A poem by Robert Wrigley.
Wherefore O Birds and Small Fish Surround Me
Trains in the West then, now — and someday?
Mapping the state of the rails across the region.
Can camera traps relieve our species’ loneliness?
A community science project reintroduces humans to their fellow mammals.
The 90-foot sentinel of Butte, Montana
What does a statue dedicated to mothers reveal about women’s rights?
Get to know the whitebark pine
This threatened tree feeds and shelters the high country.
‘I’ve always been a fan of getting people to empathize with a landscape’
#iamthewest: Giving voice to the people that make up communities in the region.
A little pickle, a fireball and an Indigenous astronaut
Mishaps and mayhem from around the region.
Future-proofing HCN
Long-term plans for the organization come together alongside staff changes.
‘Gold in the hills, but not for us’
Scenes from California’s backyard petroculture.
Finding stillness in the whirl
The West is filled with motion and reflection.
Green colonialism is flooding the Pacific Northwest
The Yakama Nation is fighting a pumped hydro storage development near Goldendale, Washington – but it’s just one of many.
What happens without warning
How a California ash embodies new information in a long friendship.
The Iditarod changes alongside Alaska’s climate
Mushers and sled dogs adapt to warmer temperatures and worse trail conditions at the world-famous race.
In the once-cool forests of the Pacific Northwest, heat poses a new threat
Drought can stress trees to death, but heat’s effects are less known. New research could hold the keys to protecting conifer forests.
Inside the EPA’s close relationship with a Montana mining company
When faced with new research on health risks in Butte, the agency turned to industry for guidance.
A demonstration of Black bodies in nature
‘Our family trip to Yosemite has given me access to places I subconsciously felt weren’t home to me.’
Are the feds risking endangered salmon for fries and potato chips?
Tribal nations say the decision to reduce water flow on the Klamath River “has more to do with potatoes than it does fish.”
How far will you go to reduce your wildfire risk?
It may depend on how you see the world.
Displaced by the climate crisis
Jake Bittle’s new book foregrounds the experience of those already affected by a worsening climate.
