People's Climate March
People march against climate change in New York on Sept. 21, 2014. Two new documentaries, "This Changes Everything" and "Racing Extinction," are aiming to build similar social movements ahead of the U.N. climate change conference beginning Nov. 30 in Paris. Eduardo Munoz/Reuters

Early Saturday morning thousands of people met up in Washington, D.C. to rally for the planet at the People's Climate March. The first People's Climate March took place in 2014 in New York City on the eve of the United Nations Climate Summit. People came together Saturday, on President Donald Trump's 100th Day in office, to urge him and other lawmakers to take action on the environment.

While the main march is happening in Washington, D.C., there are satellite marches happening worldwide. There is a live feed of the D.C. march available to stream online if you can't make it to a march but want to follow the progress.

Read: People's Climate March 2017: How It's Different Than March For Science

The metro system in D.C. was crowded Saturday morning as people made their way to the Capitol meeting area. Participants started to meet at 9 a.m. in D.C., lining up around 11 a.m., to start marching at 12:30 p.m. The plan was to begin the march and assemble in front of the Capitol Building before marching to the White House to loudly demand action on climate change.

The march is organized into groups of attendees based on their role in climate change action. They'll be marching in groups of "Protectors of Justice," "Builders of Democracy," "Guardians of the Future" and more.

Massachusetts Senator Ed Markey and Massachusetts Attorney General Maura Healey were getting ready to march Saturday morning, maybe with the "Builders of Democracy" group.

There were plenty of people ready to march with signs.

This man's sign seemed to be a nod to President Trump's tweet in which he called climate change a "hoax."

Many of the signs had to do with Trump's climate policy and his career prior to being the President.

Some people took their "signs" above and beyond, like this massive Earth ice cream cone shows.

And you probably sang this sign to yourself.

Leonardo DiCaprio was spotted front and center supporting Indigenous Communities with a sign that read "Climate Change is Real."

The weather in D.C. was forecasted to reach 92 degrees Saturday, the hottest April 29 D.C. has ever seen is 91 degrees, meaning the day could set an ironic temperature record.

Meanwhile, in Denver, it was snowing but people still showed up to march.

Even dogs showed up for the Earth.