Posted inGoat

Mountain of … bluster

President Barack Obama’s decision to put the kibosh on the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste repository has been a favorite punching bag for House Republicans in recent weeks, thanks in part to the debacle at Japan’s Fukushima Daiichi power plant stoking fears over the safety of nuclear waste stored at more than 100 temporary sites around […]

Posted inWotr

Me and my SUV

I love my purple 4Runner.  She’s a 1998 stick-shift with 177,000 miles on the odometer, and her name is Jesse.  She’s been all over the West, camping on dirt roads and shuttling for river trips. Once, in the high desert of central Oregon, I hit a patch of ice going fast on a cold, bluebird […]

Posted inMay 16, 2011: Ripple Effects

The year in water

La Niña ruled the West’s weather this winter, and states now sitting on lavish snowpacks couldn’t be happier. Cooler surface temperatures in the equatorial Pacific are responsible for the high precipitation rates in California, the Northwest and Intermountain West. Those snowpacks are expected to melt at a leisurely rate, buoying streamflows throughout the summer. The […]

Posted inMay 16, 2011: Ripple Effects

Diabetes isn’t destiny

“I want to tell Native kids that they’re not sentenced to get diabetes. They have a choice,” says Notah Begay III, a Native American professional golfer who was interviewed recently on National Public Radio’s Native America Calling. The statistics are alarming. Diabetes has increased in every segment of American society over the past few decades, […]

Posted inMay 16, 2011: Ripple Effects

Are you an Indian?

Navajos Wear Nikes: A Reservation LifeJim Kristofic256 pages, hardcover: $26.95. University of New Mexico Press, 2011. Despite his light-brown curls and pale face, Jim Kristofic gets asked this question all the time, even though he no longer lives on the Navajo Reservation. Now 29 and back in his native Pennsylvania, he teaches and tells stories […]

Posted inBlog

New Urbanism irks even green Westerners

 In my last post, I explored what appear to be conflicting views on what we today call environmental justice in Edward Abbey’s cult classic Desert Solitaire. The book is fun to assign to my Environmental Rhetoric students because between the lyrical descriptions of Utah wilderness and the fist-pounding Luddite rants it’s guaranteed to provoke lively […]

Posted inGoat

On the move in Yosemite

During one of my all-time favorite reporting trips, in the summer of 2005, I hiked through a chilly Yosemite rainstorm to meet up with University of California-Berkeley mammalogist Jim Patton. Patton — a veteran field biologist with more shipwreck stories than any one person should have — was retracing the century-old steps of Joseph Grinnell, […]

Posted inWotr

Three Cups of Tea, the sequel

One of the speakers at last year’s Telluride Mountainfilm Festival in western Colorado was convicted this March of federal felonies. But Tim DeChristopher will be back again this year to talk about his disruption of federal gas leasing at an auction in Utah. Not so Greg Mortenson, the embattled former mountain climber who has been […]

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