TUSAYAN, Ariz. – Just south of Grand Canyon National Park, this hamlet of 1,600 people is a model for what federal planners don’t want near a national treasure. The main street takes millions of visitors a year past an Imax Theater opposite an RV park, Babbitt’s General Store, motels and fast-food restaurants that tourists overwhelm […]
The Grand Canyon struggles with reality
A conservation first for Arizona
SANTA CRUZ COUNTY, Ariz. – Travelers often gasp when they reach the crest of Forest Road 58 in the Patagonia Mountains and see the San Rafael Valley spreading below to Mexico. The valley, where the musical Oklahoma was filmed years ago, is a wide bowl of grassland and gentle ridges, one of the most unbroken […]
Navajo president forced to resign
Window Rock, Ariz. – Facing up to 50 criminal charges, Navajo President Albert Hale resigned from office Feb. 19. “I could fight this,” he said, “but I don’t want to subject my people, especially my mother and children, to this.” By resigning, Hale avoided prosecution for misusing tribal money. During his parting address to people […]
Dear Friends
Old and Older Aspen Although Aspen has become mythic as a place where great wealth collides with glamour and fame (and occasionally with trees), beneath the hoopla there beats the heart of a small Western town. That town was on display Jan. 31, when Aspen honored its own: environmentalist Joy Caudill, architect Sam Caudill, ski […]
For some, horse meat ain’t all bad
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Although most Americans would never think of chowing down on a horse, their distaste is not shared by the French, the Belgians, or many other continental Europeans. Not to mention the Japanese. The reasons for such varying tastes were analyzed by Marvin Harris in […]
A difference of opinion over numbers
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. People have been bickering about how many wild horses live in Nevada ever since 1992, when horse lover Michael Blake, author of Dances With Wolves, conducted a census there. His observers found only 8,324 — less than one quarter of the BLM figure. Agency […]
Wild horses: Do they belong in the West?
Note: two sidebar articles, titled “A difference of opinion over numbers” and “For some, horse meat ain’t all bad,” accompany this feature story. BRITTON SPRINGS, Wyo. – From the top of the ridge we can hear the helicopter droning behind pastel desert hills, and see the distant slopes of the Pryor Mountains just across the […]
Scat dogs earn their keep
Moja and Molly aren’t ordinary Labrador retrievers – they earn their keep by locating animal scat for senior scientist Sam Wasser of the Center for Wildlife Conservation in Seattle, Wash. “This is going to completely revolutionize the science of animal monitoring,” Wasser said. Wasser has trained the dogs to sniff out bear and wolf droppings […]
A scarlet “A’ for ASARCO?
A controversial open-pit copper mine proposed for the Santa Rita Mountains of southern Arizona (HCN, 9/1/97) has been put on hold. In a Jan. 21 letter from ASARCO Inc. to the Coronado National Forest, the company blamed low copper prices for the pullout and said the project would be delayed for “at least a couple […]
7th Annual Land Use Continuing Education Conference
Utah Gov. Michael Leavitt and John Nichols, author of The Milagro Beanfield War, will be among the guest speakers at the 7th Annual Land Use Continuing Education Conference in Denver, March 12-13. Topics will include preserving open space, private property rights, small town economic development and urban growth boundaries. Contact the Rocky Mountain Land Use […]
From orchards to Philadelphia
Utahns who live in the booming Salt Lake City area need to manage growth now, says Baseline Scenario, a study by the nonprofit Utah Quality Growth Partnership. The partnership is a coalition of government, civic and business leaders concerned about urban sprawl in a 10-county area, including Salt Lake City. In the 1960s and “70s, […]
BirdSource Great “98 Backyard Bird Count
If you have a birdfeeder, binoculars and access to a computer, you can join the BirdSource Great “98 Backyard Bird Count, Feb 20-22. Sponsored by the National Audubon Society and Cornell University, the project will use the Internet to collect sightings from birdwatchers across the continent, documenting some unusual migration patterns observed this winter. Anyone […]
Mesa County Water Association
The Mesa County Water Association will hold its fifth annual water course Feb. 17 and 25 and March 3 in Grand Junction, Colo. Call 970/242-7490 for information. This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline Mesa County Water Association.
7th annual Winter Fishtrap Gathering
-We cannot deal exhaustively with the water concerns of the world in a few hours,” says Rich Wandschneider, director of Fishtrap, a group that explores writing and public policy in Enterprise, Ore. “But we can spend time thinking, talking, reading and writing about water.” Join Fishtrap and writer George Sibley, philosophy professor and nature writer […]
Gunnison River Basin/Grand Valley Water Quality Forum
The chemicals we use on our gardens, lawns, and highways, and the stuff we dump down the drain can cause big problems for streams and rivers, says Steve Glazer with Colorado’s High Country Citizens Alliance. You can learn more at the Gunnison River Basin/ Grand Valley Water Quality Forum Feb. 26 in Montrose, Colo. Contact […]
Western Colorado Pollution Prevention Program
You can’t pick your regulators, but you can pick their brains, says the Western Colorado Pollution Prevention Program. Learn more about environmental regulations from state regulators at an April 22 seminar in Grand Junction, Colo. The daylong seminar costs $15 and class size is limited to 50. Call Sue Kiser at 888/685-8576 or write to […]
Green Building Resource Center
Design professionals interested in incorporating “green” practices into their work have a new site on the Web. From straw-bale houses to national parks, the Green Building Resource Center provides information about energy efficiency, water conservation and other sustainable-design issues. The site is operated by two nonprofits, the Salt Lake-based Global Environmental Options (GEO) and Building […]
Working the Watershed
Richard Manning’s article “Working the Watershed” (HCN, 3/17/97) could easily have been titled “Overworking the Watershed.” It described efforts to restore salmon fisheries and oyster beds to Willapa Bay, a part of southwestern Washington state that has been logged and logged and logged again. Now the neighboring, and similarly overworked, Chinook watershed is the subject […]
Quincy comes up short
A professor at the University of California at Berkeley has taken a scholarly look at the Quincy Library Group and at its plan and decided that both are flawed, but not because he opposes consensus efforts. In the same article, Timothy P. Duane finds that a consensus group in California’s Yuba River watershed does something […]
When green becomes red
Red ink is red ink, but the U.S. Forest Service and The Wilderness Society color their images of commercial logging on our national forests in grossly different shades. The Forest Service says it made $16 million from commercial timber sales in Oregon and Washington in fiscal year 1996. The Wilderness Society estimates the agency lost […]
