Reminiscing on a half-century in the forest.
Articles
West Obsessed: How to fix a broken rural health care system
The staff of High Country News discuss the solutions small towns are trying to patch up their healthcare.
The shadow following Western political races
Nevada and Arizona attract the most “dark money” this election.
Washington state implements rule to combat climate change
State Department of Ecology unveils initiative to cap and reduce the carbon pollution.
How for-profit detention persists in the West
Federal policy changes only go part of the way in dismantling private immigrant detention.
Chasing the rarest bumblebee in the world
A group of Oregonians searches for the disappearing Franklin’s bee.
West Obsessed: After 100 years, the national parks have hit some road bumps
The staff of High Country News talk about the challenges the Park Service faces.
How the Dakota pipeline protest is spreading Westwide
The protests are fueled by a diverse array of causes, from tribal sovereignty to fossil fuel dependence.
What we’re reading about the Bundy trial in Oregon
A guide to making sense of the courtroom drama, as the trial begins.
For the first time, U.S. and Mexico take stock of the underground water they share
The two countries have tried for years to thoroughly assess aquifers along the border.
If you can’t beat the weeds, eat them
How nature — and marmots — thwarted a plan for an urban garden.
Tribes win one fight, lose another in pipeline protest
The Obama administration intervened in favor of tribes, for now.
How do you beat hunger and food waste? Try compost
Reunity turns restaurant scraps into soil — and connects Santa Fe with rural farms in the process.
The myth of telemedicine?
While technology can fill in some gaps for rural health, it can’t do it all.
Can a Montana community run its own forest?
Local citizens collaborate to restore, protect, and utilize Alvord Lake.
Defense bill threatens sage grouse survival
A sneaky amendment would block protection under the Endangered Species Act.
Ranch Diaries: Two years into Triangle P Cattle, we’re coming into our own
My childhood cowgirl dreams and family traditions are settling in and coming to fruition.
New Mexican farmers struggle to stay on the land
Can a tax break keep New Mexico’s struggling farmers from selling out?
Rural Colorado can’t afford to lose more water to Denver
Is diverting water through the Gross Dam-Moffat Tunnel project still necessary?
The Bundys go on trial
Following Oregon occupation and Nevada standoff, a family that refuses to accept the federal government will have its day in court.
