Posted inMay 28, 2012: The Gila Bend Photon Club

Conservation agreements try to head off endangered species listings

With the arrival of spring in western Colorado’s Gunnison River Basin comes the bizarre mating ritual of the Gunnison sage grouse. In clearings called leks, males gather to show off extravagant courtship dances, slapping their wings against their bodies and filling and popping the two air sacs on their breasts. Spring also heralds another local […]

Posted inMay 28, 2012: The Gila Bend Photon Club

Choosing between solar and soil in California

California farmer Michael Robinson’s 120 acres in the Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta might seem like the perfect site for a 20-megawatt solar array to power thousands of homes. It’s near transmission lines and lacks the endangered tortoises, long waits for federal permits and other obstacles that have tripped up larger solar projects in the Mojave […]

Posted inMay 28, 2012: The Gila Bend Photon Club

Rowing to Yap

Michelle Nijhuis’ essay in the April 30, 2012, issue, “The row to nowhere,” was delightful. I lived on Yap, or more accurately, I spent several weeks there several times. The island is beautiful and traditional. Most amazing is that part of the islanders’ own “rowing history” involves rowing, or, rather, sailing, to the sort-of-nearby island […]

Posted inMay 28, 2012: The Gila Bend Photon Club

Filling empty pages: A review of When Women Were Birds

When Women Were Birds: Fifty-four Variations on VoiceTerry Tempest Williams224 pages, hardcover: $24.Farrar, Straus and Giroux (Sarah Crichton Books), 2012. Terry Tempest Williams’ new book, When Women Were Birds, resonates with her signature gift — the ability to salvage beauty from great heartbreak. Like her acclaimed memoir Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place, […]

Posted inMay 28, 2012: The Gila Bend Photon Club

Dead trees, biodiversity, and the black-backed woodpecker

The ruins of scorched or beetle-killed forests may not seem like ecological havens. But myriad species depend on standing dead or dying trees, including the black-backed woodpecker, which haunts skeletal forests in the West, Alaska and Canada. Its ebony dorsal plumage blends in with the charred tree trunks on which the bird rummages for juicy […]

Posted inMay 28, 2012: The Gila Bend Photon Club

In the desert, questions without answers: A review of Gods Without Men

Gods Without MenHari Kunzru384 pages, hardcover: $26.95.Knopf, 2012. The setup to Gods Without Men may sound like the beginning of a bad joke: “A Sikh, a hippie, and a monk walk out to the desert. …” But there’s nothing clichéd about British novelist Hari Kunzru’s latest work. Kunzru’s mosaic of a story envisions history lapping […]

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