Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story: Disappearing railroad blues You’re approaching the railroad tracks when you hear the horn and see a train coming down the line. Most people get annoyed by the delay. But if you relax and look forward to watching the train roll by, you’re a railroad buff. […]
A confirmed railroad addict
Disappearing railroad blues
SALIDA, Colo. – For about 25 years, people around here have observed that “the train doesn’t stop here any more.” Someday soon, we may be saying that the train doesn’t even come through here any more. “Here” is a town of 5,000 in the middle of Colorado. Like many towns in the West – Cheyenne, […]
Drought ‘ heat = fire
Drought ‘ heat = fire This year’s fire season started fast and furiously. Across the parched states of Arizona and New Mexico, 3,600 fires have scorched some 324,000 acres. As a precautionary measure, 10 of 11 national forests in the region declared at least part of their acreage off-limits to recreationists in June. The most […]
Canyon trip turns fatal
When Robin Phillips of Bountiful, Utah, planned a six-day hiking trip into the Grand Canyon for his troop of Boy Scouts last month, he knew the remote route would be waterless. But maps and guidebooks couldn’t tell him it would prove deadly. Three days into the trip, which, as it turned out, Phillips could not […]
Story’s comparison was wrongheaded
Dear HCN, Your May 13 article on dams and Northwest salmon quoted a Boise teacher to the effect that removing dams on the Snake and Columbia rivers would only affect “15,000 jobs connected to the BPA, the Army Corps, the navigation industry, three lower Snake ports, eight aluminum companies, and 500 farms served by the […]
We are regulating ourselves at last
Dear HCN, As a professional in the field of outdoor-adventure education, I appreciated your well-balanced, thorough discussion of outdoor education (HCN, 6/10/96). As wilderness becomes the place for personal growth, team-building and therapeutic purposes, industry regulation becomes increasingly critical. This is evidenced by the toll of teenage fatalities in “tough love” programs such as North […]
Winning hearts and minds through local action
Dear HCN, Sierra Club leader Michael McCloskey was correct when he told his board that community collaboration processes “have the effect of transferring influence to the very communities where we are least organized and potent.” He went on to note that local environmentalists often lack experience, training, skills and money. So what is the correct […]
Keep it on the ground
Dear HCN, I read with interest your issue featuring community-based approaches to conservation (HCN, 5/13/96). Mike McCloskey’s essay illustrates the concerns of many since, in his view, locally based conservation would disempower the heavily urban constituencies of the Sierra Club, and by extension, other national environmental organizations. That concern is perhaps the most compelling reason […]
Postscripts from a Californian
Dear HCN, Regarding the Quincy Library Group efforts described in HCN May 13, there are consequences to the Clinton administration’s well-meaning decision to provide the promised $4.7 million to fund the library group’s agreement. The funding was taken off the top of an already impoverished Region 5 resources budget. Range management programs which have never […]
Kids know where to look
Dear HCN, This spring I had the pleasure of leading a group of fifth-graders from Portland, Ore., on a hike through the Opal Creek Ancient Forest. These are the future hellions which our politicians have been scrambling to build prisons for. Kids from not-so-normal families. Their neighborhood is known as “felony flats.” My kind of […]
Helping Small Towns Survive
Jackson, Wyo., will host the fifth annual training institute for community development specialists, sponsored by the Heartland Center for Leadership Development, Oct. 10-14. This year’s focus is Helping Small Towns Survive. Contact the Jackson Hole Institute, care of the Heartland Center for Leadership Development, 941 “O” Street, Suite 920, Lincoln, NE 68508 (800/927-1115). This article […]
Endangered Species Act Conference
For those whose job requires detailed knowledge of the Endangered Species Act, there will be a technical conference Aug. 8-9 at the Hyatt Regency in Denver, Colo. Sponsored by CLE International, a company that hosts environmental law seminars, the third annual Endangered Species Act Conference will explain how the law works and how it affects […]
Instream Flows: Minimum Doctrine/Maximum Controversy
The 21st annual Colorado Water Workshop at Western State College in Gunnison Aug. 7-9 focuses this year on Instream Flows: Minimum Doctrine/ Maximum Controversy. For more information, contact the Colorado Water Workshop, Aspinall Wilson Center, Western State College, Gunnison, CO 81231 or call Pam Ayers at 970/ 943-7156. For those whose job requires detailed knowledge […]
From the Canyons to the Stars
If you’ve read Terry Tempest Williams and would like to hear her in person, come to a free reading and talk at 5:30 p.m. on July 30 at Aspen’s Harris Hall. The event is sponsored by the Southern Utah Wilderness Alliance as part of the Aspen Music Festival’s “From the Canyons to the Stars,” a […]
Forgotten, but not gone – yet
Few people know that the American marten, a forest-dwelling weasel the size of a house cat, hunts small mammals in cavities under snow, and “is so exquisitely tuned to its surroundings that it can depress its body temperature … minimizing energy expenditures in the stressful winter months.” Or that the wolverine, the largest of the […]
Sharing a clouded past
Thousands of people exposed to radiation from the Hanford Nuclear Reservation in southeast Washington during decades of Cold War experiments have had health problems and wondered: “Am I the only one?” Now they will have a chance to share their experiences, says Bea Kelleigh, of the Hanford Health Information Network. Formed by Congress in 1991, […]
Mine your own business
When a Canadian mining subsidiary showed up last year in the 1,500-person mountain community of Yarnell, Ariz., mine officials announced they were re-opening an open-pit gold mine that had been closed since 1942. Angry locals immediately formed Guardians for the Rural Environment, and members hope they can halt the cyanide heap-leach mine. They’ve asked the […]
How we did them in
Anyone interested in understanding the ongoing salmon debacle should read The Northwest Salmon Crisis: A Documentary History. Editors Joseph Cone and Sandy Ridlington have compiled over 80 documents from the last 140 years to lead us through the salmon’s decline. They remind us that this tragedy occurred even though red flags were waving every step […]
Getting the lead out
The nonprofit Inland Empire Public Lands Council, based in Washington state, broke new ground in public outreach when it dropped 10,000 video cassettes on Spokane Valley doorsteps in May. It produced the 10-minute video, “Get the LEAD out!” to alert residents to the legacy of toxins from mining in the Spokane-Coeur d’Alene watershed. “We want […]
The history of two canyons, in photographs
Out of the flood of books on the Colorado River, two recent illustrated volumes caught our eye. Robert H. Webb’s Grand Canyon, a Century of Change features pairs of matched photos, old and new. The author, a hydrologist involved with Glen Canyon Environmental Studies, spent seven months replicating hundreds of photographic views from the Stanton […]
