Posted inOctober 26, 1998: The Oregon way

A water baron takes on the establishment

One-word descriptions of rancher Gary Boyce are easy to find in the high, wide and impoverished San Luis Valley of south-central Colorado. “Greedy” comes up often, as does “opportunist,” along with terms unprintable even by Starr Report standards. But “flamboyant” also fits. Boyce is generous with expensive cigars and wears knee-high hand-tooled stove-pipe cowboy boots […]

Posted inOctober 26, 1998: The Oregon way

Building a $100 million paradise in Montana’s Paradise Valley

EMIGRANT, Mont. – In the early 1900s, when Yellowstone Park Superintendent Horace Albright looked upon Paradise Valley, his neighbor to the north, he proclaimed: “If that area were in any other state, it would have been a national park.” Framed by mountains and split down the middle by the Yellowstone River, Paradise Valley has always […]

Posted inOctober 26, 1998: The Oregon way

Are the West’s governors turning over a new (green)leaf?

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. This summer, the governors of 17 Western states quietly changed their tune. Led by Gov. John Kitzhaber of Oregon, D, and Gov. Michael Leavitt of Utah, R, the mostly anti-federal-government members of the Western Governors’ Association unanimously agreed to a “shared environmental doctrine,” giving […]

Posted inOctober 26, 1998: The Oregon way

Oregon statistics

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Annual per capita income in urban areas: $24,697 … in rural areas: $19,381 Percentage of Oregon adults with a high school degree: 91 Number of one-teacher schools in Oregon: 8 Estimated daily number of visitors to the 43,000-square-foot Powell’s Books in Portland: 6,000 Unemployment […]

Posted inOctober 12, 1998: A river becomes a raw nerve

Trails and the American Spirit

Tucson, Ariz., plays host to this year’s National Trails Symposium, Nov. 13-17. “Trails and the American Spirit,” sponsored by American Trails, features keynote speakers Royal Robbins, the adventurer and outdoor clothing baron, and Tom Whittaker, the first disabled person to summit Everest. Contact American Trails at 520/632-1140 or visit www.outdoorlink.com/amtrails. This article appeared in the […]

Posted inOctober 12, 1998: A river becomes a raw nerve

World Oil Forum

The World Oil Forum in Denver, Oct. 30, considers the future of the world supply of petroleum. Experts from advocacy groups, industry and government will discuss the timing and consequences of oil production’s impending decline. Contact the Community Office for Resource Efficiency, P.O. Box 9707, Aspen, CO 81612 (970/544-9808). This article appeared in the print […]

Posted inOctober 12, 1998: A river becomes a raw nerve

Broadway, mountain-style

Bitter environmental conflict inspires demonstrations, op-ed pieces, sometimes violence. In the Mattole Valley of Northern California, fights over logging and salmon have generated something else entirely: musical comedy. Activist David Simpson and his choreographer wife, Jane Lapiner, both San Francisco Mime Troupe veterans, launched a theater group, Human Nature, to try to ease tensions between […]

Posted inOctober 12, 1998: A river becomes a raw nerve

They left only footprints

When storms hit central Wyoming’s Bighorn Basin, dry washes turn to muddy streams, scouring the limestone bedrock. In one gully near the Red Gulch/Alkali Backcountry Byway, the yearly floods uncovered more than 2,000 dinosaur tracks from the Middle Jurassic period. “There were thousands and thousands of small- to medium-sized meat-eating dinosaurs scurrying around here,” explains […]

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