Posted inMarch 17, 1997: Working the Watershed

Carbon Monoxide Forecasting for Colorado Springs: 1996-2020

Local planners in Colorado Springs have underestimated both population growth and carbon monoxide pollution so as not to hinder the city’s rapid growth, warns physicist Val Veirs. The director of environmental science at Colorado College, Veirs predicts the sprawling city will violate the federal Clean Air Act within 15 years. His detailed report, Carbon Monoxide […]

Posted inMarch 3, 1997: Hunters close ranks, and minds

Wanted alive

Bewildered by declining numbers of boreal toads, the Colorado Division of Wildlife is hoping the “help wanteds’ will yield some clues. The agency is displaying colorful posters at trailheads and outdoor equipment stores, describing the small toads and asking for the public’s help in finding them. Since the boreal toad is uniquely adapted to the […]

Posted inMarch 3, 1997: Hunters close ranks, and minds

Caretakers wanted

Taking care of other people’s property for a living is taking off, says Gary Dunn, publisher of Washington state’s eight-page newsletter, The Caretaker Gazette. The bimonthly newsletter, first printed in 1983, lists some 90 caretaking opportunities in the United States and nine foreign counties. Interest is equal on either side of the equation, Dunn says: […]

Posted inFebruary 17, 1997: No home on the range

Whose West is it?

Developers, planners, attorneys and conservationists will talk about urban and rural land development at the sixth annual conference on land use, sponsored by the Denver-based Rocky Mountain Land Use Institute, March 13-14. High Country News publisher Ed Marston will debate what’s happening to the economy and culture of the New West with William Perry Pendley, […]

Posted inFebruary 17, 1997: No home on the range

Go native

Native plants are enjoying a new celebrity with Western gardeners, landscapers and conservationists. But just what makes a plant a native? Art Kruckeberg, a botanist at the University of Washington and a founder of the Washington Native Plant Society, says the short answer is this: Natives are plants that were here before European contact. The […]

Posted inJanuary 20, 1997: Bees under siege

Mostly you need faith

Grassroots Grants: An Activist’s Guide to Proposal Writing belies its title by first listing all the reasons why nonprofits should not chase grants. That’s because only 12 percent of nonprofit funding comes from foundation or corporate grants, compared to 88 percent from individuals, writes Andy Robinson, who lives in Tucson, Ariz. To make matters worse, […]

Posted inJanuary 20, 1997: Bees under siege

Cowboy Poetry Gathering

The Cowboy Poetry Gathering is back Jan. 25-Feb. 1, to celebrate the ranching traditions of poetry, music, art, dance and “plain old visiting.” The 13th annual shindig in Elko, Nev., pays special tribute to Canadian cowboys, while daytime events range from workshops on ranch-kitchen cooking to multi-day classes on songwriting, saddle-stamping and rawhide-braiding. Evenings feature […]

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