Activist Winona LaDuke on environmental justice and foregoing unclean technology.
From the Tipi to the Tesla
Target practice with a vengeance
I was reading the newspaper at my computer desk when a huge explosion rattled the window of my home office. I leaped several inches off the chair, sure that my husband, who was working on our camp trailer, had been blown to smithereens by a propane tank explosion. I ran to the front window and […]
Offshore oil rigs can provide prime fish habitat
But will California’s platforms stay in the ocean once the oil runs out?
Obama declares new national monument in the mountains above Los Angeles
Trails, campgrounds and wildlands will qualify for federal funding for improvements.
The Latest: Wyoming’s wolf delisting thrown out
A U.S. District Court hands management back to the feds.
Writing the unthinkable
Things We Do Not Talk About: Exploring Latino/a Literature Through Essays and InterviewsDaniel A. Olivas202 pages,softcover: $21 San Diego State University Press, 2014. After 24 years as a lawyer in the California Department of Justice, Daniel A. Olivas has heard a lot of stories. His seventh book, Things We Do Not Talk About, gathers essays […]
When a hunter chases his quarry through a Lexus dealership
Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.
Snake River quibbles
Having grown up in the “Magic Valley,” I was intrigued and impressed by this article on the socio-economic and environmental effects of Big Ag in the Snake River Plain (“Idaho’s Sewer System,” HCN, 8/4/14). I do have one factual quibble: Cassia County (my home) has considerable mountainous terrain, including much national forest. It cannot possibly have […]
Winners of the HCN reader photography contest
Readers’ and editors picks in people, landscape and wildlife.
On the edge with Edward Abbey, Charles Ives and the outlaws
One of Charles Bowden’s last essays.
Lost impartiality
As a longtime supporter of High Country News, I was very disappointed that you chose to publish the biased and unsubstantiated “Lost in the Woods” by Claudine LoMonaco (HCN, 9/1/14). LoMonaco uses clever buzzwords — “slick slide show and earnest manner,” “bright blue eyes,” “dysfunctional and ineffective,” “historical vendettas, personal grudges and political connections,” just to quote […]
Has the Obama administration hobbled the Endangered Species Act?
A new policy may set the law back half a century.
Fires, grazing and logging
I never understood how we have planning commissions and they let developers build in forested areas without clearing fire-safe areas around developments (“Smoke and mirrors,” HCN, 9/1/14). People that build like this should have to pay an exorbitant amount for fire insurance. Same goes for building in the river bottom and on avalanche terrain. The […]
The Latest: Feds pay final installments of $3.4 million settlement to Native Americans
The Cobell case paid mineral royalties long due to tribal members.
Fathomable journalism
LoMonaco’s feature article is why HCN is one of only two publications that I loyally subscribe to. LoMonaco’s in-depth reporting is an example of excellent journalism. She unsnarls a monumentally complicated issue and makes it interesting and understandable, if not fathomable, to a general reader like me. Not many journalists go to as much trouble […]
On the edge with Edward Abbey, Charles Ives and the outlaws
One of Charles Bowden’s last essays.
Bowden the half-mad hiker
The iconic Southwest writer brought minimal gear but loads of reading material on the trail.
Adiós Charles Bowden
The writer passed away in Las Cruces, New Mexico, on Aug. 30.
Charles Bowden’s Fury
The Southwest loses its strongest voice.
