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Holy Cow, Let's Go WiWiC Hive!

  • Writer: Kriss Marion
    Kriss Marion
  • Dec 23, 2025
  • 2 min read
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Thank you, thank you, thank you to all of the WiWiC fam that have donated to our Sally Mead Hands Foundation Match Drive in the past 24 hours! We sent out an email last night (check your inbox if you haven't seen it) and we've had a tremendous response so far to extending the match. Now we're cooking. Let's keep going and meet our goal by the end of the year!


Here's a slight but exciting update to the news we shared yesterday:


Donate any amount by Dec. 31, and we'll send you a "Love Soil" magnet to rock on your car or fridge and show solidarity in this important work.


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But we will also enter every donor in a drawing to receive one of these lovely gifts. You will get an additional entry for every $25 donated.


  • A box of beautiful pasture-raised lamb from Hickory Hills Farm (southern Wisconsin locals)

  • A box of Fields Best Grains with Vintage Tractor Beer Steins

  • A Milwaukee Urban Agriculture Network Market Bag filled with a MUAN t-shirt of your choice and an assortment of our urban ag stickers

  • A WiWiC limited edition bandana with a NEW WiWiC t-shirt design (in production now!)


We can't reveal the new WiWiC t-shirts yet, but we can show you the finished bandanas! We'll launch the new t-shirts in January, and they should be ready to purchase at Marbleseed in February.




These were specifically designed as gifts for our Recurring Monthly Sustaining Donors to WiWiC. Sign up to give $5 or more monthly, and we'll send you the color of your choice! Be sure to check the box that says: Show my support by making this a monthly donation.



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Happy Holidays to You and All of Yours!

Kriss Marion, WiWiC Communications Lead





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Wisconsin Women in Conservation is a project of Michael Fields Agricultural Institute, a non-profit organization dedicated to developing and promoting regenerative agriculture through research, education, and policy initiatives since 1984. We serve farmers and food systems across the Upper Midwest with science-based solutions for today's agricultural challenges.

 
 
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