Editor’s note: This is a final column submitted to High Country News by Ed Quillen, who died Sunday, June 3. He was 62 years old. Can you protect an area by publicizing it and attracting more visitors? That question first hit me a few years ago when I encountered a guidebook that featured Colorado’s waterfalls. […]
Ed Quillen
How now, Browns Canyon
U.S. Senator Mark Udall, a Colorado Democrat, got two differing views about Browns Canyon when he met with constituents and hiked in the area during the congressional Easter recess. The meetings were in Chaffee County in central Colorado. The Arkansas River flows through Browns Canyon, which sits between Salida and Buena Vista. It may well […]
A monumental proposal
Things have sure changed around here. When I moved to Salida in 1978 to work for the local newspaper, I covered many hearings about roadless areas and their suitability as wilderness. And invariably, the local business community was opposed to “another federal land grab” that would “lock up valuable resources” and “deprive us of a […]
Land of Disenchantment
The Territory of New Mexico became the 47th state of the union in 1912, so the state is celebrating its centennial this year. It’s also looking for a new marketing slogan to revive its tourism industry. For nearly 80 years, it’s been “the Land of Enchantment,” but the spell seems to be wearing off. As […]
Who’s the worst of all?
In his essay “The Second Rape of the West” published in 1975, Edward Abbey observed that when Westerners with certain attitude problems start talking, the conversation often features their representatives in the U.S. Congress. “Look at Senators Garn and Moss of Utah, Senators Goldwater and Fannin of Arizona, Governor Rampton of Utah, Congressmen Steiger and […]
The postal service is slipping away
On many days, it seems as though the things I like best about our country are all under attack: public lands, the Bill of Rights, passenger trains and the U.S. Postal Service. Especially if you live in the boondocks of the West, the Postal Service means more to you than it does to most urban […]
A Great Aridity
There’s an old Doors song which tells us that “The future’s uncertain and the end is always near.” That pretty well sums up the message I got from the new book by William deBuys, A Great Aridity: Climate Change and the Future of the American Southwest. He takes us around the region — its heart, […]
Fixing what ain’t broken in Foggy Bottom
There may be many distinguishing features of the current U.S. House of Representatives, but one that sticks out recently is the tendency to do things that don’t need to be done. First, keep in mind that Lisa Jackson, head of the Environmental Protection Agency, has made it clear on several occasions that the EPA has […]
Former New Mexico governor leaves GOP
Until Dec. 28, there were two former Western governors seeking the Republican presidential nomination. One remains in the race. Jon Huntsman, Jr., was governor of Utah from 2005 until he resigned in 2009 to serve as U.S. ambassador to China. He hasn’t gained much traction to date — a reputation for sanity has not been […]
Another try for wilderness
Browns Canyon in central Colorado is again getting promoted for wilderness designation. It was one of 18 areas in nine Western states identified in a recent report by the federal Bureau of Land Management with “significant local support for Congressional protection.” The area sits six miles south of Buena Vista, and even if it’s called […]
How Christo’s opponents can change your mind
Early in November, the Bureau of Land Management approved plans for an immense art installation called “Over the River,” which involves suspending translucent fabric panels across 5.9 miles of the Arkansas River in central Colorado. The artist behind Over the River’s two-week existence in 2014 is Christo and his late wife Jeanne-Claude. They specialize in […]
Presidential candidates are missing the Western issues
What if the Western Republican Leadership Conference sponsored a debate in the West for Republican presidential candidates, with audience members all from the West, and they never got around to talking about Western issues? That’s pretty much what happened on Oct. 18 in Las Vegas in a contenders’ debate co-sponsored by CNN, which also broadcast […]
Occupation in the boondocks
It started with “Occupy Wall Street” on Sept. 17, and the movement has since spread to more than 1,000 cities in 82 countries. So it didn’t come as a major suprise that my town was home to an “Occupy Salida” protest early in the afternoon of Oct. 29. About 50 people showed up at the […]
It pays to be walkable
One of the things I like best about living in Salida, Colo., is that this town of 5,500 offers a good pedestrian environment with narrow streets and wide sidewalks though much of town, Although it’s not quite so easy as it used to be, we can still manage most of life’s routine commerce on foot. […]
The other Sept. 11 tragedy
Long before 2001, Sept. 11 marked the anniversary of a date when Americans going about their business were killed in cold blood by religious zealots. It was the Mountain Meadows Massacre of 1857 near Cedar City, Utah. Just about everything except the date and location remain subject to dispute. Mormons had been persecuted in […]
Environmental privilege
By now most of us have heard of “environmental racism,” which involves actions like putting toxic facilities in minority neighborhoods. The opposite, “environmental privilege” is explored in a book due out this month, The Slums of Aspen, Immigrants vs. the Environment in America’s Eden by David Pellow and Lisa Sun-Hee Park, both professors of sociology […]
Attracting attention
By some accounts, the eyes of the world were on my little mountain town on Aug. 23. That’s because Salida, Colo., was the starting point for the first stage of the week-long USA Pro Cycling Challenge race that wends through the Colorado mountains. Competitors come from all over the globe, and so do the TV […]
BLM issues final EIS for Over the River
The federal Bureau of Land Management has issued a final Environmental Impact Statement for the controversial “Over the River” art installation. Proposed by the artist Christo and his late wife Jeanne Claude, the project would suspend nearly six total miles of translucent fabric in various spots along a 42-mile stretch of the Arkansas River between […]
Naming the wind
Living in the West means living with the wind. Some of our winds even have names like chinook, dust devil, black roller and blue norther. Many of us learned of another name this July, when a “haboob” struck Phoenix. It’s a blinding dust storm, provoked by strong gusts from a thunderstorm. The National Weather Service […]