The weather phenomenon could bring rain but also mudslides and drought to the different regions of the West.
Hopes high for a ‘Super’ El Niño
Mexican wolf restoration hits (another) snag
The feds want to release captive animals to increase genetic diversity in the wild, but New Mexico isn’t having it.
Iran deal adds to pain for US oil producers
Experts disagree about how much incremental damage US drillers will suffer.
Extinction is taking its course underwater
As children, most of us learned about the passenger pigeons, whose huge flocks darkened America’s skies before they became extinct a century ago. Another lesson came from the buffalo that we did our best to eradicate from the Great Plains. Less understood is what goes on underwater in our lakes, rivers and streams. Now, a new report by Trout Unlimited shows disturbing parallels with […]
Dispatch from Valley Fire evacuation camp in California
State officials are calling the Lake County blaze one of the fastest-moving fires in memory.
A crude oil export ban primer
All you need to know, and then some, about selling U.S. oil overseas.
Writing beyond the reservation stereotype
A Native author creates characters who are making a life in the urban West.
Where agriculture and aesthetics go hand-in-glove
Former Seattleite and author Bryce Andrews writes and ranches in Montana.
The real work
On a hot, dusty August Saturday a few years ago, people from all over the North Fork Valley convened at a country veterinarian’s office just outside Paonia, Colorado (HCN’s hometown). We came with paintbrushes and paint, wheelbarrows, buckets, rakes and shovels, food and drink. About a dozen of us, ranging in age from 8 to […]
The myriad ways the natural world disappoints, delights and destroys.
Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.
The human cost of Westward expansion
A review of ‘American Copper’ by Shann Ray.
The fall reading list
Book recommendations for the cold months ahead.
Sketching water chemistry on the Animas, hunting mushrooms in the Northwest.
Hcn.org news in brief.
Self-published books: What to read
Some favorite under-the-radar writers and their recent releases.
Overlooked author Lucia Berlin gets brought back to the light
‘A Manual for Cleaning Women,’ her posthumous book of stories, reveals a formidable talent.
Notes from the road to bestsellerdom
An author’s promotional book tour includes incontinent owls and posh but uncomfortable luncheons.
Mitchell S. Jackson finds another Portland
An author speaks on growing up black in 1990s Portland and countering his city’s hipster image.
In the barren Central Valley, a woman unravels
A review of ‘Into the Valley’ by Ruth Galm.
How to redefine — and defend — wilderness
A review of a new way to look at what’s wild and what’s not, in Jason Mark’s ‘Satellites in the High Country’ and Fred Pearce’s ‘The New Wild.’
Claustrophilia: Do wide-open lands bring us closer together?
A writer finds that Colorado small-town life and Mongolian mishaps strengthen her human connections.
