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Why you keep hearing howling at 8 p.m. across Denver

And why you might want to join in

A wolf howls. (Prachanda Rawal, iStock via Getty Images)
A wolf howls. (Prachanda Rawal, iStock via Getty Images)
DENVER, CO - AUGUST 1:  Danika Worthington - Staff portraits at the Denver Post studio.  (Photo by Eric Lutzens/The Denver Post)Amy Brothers of The Denver Post.The Know is The Denver Post's new entertainment site.
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You’ve likely heard it already. And if you haven’t, you’ll likely be hearing it soon.

The howl.

You might think itap wolves or coyotes. You may wonder whatap going on with the neighborhood dogs. Or you may even check your computer to make sure you didn’t leave that nature documentary running again. But no, listen closely and you’ll soon realize itap the city of Denver thatap howling.

Partners Shelsea Ochoa and Brice Maiurro started the Facebook group  on March 27. A little more than a week later, that group has more than 420,000 members. Many are in Colorado, including Ochoa and Maiurro who live in Congress Park, but many others live elsewhere, spreading from the East Coast to Switzerland and Brazil.

“We can’t necessarily see the people we want to see or hug the people we want to hug, but we can reach out to people through this,” Ochoa said.

Both Ochoa and Maiurro are part of Denver’s art and community activism scene. Ochoa is an educator at the Denver Museum of Nature and Science and the creative director of the local storytelling group . Maiurro works in administrator at National Jewish Health and is the poetry editor for the local literary magazine .

But letap get back to the howling.

How does it work?

  • Step one: Note when the clock strikes 8 o’clock
  • Step two: Open up your window or step into your backyard
  • Step three: Howl.

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