“Fancy how I trembled.” That was activist Rosalie Edge’s tongue-in-cheek response to an incident in the 1930s, when an Audubon Society attorney accused her of being a “common scold.” A thorn in the conservation organization’s side for decades, Edge badgered board members and directors for bowing to sportsmen’s influence and ignoring dissenting voices. Although her […]
Departments
Retooling for the next mission
Some vets think their war was for oil. Now they’re working to help us use less.
A tenderfoot in Taos
An exhausted mother. A lively baby. A compassionate drunkard.
Cultural blight
Plant disease threatens traditions of California tribes.
Let’s get bigger
The article “Let’s Get Small” noted some problems with incentives for distributed generation in California — many of which I experience with my 1.2 kilowatt photovoltaic system (HCN, 6/22 & 7/6/09). Two years ago, I generated $25 more electricity than I used. I lost this “credit” at the end of my one-year net metering period. […]
Unintended castor-quences
“Voyage of the dammed” by Kevin Taylor doesn’t mention one of the negative impacts of beaver — their indirect influence on native plants and animals when non-native species are present (HCN, 6/8/09). For example, beavers strongly prefer native cottonwoods over non-native salt cedar (tamarisk) and Russian olive. This selective foraging gives a substantial additional advantage […]
Biomass is where it’s at
I have checked your “Alternative Alternative Energy: An HCN Special Report” issue over carefully, twice now, and it appears that my eyes are not deceiving me — you really did ignore the potential contributions of woody biomass (HCN, 6/22 & 7/6/09). This is shortsighted, to say the least.Forest biomass is plentiful, carbon-neutral and essential to […]
Wavin’ in Oregon
In your otherwise excellent series of articles on renewable energy in the West, a few gaps were evident (HCN, 6/22 & 7/6/09). Your map on page 16 leaves the impression that Oregon is far behind neighboring states in alternative energy projects (see correction, page 11). In fact, many wind energy sites not noted on the […]
Bull riders for Jesus
I wish Craig Childs had attended Cowboy Church during his PBR bull riding experience in Billings (HCN, 5/25/09). He might have had a different perspective in his article concerning the “wild life” of bull riders. They are all not drinkers and carousers as implied in his article. Cowboy Church is organized and attended by many […]
Even hard-liners want to experiment in Arizona
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, “Taking control of the machine.” “We squashed the timber industry and the Forest Service, and dictated the terms of surrender” in the Southwest, says Kieran Suckling, the director of the Center for Biological Diversity. He’s talking about a war that began in the 1980s, […]
Taking control of the machine
Environmentalists and timber companies push big experiments in national forests
Of moose and mandolins
AGE 30HOMETOWN Broadview Heights, OhioOCCUPATION Environmental scientist with the EPAHCN READER SINCE 2002 Elaine Lai stopped by High Country News on a sunny day in early May. She works for the wastewater unit of the Environmental Protection Agency, and had driven over from her Denver office to write a permit for the federal fish hatchery […]
The Renewable Energy Landscape
A look at renewable energy in the West
Renewables: The Final Frontier
Why historian Vaclav Smil thinks there are no easy solutions to our energy problems
“God ain’t a great co-pilot”
Christopher Hitchens and his godless views attracted only a dozen cadets from the Air Force Academy recently, probably because the get-together, which took place at a Colorado Springs restaurant, was forbidden on campus. An Academy spokesman said Hitchens was not welcome because he’d made comments that were “degrading to others,” reports the Colorado Springs Independent. […]
From Pickups to PV
Utility brings solar power to far-flung Navajos
Thinking Past the Moment
An interview with Sierra Club renewable energy expert Carl Zichella
Scrounging in Seattle
A 2-year-old black bear, sympathetically described by wildlife experts as lonely, scared and kicked out of home by his mother, raced around Seattle backyards recently, for days eluding police, who dubbed him the “urban phantom.” Kim Chandler, a Washington state Fish and Wildlife officer, told the Seattle Times that the 125-pound bear was as wily […]
Growing Away from Big Coal
Rural electric co-ops make a slow push back toward community energy
