Posted inWotr

Live and let live

Lion attacks have been in the news lately, but there’s one story I’ll never forget. It was in the Ogden, Utah, Standard-Examiner last year, and featured a hunter who’d shot an “angry” mountain lion while out hunting mule deer. Investigators from the Utah Division of Wildlife Resources determined that the hunter had acted in self-defense […]

Posted inGoat

Haze be gone

When I started researching regional haze rules a few months back, a source warned me that I was wading into the Clean Air Act’s wonkiest, most technically complicated depths. I remember her asking me something like: “Are you sure you want to go there?” Which is to say, you’d be forgiven if you paid little […]

Posted inGoat

Surf and turf update

After two decades of restoration, roughly 1,700 gray wolves now roam the Northern Rockies. But constant court battles over their management led Congress to end federal protection in May, using a budget rider to sidestep the Endangered Species Act (see our May 30 story). Last week, U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy unhappily upheld the rider, […]

Posted inRange

Lewis, Clark and Darwin

Charles Darwin wasn’t born until three years after the Lewis & Clark Expedition was over, but evolutionary science is shedding a new light on a question that has perplexed me and other history buffs about their epic journey.  Here’s the question: Why were the Indians so friendly to Lewis & Clark? The answer might just […]

Posted inGoat

Air quality and all that gas

If you’ve been following the recent media blitz surrounding fracking — where water, chemicals and sand are pumped at high pressure down a well to help release oil or natural gas — you might think that concerns over the process are all about groundwater pollution. After all, thanks to the “Halliburton loophole,” the process is […]

Posted inAugust 8, 2011: Ganjanomics

Yellowstone leak highlights a different kind of oil spill

As modern rivers go, the Yellowstone is relatively unadulterated. It’s the longest dam-free river in the U.S., rushing 692 miles from its headwaters in Wyoming’s Absaroka Mountains through Yellowstone National Park and Montana’s Paradise Valley and eastern plains, to its confluence with the Missouri. Cutthroat trout, vanished from much of their native range, still hold […]

Posted inAugust 8, 2011: Ganjanomics

Settlements prompt federal decisions on hundreds of endangered species

Updated 8/8/2011 The Arctic grayling, found only in the Missouri River Basin’s upper reaches, became an endangered species candidate in 1994, meaning the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service found that it deserved federal protection but did not list it because other species took priority. The grayling has languished there ever since, along with more than […]

Posted inAugust 8, 2011: Ganjanomics

Portraits of the frontier West: A review of Western Heritage

Western Heritage: A Selection of Wrangler Award-Winning ArticlesEdited by Paul Andrew Hutton305 pages, softcover: $19.95.University of Oklahoma Press, 2011. Geronimo, Crazy Horse and the Texas Rangers all have dramatic cameos in Western Heritage, Paul Andrew Hutton’s anthology of award-winning essays. Since 1961, Oklahoma City’s National Cowboy and Western Heritage Museum has given its annual Wrangler […]

Posted inAugust 8, 2011: Ganjanomics

A Western mystery with an environmental twist: a review of Buried by the Roan

Buried by the RoanMark Stevens346 pages, softcover: $14.95.People’s Press, 2011. In his second mystery novel, Buried by the Roan, Colorado writer Mark Stevens tells a “ripped from the headlines” story involving natural gas drilling and hydraulic fracturing, or fracking. The story is set in and around the Roan Plateau area between Glenwood Springs and Meeker, […]

Posted inGoat

The Visual West: Going with the Monsoonal Flow

Over the past several weeks, the monsoon season has kicked in nicely across the Southwest, reaching up into Colorado, where it has created some spectacular lightning, downpours and sunsets. In my humble opinion, summer afternoons during monsoon season were meant to be spent working (not too vigorously) in the garden and watching the thunderheads build […]

Posted inWotr

Bootstrapping in Roundup

The morning of May 26, the town of Roundup in central Montana became separated from the world. The Musselshell River, normally a lazy brown trickle, had been transformed overnight into a raging monster a half-mile wide that swept away everything in its path. In the wee hours, the sheriff’s department received word from 20 miles […]

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