Sandhill Crane Migration by Bruce and Scott Sink

Nevada

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Proceeds Support:

Proceeds support Earthjustice, using the power of law to defend our right to a healthy environment. See America is reviving the legacy of the New Deal arts projects by building a new collection of national park posters celebrating our shared natural landmarks and treasured sites. Explore the full collection here.

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Design By: Bruce and Scott Sink
Bruce and Scott Sink
Bruce and Scott Sink are a father-son artistic duo that live in Chandler, Arizona and Cheyenne, Wyoming respectively. Since Scott was born in 1983, as a family they have traveled to many public lands across the United States of America, particularly throughout Alaska. Bruce is a professional watercolor painter and Scott is an outdoor travel writer, so they both found the campaign to See America appealing.
Design By: Bruce and Scott Sink
Bruce and Scott Sink
Bruce and Scott Sink are a father-son artistic duo that live in Chandler, Arizona and Cheyenne, Wyoming respectively. Since Scott was born in 1983, as a family they have traveled to many public lands across the United States of America, particularly throughout Alaska. Bruce is a professional watercolor painter and Scott is an outdoor travel writer, so they both found the campaign to See America appealing.
Artist Statement

Every spring, approximately 650,000 sandhill cranes depart their overwintering grounds from Arizona to Texas to migrate north. In March and April, the majority gather along the Platte River in central Nebraska in one of the most remarkable avian spectacles on the planet. The mating pairs then disperse across the continent, as far north as Alaska, to nest and raise their chicks. Sandhill cranes are especially important to us because a breeding pair returns to our family cabin in Anchor Point, Alaska each summer, which is where the photo was taken on which this painting is based. ‰ÛÓ Bruce and Scott Sink