Custom Screen Printing Service

We provide high-quality, durable custom prints for apparel and promotional products. Whether it's for your team, organization, or business, our screen printing services turn your designs into wearable art.

What Wildways Is

A program in three parts

Natural habitats are in danger

Wild places are getting smaller every year. The forces behind it are usually the same: short-term decisions, commercial pressure, and policies that prioritize extraction over protection.

We can't fix all of that. But we can build something that pushes the other direction — a printmaking business that quietly turns into steady conservation funding, and that backs the people already doing the work to protect wild places before they're gone.

01 · The Promise

How it works

A portion of all revenue — online sales, retail, and print shop services — is dedicated to Wildways. The commitment is built into the business itself, not tied to any one product, sale, or campaign. That keeps the funding steady whether a given month is loud or quiet.

02 + 03 · Our Work

Things we do, and things we plan to do

Wildways runs as a portfolio: active side projects happening right now, alongside a longer five-year arc. Below is both — what we're doing today, and what we're working toward.

What we're doing now · Active Project 01

Reno Pollinator Corridor

Active · Scouting Phase Last update 2026-05-10

Our launching project — and the first in an ongoing portfolio of hands-on conservation work running alongside the long-term plan. A connected ribbon of native, pollinator-friendly habitat across Reno so bees, butterflies, hummingbirds, and other pollinators have continuous food and shelter as they move through the city.

Proposed Scouting Active plantings Stewardship Complete corridor

Why Reno specifically. Reno sits in the Great Basin, where decades of development have fragmented sagebrush and riparian habitat. Native pollinators — including the steeply declining western monarch and several at-risk bumble bees — need continuous corridors of flowering native plants to move and feed. The Truckee River corridor and the surrounding foothills act as natural bookends; the city itself is the gap.

What "corridor" means here. Not one big plot. A network of smaller native-plant patches — public verges, parks, schoolyards, business lots, and yards — close enough together that a bee or butterfly can move between them without running out of food or shelter.

Trail Log

2026-05-10
First round of landowner outreach — six properties along the south Truckee corridor. Two interested, one tentatively offering a 600 sq ft side lot for a starter patch.
2026-04-28
Native plant list draft underway with input from a local horticulturist. Building around penstemon, rabbitbrush, milkweed (showy + narrowleaf), buckwheat, and Great Basin wildrye.
2026-04-12
First scouting walk along the Truckee corridor between Mayberry and Idlewild — mapping existing native pockets, gap zones, and likely partner sites.

The Midtown Route

The corridor bounces business-to-business through Midtown — cafes, breweries, boutiques, studios — each one hosting a small native-plant patch close enough to the next that pollinators can move between them. Real partners publish as they confirm.

Hover or tap any pin for the business name, address, and planter details. Sample placeholders shown — real partners drop in as they confirm.

Suggest a Site

If you own or manage land in Reno that could host native pollinator plantings — a yard, an HOA common area, a business lot, a school — tell us about it. We'll follow up before any planting decisions are made.

Active Project · 02

Next side project — to be announced

The portfolio grows as Wildways grows. New side projects are added once the current one has visible momentum.

What we're working toward · Long-term plan

The five-year arc

The main trail is the five-year plan. Side projects branch off it as we go — smaller, hands-on work running alongside the long-term goal.

Wildways 5-year roadmap with active side projects Active Projects Y1 Groundwork Y2 Learn & Partner Y3 First Action Y4 Stewardship Y5 Long-term Side 01 Reno Pollinator Corridor
Year 1 — Groundwork

Laying the Groundwork

We're setting aside revenue, defining clear conservation goals, and committing to transparent operations. This year is about building the foundation that supports meaningful action — clean books, an honest baseline, and a public commitment we can be held to.

Building a strong foundation

Frequently Asked Questions

Does buying a product automatically protect land?

No, and we don't want to claim that. Wildways isn't a per-item donation — it's a percentage of overall revenue that we dedicate regardless of which products sell. That keeps the funding steady and honest, and avoids the trap of attaching conservation claims to individual SKUs.

Are the lands already owned by the company?

Not yet. Year 1 is groundwork. Year 3 is when accumulated funds start moving toward real action — through partnerships, contributions to land trusts, or direct acquisition, depending on what's realistic and high-impact at that point.

How can I see progress on these goals?

This page is the live map. Each waypoint updates as we move along it, and we publish a Wildways annual update with the year's contributions, partners, and what's planned next.

Why "Wildways"?

A wildway is a connected stretch of habitat that lets wildlife move safely between protected areas. The work is rarely one heroic act — it's many small connections that, over time, add up to something a species can actually live across.

Our Commitment to You

Conservation isn't a side project — it's woven into how the business runs. Every product we make, every order we print, and every decision we make as a business supports the long-term commitment behind Wildways. We'll keep sharing progress transparently through regular updates, annual reports, and honest communication about what we've achieved and what's still ahead.