Pick Your Poisson Vinyl Sticker - Conservation Collection

$6.00

The Pick Your Poisson sticker features 3 threatened Colorado fish species: the Bonytail Chub, Greenback Cutthroat Trout, and Brassy Minnow. Each fish is hand drawn with ink, watercolor pencil, and colored pencil, then digitized for the sticker. The sticker has a clear background and measures 3” across. The text is a play on the idiom “pick your poison”. “Poisson” is French for “fish”, which is a nod to Colorado’s French fir trapping history.

This design, and the rest of the Conservation Collection, helps raise awareness of threatened species. 10% of the profit of each sale is donated to the High Plains Environmental Center (HPEC) in Loveland, Colorado. HPEC works to reintroduce native plants alongside the built environment; this helps to conserve water, support pollinators, and protect native plants and animals. HPEC is a non-profit that grows and donates native plants, educates the public, and has several hundred acres of protected land to support native wildlife and plant life. You can learn more on their website: https://suburbitat.org/

The Pick Your Poisson sticker features 3 threatened Colorado fish species: the Bonytail Chub, Greenback Cutthroat Trout, and Brassy Minnow. Each fish is hand drawn with ink, watercolor pencil, and colored pencil, then digitized for the sticker. The sticker has a clear background and measures 3” across. The text is a play on the idiom “pick your poison”. “Poisson” is French for “fish”, which is a nod to Colorado’s French fir trapping history.

This design, and the rest of the Conservation Collection, helps raise awareness of threatened species. 10% of the profit of each sale is donated to the High Plains Environmental Center (HPEC) in Loveland, Colorado. HPEC works to reintroduce native plants alongside the built environment; this helps to conserve water, support pollinators, and protect native plants and animals. HPEC is a non-profit that grows and donates native plants, educates the public, and has several hundred acres of protected land to support native wildlife and plant life. You can learn more on their website: https://suburbitat.org/