This May, National Geographic Press published Running Dry: A Journey from Source to Sea Down the Colorado River. It’s by Jonathan Waterman, who lives on 20 acres near Carbondale, Colo. As someone who follows water issues, I wanted to like this book. But I couldn’t. That’s because I ran across so many errors at […]
A Grand Disappointment
Net losses
Four endangered fish species currently live in the mainstem of the Colorado River. Several other endangered native fishes — including the woundfin, desert pupfish and Gila topminnow — used to live there but now survive only in the river’s tributaries or in man-made habitats. This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with […]
Wolf case highlights need for collaboration
Sometimes no news is good news, so I’ll count last week’s relatively uneventful oral arguments as a boon for continued wolf recovery efforts in the northern Rockies. But the mood both inside and outside the U.S. district courthouse in Missoula shows there’s still much work to be done to ensure sustainable wolf management in the […]
Hard to believe, but it’s my 50th high school reunion
A half-century of memories, and a look forward
Guns — and none
A woman who grew up with guns goes on to a life without them
Clash of the museums
NEVADAThat city of excess, Las Vegas, is outdoing itself by hosting not just one, but two new museums dedicated to the Mafia and the “moral turpitude of organized crime,” reports the New York Times. Is there a little problem of duplication? Not at all, says Las Vegas Mayor Oscar B. Goodman (the city is building […]
Fish face-off
A proposal to ban gillnets in Oregon has commercial fishermen up in arms.
The land less traveled
Your May 24 cover story “Accidental Wilderness” was for me a catalog of former or current projects I have worked on as an environmental consultant. The map on page 15 showing select Department of Defense and Energy Department sites around the West identified seven facilities where I have worked or visited as a consultant, chief […]
Summertime slowdown
We publish 22 times per year, so we’ll be skipping the next issue. Here in western Colorado, we’ll be tending our gardens, celebrating the annual Cherry Days festival and the Fourth of July, and working on great stories for upcoming issues — not necessarily in that order. You’ll see the next edition of HCN in […]
So long, Paonia
Earlier this week, I drove through a stretch of barren landscape about 50 miles from our Paonia home, as I’ve done many times before. It’s an unremarkable part of western Colorado. The sparsely vegetated hills contain radioactive waste, an old bombing range, an experimental chicken farm and a lot of shot-up appliances. Soon, hundreds of […]
Rapid runoff
On April 1, it looked like this would be a banner water year for Colorado’s San Luis Valley, which receives just six to eight inches of precipitation annually and relies on snowmelt to fill streams and irrigate crops. Heavy spring storms had bumped the snowpack in the surrounding mountains to 113 percent of the historic […]
Ranger danger?
National parks seem like places of refuge, far removed from urban crime and violence. But for at least the last decade, law enforcement rangers in the National Park Service have been among the federal law enforcement officers most likely to be injured or killed by assault. In 2009, descriptions of violent incidents in national parks […]
Life in a doomed dome
Dreaming the Biosphere: The Theater of All PossibilitiesRebecca Reider310 pages, hardcover, $39.95.University of New Mexico Press, 2009. The American West has long been home to grand engineering schemes, with planners and boosters eager to manipulate nature to suit their own purposes. Rebecca Reider’s new book, Dreaming the Biosphere: The Theater of All Possibilities, reveals one […]
Li-ber-tar-i-an, n
If Ray Ring (“Going to Extremes”, May 24) is going to write about politics, especially in the hard-to-label West, he needs to watch his flippant labeling. As an Arizonan and a Libertarian, I am very angered by folks who lump my freedom-loving and consistent positions with the often inconsistent stands of the Tea Party. Most […]
Learning lessons in Owens Valley
In Kim Todd’s essay “Walking Woman,” she used the re-watering of the lower Owens River as a reason to visit Owens Valley and rhapsodize about Mary Austin (HCN, 5/24/10). In the re-watering, she finds a hopeful lesson that the truism of environmental victories being temporary and defeats being permanent may not always be true. Had […]
Finding radical balance
I very much enjoyed David Wolman’s article on the success of wildlife on military land (HCN, 5/24/10). It’s always welcome to hear of nature thriving. But the assertion that these instances represent a balance between “trashing of, or respect for, the planet” doesn’t follow. If anything, it’s David Brower’s dream: an intact landscape left untrammeled […]
Eccentricity and wildness
My wife and I once drove from Montana to Seattle for a wedding at a farm that hosts such ceremonies. En route, we found a good place to change into our fancy clothes — a thicket alongside the Snohomish River. OK, we’re a little eccentric. But at the river, we met a guy who was […]
Compassionate listening, fierce conversation
Voices of the American WestCorinne Platt and Meredith Ogilby; foreword by William Kittredge280 pages, hardcover: $29.95.Fulcrum Publishing, 2009. A chance conversation at a conference in 2004 launched photographer Meredith Ogilby and writer Corinne Platt on an ambitious journey. They resolved to photograph and speak with 49 “heavy lifters” from across the West, people of […]
