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Welcome to the WWOA Gift Shop! When you are ready to order, print out the order form, fill it out and mail to the address provided. You will receive your order within 2-3 weeks.
Any questions can be directed to Marlene and Jim Zdanovec at 920-233-1948 or zdanovecj@new.rr.com.
WWOA Logo Items
- NEW WWOA Baseball cap - dark brown, embroidered WWOA logo
- NEW WWOA sweatshirts - full zip, hooded, navy or green unisex sizes S-3XL
- NEW "May the forest be with you" Tshirt - short sleeve, sage green color, sizes S-2XL
- Tshirts – long sleeve or short sleeved, embroidered with WWOA logo, available in sizes S-2XL, color choices
are blue, green, or dust
- CLOSEOUT Womens WWOA Denim Shirt – sizes XS or 3XL
- CLOSEOUT Fleece vests with WWOA logo – gray, sizes XS, S, XL, 3XL
- Woods hanky – embroidered with WWOA logo
- WWOA pride pin – Circular pin with gold and green WWOA logo
- Tote bag – durable canvas printed with WWOA logo; available in two sizes: small (12” x 8” x 13”) or large
(13” x 10” x 15”)
- Travel mug
- CLOSEOUT WWOA Life Member Plaque – 7” x 9”
- CLOSEOUT WWOA Wooden Outdoor Sign – 18” x 18”
- WWOA Recycled Aluminum Outdoor sign – 18” x 18”
- WWOA Aluminum sign – 33” x 33”
Stationery, Books & Children Books
- CLOSEOUT Notecards – Six per package; birch bark design
- CLOSEOUT Notecard Variety Pack – 12 per package; assortment of designs
- NEW Wooden Notecards – Five per package; one design: landscape trees, holiday chickadees or Santa feeding animals
- NEW Wild Berries & Fruits of MN, WI and MI
- Invasive Plants of the Upper Midwest: an Illustrated Guide to their Identification and Control by Elizabeth J. Czarapata. An informative, colorful, comprehensive guide to invasive species that are currently endangering native habitats in the region.
- Log Rules and other useful information
- Spies in the Deer Woods – How to Hunt, Game and Monitor Wildlife with a Scouting Camera by Dick Scorzafava and Walt Larsen. The authors give advice on how to buy the right camera, how to set it up in the optimal location, how to encourage wildlife to visit, and how to interpret the photos you get.
- Trees of Wisconsin by Stan Tekiela. Learn to identify the 101 most common trees of Wisconsin with full color pictures. Interesting notes and facts are included about each species.
- CLOSEOUT Wisconsin’s Champion Trees: A Tree Hunter’s Guide by R. Bruce Allison. Contains the location and measurements of 153 species of Wisconsin champion trees – the largest recorded tree of its species.
- NEW VERSION Woodworking for Wildlife. Features thirty designs for nest boxes and nest platforms that will accommodate forty-six species of wildlife with easy-to-follow diagrams for cutting out and assembling the nest boxes, accompanied by over 300 color photographs.
- Woodland Stewardship: A Practical Guide for Midwestern Landowners (2nd Edition)
- CLOSEOUT WWOA 30th Anniversary Cookbook
- NEW Forests For All. Children's book. Available in hard cover, soft cover and coloring/activity.
- Trees: A Colorful Look at our Forests (coloring book). This book presents forests in a positive light with 18 pages of simple messages, pictures for coloring and activities.
- Birds of the Northwoods Activity Book: A Coloring and Learning Guide by David Grack. This book features facts for beginning bird watchers, fun activities and bird illustrations to color by number.
- Ancient Forests: Discovering Nature by Margaret Anderson, Nancy Field and Karen Stephenson. Termites, slime molds, owls and flying squirrels seem more like neighbors, thanks to the activities in this engaging, scientifically accurate book, helping children see the interconnection between nature and people.
- CLOSEOUT The Wonders of Nature Sketchbook: Learn About Nature and How to Draw It by Colleen Monroe and Michael Glenn Moore. A simple, step-by-step guide for young people to sketching animals.
- CLOSEOUT If Trees Could Talk: Stories About Wisconsin Trees by R. Bruce Allison. Children's book. Fascinating stories about noteworthy trees from across Wisconsin, from Kenosha’s buried forest on the shores of Lake Michigan to the Wyalusing maple which saw the last of the passenger pigeons; from Aldo Leopold’s “good oak” to the disappeared elms of State Street in Madison.
- The Grandpa Tree by Mike Donahue. Children's book. The tale of the life cycle of a tree, from its beginnings as a sapling to its demise on the forest floor, where it decomposes and becomes a home for rabbits and food for flowers.
- The Tree Farmer by Chuck Leavell, Nicholas Cravotta and Rebecca Bleau. This story takes young readers on a magical journey through the forest, in a tale of the gifts of trees and our responsibility to care for trees, generation to generation.
- CLOSEOUT What’s Under the Log? by Anne Hunter. What are the things that scurry away when you turn over a log? With detailed illustrations, Anne Hunter shows the creatures a child might find there – a sowbug, salamander, millipede.
Click here for Printable Order Form
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