Invasive Japanese beetles are drawn to flowers and fruit. Washington officials are trying to eradicate them from the state.
Meet the beetle threatening Washington’s cherries, hops and other crops
Native mental health providers seek to heal boarding school scars with informed and appropriate treatment
As more visibility is brought to the legacy of U.S. boarding schools, Indigenous mental health providers and social workers feel that therapy must address the unique trauma carried by survivors.
See inside the Grand Canyon region’s new monument
A weeklong journey through the under-documented region, which now has new protections.
Tribal nations celebrate new monument near the Grand Canyon
How decades of Indigenous advocacy led to the Baaj Nwaavjo I’tah Kukveni-Ancestral Footprints of the Grand Canyon National Monument.
Extreme heat hits the rural Southwest
How community members keep one another safe.
Private equity gets into oil and gas
A new report warns of bankruptcies and abandoned wells on Western public land.
People are starting a lot of fires in the Pacific Northwest
The Forest Service reports 197 human-caused or undetermined starts since the beginning of June.
People are shooting birds off power lines in the West
Gunshots outnumber electrocution as a cause of death, according to a new study.
How a mobile-home park saved its community from a corporate buyout
In southwest Colorado, a cooperative and a land trust partnered to preserve affordable housing.
Consoling spirits
A visit to the sacred Ireichō at the Japanese American National Museum.
Things We Were Told About the Moon in School
A poem by Dara Yen Elerath.
‘We have fire all around us and we can’t get out’
What happened when two experienced hikers got caught in the Bolt Creek Fire.
The abundance of subsistence
Losing salmon means losing more than just food.
Oregon’s Greater Idaho movement echoes a long history of racism in the region
Instead of fixing Oregon, the Greater Idaho movement seeks to leave it. White supremacists are on board.
Letters to the editor, August 2023
Comments from readers.
An antiquated law rules mining in the West
Can the U.S. finally vanquish one of the most enduring Lords of Yesterday?
‘It’s really about unconditional love’
#iamthewest: Giving voice to the people that make up communities in the region.
Orcas, insects and other roadside attractions
Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.
The Tractor Princess
Memories from California’s Pajaro Valley.
Practice vigilance
What recreation looks like in the age of wildfire.
