Posted inJanuary 21, 2013: Special issue: Natural resources education

Round River pushes kids out of their comfort zones and into the field

In 1992, four fresh-faced students joined conservationist Jim Tolisano in Colorado’s San Juan Mountains in search of grizzly bears. Grizzlies are thought to be extinct in the state, but sighting rumors circulated, and Round River Conservation Studies’ founders Dennis Sizemore and Doug Peacock — who inspired the character Hayduke in Edward Abbey’s The Monkey Wrench […]

Posted inWotr

The beauty of the wood pile

The six-and-a-half pound maul making its way around my head travels through the October sunshine: dull gray, blunt, serious as an elk in rut. It windmills beneath the yellow larch needles and outstretched arms of evergreens, their fall odors incensing an already heady mix of dried grass, wood smoke, and sun-warmed bark. A wedge of […]

Posted inHeard Around the West

Sign-hating Californians

CALIFORNIA “Out here, people don’t like signs.” So said Sheriff’s Deputy Rob McDaniels to the Point Reyes Light in December, after apprehending “Sensitive Sean” for stealing more than 20 no-parking signs. This small community on the Northern California coast –– let’s just call it “Anonymous,” since the locals have asked us not to reveal its […]

Posted inGoat

Hello, climate change

Environmentalists got what they’ve been waiting for Monday, when President Obama reinvented himself as a committed liberal in his second inauguration speech. He referred to climate change by its proper name, rather than dancing a little rhetorical jig around it, and even summoned the Almighty. God, he said, “commanded” the planet to our care. He […]

Posted inJanuary 21, 2013: Special issue: Natural resources education

Oil and gas companies pour money into research universities

Northwest Colorado’s Piceance Basin — 5 million acres framed by cliffs and hogbacked mountains — overlies roughly 300 trillion cubic feet of natural gas, enough to supply the nation for 50 years. It’s also ideal mule deer habitat; state wildlife managers once called it “the deer factory.” But as drilling ramps up, deer numbers plummet. […]

Posted inJanuary 21, 2013: Special issue: Natural resources education

The more you know, the more you marvel

I was prepared to scowl at Jim Robbins’ article, “Wildlife Biology Goes High-Tech” (HCN, 12/10/12), after reading the subtitle — “But has our science lost its soul?” Science has no “soul.” It deals with the physical, tangible universe. As a professional ecologist and longtime teacher, I have grown impatient with the complaint that memorizing all […]

Posted inJanuary 21, 2013: Special issue: Natural resources education

Oil boom spurs a rush on extractive education programs

Last May, Russell Carr crammed his possessions into his 4Runner and drove 30 hours to North Dakota, seeking a new start. The strapping 22-year-old had just earned a degree in civil engineering at the University of Nevada, in his hometown, Reno, but the local firm he’d been courting offered a starting wage of only $17 […]

Posted inJanuary 21, 2013: Special issue: Natural resources education

Gratuitous hand-wringing

We can’t help the animals unless we understand their needs (“Wildlife Biology Goes High-Tech,” HCN, 12/10/12). In a world of ever-increasing human encroachment on the last pristine habitats, denying people their “God-given right” to property ownership requires justification, and that is why studies such as those cited in Robbins’ story are invaluable. I have marked […]

Posted inJanuary 21, 2013: Special issue: Natural resources education

Education includes people, naturally

When I was 20, I joined a college-abroad program in Kenya, Africa, to study the country’s magnificent wildlife reserves. But my most memorable experience wasn’t the night I nervously watched a herd of elephants crash through our campsite (though that was pretty cool). It came in the dusty, colorful markets of Nairobi. There, walking through […]

Posted inJanuary 21, 2013: Special issue: Natural resources education

Collared collateral damage?

My father pioneered research on California quail in the 1940s, long before telemetry technology of any kind was available (“Wildlife Biology Goes High-Tech,” HCN, 12/10/12). I served as a small-aircraft pilot to monitor collared wolves, and to count animals from the air. More recently, I volunteered to help with a greater sage grouse study in […]

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