Posted inDecember 8, 1997: Mono Lake: Victory over Los Angeles turns into local controversy

Mono Lake: Victory over Los Angeles turns into local controversy

Note: an essay by Charles Wilkinson about Mono Lake accompanies this feature story. LEE VINING, Calif. – Mono Valley hovers at the western edge of the Great Basin on the Sierra Nevada range, a majestic place of stark horizons and haunting skies. In autumn, Lombardy poplars and cottonwoods blaze golden along the highway and seem […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

With friends like these …

Dear HCN, As I am accustomed to seeing my name on bathroom walls and bulletin boards in certain public buildings, the implication (from developer Milo McCowan) that I support the dozing of Utah’s Rockville Bench merely adds another zit to an already blemished reputation (HCN, 9/29/97). It is not OK, however, to drop the name […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

What’s really behind user fees

Dear HCN, The current “recreation funding crisis’ has less to do with trail fees than with management direction. Congress and top federal agency managers are rapidly shifting their focus from one commercial forest “product” to another: from timber production to industrial recreation. The “Demonstration Recreation Fee Program” is but a small part of a larger […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

Let the exploiters pay

Dear HCN, In your article, “The land is still public, but it’s no longer FREE,” you quote Randal O’Toole, a forest economist, as saying, “… the government has been managing land for ranchers and loggers, and collecting fees from them (HCN, 10/13/97). The result … is that the agencies have leaned toward the interests of […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

A ranch rescued

The Nature Conservancy of Utah is spending $4.6 million to save a working ranch from developers. The Dugout Ranch near Canyonlands National Park is now safely in conservancy hands since owner Heidi Redd and conservancy officials closed a deal Oct. 15. “I couldn’t be happier,” said a relieved Redd. “The Nature Conservancy has bent over […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

Our national movie stars

National parks have always played starring roles in Hollywood productions. Sandstone pillars and deep gorges also appear on television and in magazines, selling cars, beer and almost everything in between. But most parks, some of which host an average of 50 productions per year, don’t see a dime from production companies. A 40-year-old rule prohibits […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

Tribes create a wilderness park

Buying back part of their original homeland, 11 tribes in California have established the first Native American-owned park, located 200 miles north of San Francisco along the California coast. The 3,900-acre InterTribal Sinkyone (pronounced sinky-own) Wilderness Park will be managed differently than Yellowstone or the Grand Canyon, however, because the tribes, including descendants of the […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

The Wayward West

Three Wisconsin Chippewa tribes wanted to start a casino. Nearby tribes didn’t want the competition. They had given money to the Democratic Party. After the regional office of the Bureau of Indian Affairs endorsed the casino, higher-ups in Washington rejected it. Conflict of interest? Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt says no. His old friend and former […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

How an eco-logger views his work

Not many loggers have a degree in creative writing. Fewer serve on the board of a state wilderness association or argue philosophy with timber giants like Plum Creek in northwest Montana. Bob Love does. He’s been called the “eco-logger” by some, the “Una-Logger” by others, and these days he runs a one-man selective logging business. […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

Freak wind storm flattens 6 million trees

For hundreds of years, the spruce forest in the mountains north of Steamboat Springs, Colo., close to Wyoming, endured everything Mother Nature could throw at it: deep winter snows, severe drought, lightning strikes and gusty winds. But on the night of Oct. 24, the forest got hit by something new: 120-mile-per-hour winds blowing from the […]

Posted inNovember 24, 1997: Restoring a refuge: Cows depart, but can antelope recover?

Montana congressman sweetens a buyout

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Mysterious are the labyrinthine hallways of the Capitol; who knows what spirits lurk therein? Down those twisted tunnels and curved corridors are things that go bump in the night. Some of those bumps can vibrate all the way to Montana. One dark, murky night – indeed, it may have been Halloween night […]

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