Posted inAugust 6, 2007: Guns R Us

A forest in flux

Perched 25 stories high in a construction crane – above the crowns of the Douglas firs – environmental writer Jon Luoma surveyed the forest canopy, searching for a humble lichen, Lobaria oregana. The lichen forges an intimate relationship with the trees, swapping nutrients for a home and helping the firs grow taller. These sorts of […]

Posted inAugust 6, 2007: Guns R Us

Not so uncommon

In regards to your recent “Uncommon Westerners” article, I find little uncommon about Mike Noel, Utah state representative, other than that his favorite food is sushi (HCN, 5/28/07). Mike exemplifies many Westerners that are gung ho on keeping all public lands open to off-road vehicles, mining, logging and ranching. He also shows that a lot […]

Posted inAugust 6, 2007: Guns R Us

Ask Dr. Science

As an emeritus professor of metallurgy, I was disturbed to see the promotion of bamboo bike frames relative to steel frames in the “Snapshot” section of the June 11 issue (HCN, 6/11/07). Steel is referred to as “carbon-intensive” in that note, but steel is not carbon-intensive. Steel is mostly iron, an abundant element, that contains […]

Posted inAugust 6, 2007: Guns R Us

Piscatorial baloney

I had to cool off for a couple of days after reading Irle White’s sanctimonious diatribe praising his father’s attitude toward fly-fishing and condemning anybody who fishes for sport or with new and improved equipment (HCN, 6/11/07). How and when did he get the rights to dictate the moral ethics for fly-fishing? I’m 76 years […]

Posted inArticles

Pipe dreams

By the time endangered spring chinook reach the mouth of the Methow River, a tributary of the Columbia, in late summer, they have traveled 500 miles and passed nine dams in order to spawn. Upstream, the Chief Joseph Dam, which lacks fish passage, blocks further progress up the Columbia. The Methow’s forested watershed offers one […]

Posted inWotr

Reckless at 50

I celebrated my 50th birthday a few years back by just about killing myself on a desert hike. I lived atop a 3,000-foot plateau called Grapevine Mesa, an extraordinary place that towered over the far eastern end of Lake Mead, a huge man-made body of water that sprawled through desert canyons 80 miles distant. My […]

Posted inWotr

Wyoming manners? Forget about it!

Wyoming may be the rudest state in America. I grew up in upstate New York, where it was rude not to introduce strangers to each other. If you neglected to do this, you found yourself apologizing to the accidentally slighted person. Nothing in the preceding paragraph applies to daily life in Wyoming. Even New York […]

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