Silver Alert for Milwaukee man, last seen at Amtrak station
By FOX6 News Digital Team
Published article
MILWAUKEE - A Silver Alert has been issued for a 63-year-old Milwaukee man who was last seen on Saturday afternoon, July 31 at the Amtrak station on St. Paul. The missing man is Jeffrey Lockwood.
Lockwood is described as a male, white, 6 tall, weighing 185 pounds, with brown eyes, gray hair, and a goatee. He was last seen wearing a gray Tractor Supply baseball hat, a long-sleeve turquoise button-up shirt, blue jeans, and brown boots.
The Lockwood Foundation in Pueblo West needs volunteers to make the impossible, possible Alexis Smith, The Pueblo Chieftain
The Lockwood Foundation takes on Lake Pueblo
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The Lockwood Foundation, a Pueblo West-based non-profit organization which facilitates adaptive recreation on the mountain trails of Colorado is preparing for a full season of creating opportunity, needs volunteers to make the impossible possible.
One of the most recent events the foundation held was an event for nine riders on the Red Gate Trailhead at Lake Pueblo State Park.
“With our volunteer and community strength, we were able to take (these nine people) out for a pretty exclusive, and ironically inclusive experience,” The Lockwood Foundation founder Jeffrey Lockwood said.
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Local organization making outdoor adventures possible for those with limited mobility
The Lockwood Foundation
and last updated 2021-05-19 19:38:02-04
SOUTHERN COLORADO â A local organization is making outdoor adventures possible for people with limited mobility or those who are unable to walk on their own. Since 2018, The Lockwood Foundation has been taking riders on trails and up mountains, with help from volunteers in the community. Our riders are experiencing adventure that was either impossible for them their entire life, or it was taken away from them, said Jeffrey Lockwood, the organization s founder.
More than four years ago, Lockwood asked himself what a 14-er would look like for someone in a wheel chair. He noticed there were no programs like it in place, and he wanted to create his own.
Trillions of cicadas are coming to the U.S. Here’s why that’s a good thing.
Don’t be afraid or annoyed of the coming periodical cicadas. It’s a once-in-a-17-year chance to enjoy a wondrous natural phenomenon.
Adult Brood X cicadas, which come out only once every 17 years, on a wooden fence in Maryland, in 2004.
ByDouglas Main
Email
In the late spring of 1634, pilgrims in Massachusetts witnessed an incredible sight: Millions and millions of winged, red-eyed insects sprung from the earth. Not knowing better, the Puritan immigrants likened them to pestilential swarms from the Old Testament and called them “locusts.”