Personal tools
You are here: home   Issues   How low will it go?   Crown of horns
 

Images from Crown of horns

back to the article
Click to enlarge

by Craig Childs

Craig Childs holds up a ram's skull.

Viewing 1 of 1
  1. Roadless-less | Judge Clarence Brimmer is determined to bring down...
  2. Commitment issues | White House pledges further collaboration with tri...
  3. Can't see the forest for the skyscrapers | The nation's capital gets stimulus funds to fight ...
  4. "A deeply troubled idea from the start" | Valles Caldera's experiment in public lands manage...
  5. Frack 2, Scene 1 | New York City fights drilling in its watershed, an...
  1. Roadless-less | Judge Clarence Brimmer is determined to bring down...
  2. Socialism and the West | Despite our reflexive fear of the word "socialism,...
  3. The Lost Art of Listening | Can the Arapaho language be saved from extinction?...
  4. Return of the pod man | Arizona farmer Mark Moody raises mesquite trees fo...
  5. Is the BLM practicing unsafe CX? | The Bureau of Land Management used a large number ...
Related
Having a third child in a world of scarcity The writer makes a personal and difficult choice to have a third child
Underworld In a dark, narrow storm drain below the border town of Douglas, Ariz., eight illegal immigrants drowned in the summer of 1997
Prey at the waterhole The experience of watching a mountain lion is utterly transformed when the watcher realizes he is the one being watched
A very brief conversation with a Jet Fighter A long solitary hike through an empty, pristine desert is interrupted by a close encounter with an F-16 fighter plane
In the throat of a black hole An essay from the author's book, "The Desert Cries," in which he tours Antelope Canyon, where a flood once took the lives of hikers.

JOIN THE High CountryEmail Commons

Award-winning content delivered weekly.

RSS FEEDS

Keep in touch! Find us on Facebook & Twitter
More from Culture & Communities
A ride on the Big Love bus Polygamy tours begin in Utah.
Reader Photo - Cowboy Up A classic Western image, in black and white
The Eastern Frontier New York City is really the West, buried under time's wrapping.
All Culture & Communities
 
© 2009 High Country News, all rights reserved. | privacy policy | powered by Plone | site by Groundwire and Web Collective | design by our very own Ryan Foster