your copy today!
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The 2025 Colorado Outdoors Photo Issue is here and brimming with stunning photos of Colorado’s diverse wildlife, landscapes and recreation. Get your copy today!

High above the treeline, on the windswept cliffs of the Rockies, lives a bird many people never see in the wild — the brown-capped rosy-finch. Thanks to cutting-edge wildlife tracking, Colorado Parks and Wildlife researchers are learning how these birds endure harsh Colorado winters and whether their populations face a dangerous decline.

Colorado Parks and Wildlife (CPW) is continuing to build upon its decades-long history of investigating and preventing livestock conflicts through dedicated interagency training designed to keep Colorado’s wolf program grounded in science, partnership and transparency.

When fall comes calling, these properties play an important role for farmers across the Eastern Plains

This section of the Lake Fork reflects decades of collaborative conservation, including habitat improvements funded by the Bureau of Reclamation and implemented CPW.

As fall approaches, C4C properties continue to provide robust, healthy habitat and are primed for pheasant hunting.
Colorado Outdoors, Colorado Parks and Wildlife’s magazine, features a wealth of information for hunters, anglers and outdoors enthusiasts.