President Bush just whistled through southern Oregon for a quick look at our catastrophic wildfires and a high-profile policy address at a county fairgrounds. He repeatedly told a cheering crowd that he’s for “common sense” forest management to stem “endless litigation.” His boldness inspires me to come right out and say it publicly: I, too, […]
A modest forest proposal for President Bush
Island Hoping
Island hoping In Arizona and New Mexico, a unique complex of 27 mountain ranges encompasses vast stretches of desert scrub, grasslands and oak woodlands, and is home to more than 75 species of reptiles. Called the Sky Islands (HCN, 4/26/99:Can science heal the land?), the landscape inspired Aldo Leopold to write that ” … these […]
Museum collections hit the roof
‘Curation crisis’ could stall construction projects on public lands
Drought unearths a water dinosaur
Colorado’s Front Range reaches for a share of the Colorado River
The BLM stabs at a tired land
Bush’s push for oil and gas development touches down on the San Juan Basin
A legend of the land
A legend of the land He’s been described by writer John McPhee as the “grand old man of Rocky Mountain geology,” and by longtime friend and HCN founder Tom Bell as a man you meet “once in a lifetime.” Born in Riverton, Wyo., in 1913, and raised in the rich landscape that became his life’s […]
Balancing act
Balancing Act The cover story in this issue is the first of a two-part series about a topic that High Country News has been covering for a long time: California water. More specifically, it’s a look at the Golden State, post-Bruce Babbitt – the Clinton-era Interior secretary who negotiated massive water agreements in California and […]
The Royal Squeeze
For nearly a century, the Imperial Valley’s wastewater has kept the Salton Sea alive. Now, the push to make California more watertight may threaten this wildlife haven – and Imperial’s agricultural economy.
Backlash
Local governments tackle an in-your-face rush on coalbed methane
Golden in drought denial
Dear HCN, The August 19th issue’s front-page photo of the Denver Water Department signboard imploring people to take action and conserve water reminded me that yes, we are having a drought here in Colorado. Well, there have been other clues as well, such as the scorched brown hillsides, a summer with almost no measurable rainfall, […]
Forward from the Pleistocene
Dear HCN, Thanks for the 13 May issue, with the discussion of how past changes in North American ecosystems affect decisions we now face in the West. You might say that those who forget prehistory are doomed to repeat it. The letters from Linda Driskill (HCN, 6/24/02:Review gives only one view) and Kali Kaliche (HCN, […]
Forest thinning urgent
Dear HCN, In the long run, many well-intentioned environmental groups, with their stubborn resistance to sound forest-management techniques, will do far more damage to our forests than the timber industry. Loggers often cut too many trees, but many environmentalists, in their resistance to cutting any trees, may bring about a total conflagration. I’m a nature […]
Defenders defends wolves
Dear HCN, In response to Joy York’s letter to the editor, “Wolf killing hard to swallow” (HCN, 7/10/02:Wolf killing hard to swallow), we are stunned to see an accusation that Defenders of Wildlife is “in the business of killing wolves.” How that statement could possibly be made about an organization that has done so much […]
Great Basin belongs to all of us
Dear HCN, Michelle Nijhuis was mistaken when she wrote that the recent transfer of some Death Valley National Park land to the Timbisha Shoshone “was the first time the Park Service had ever ceded land to a tribe” (HCN, 8/5/02:Another way to win back the land). In 1975, about one-third of Grand Canyon National Park’s […]
Cross lawsuit is not petty
Dear HCN, Myles Traphagen, (HCN, 6/24/02:Cross lawsuit divisive, petty), commenting on a May 13 article, “Does desert cross cross the line?” characterizes as “frivolous” and “petty” the American Civil Liberties Union’s lawsuit whose object is to have a six-foot metal cross removed from its unlawful installation in California’s Mojave National Preserve: “In an age where […]
Visit awhile with Molly …
Visit awhile with Molly Ivins, sharp-tongued Texas columnist, on Sept. 21 at the Western Colorado Congress meeting in Grand Junction, Colo. Inspired by her book, You Got to Dance with Them What Brung You, her discussion will examine – with, inevitably, great sarcastic delivery – how campaign finance distorts the political process. Call the WCC […]
If you’re tired …
If you’re tired of gloomy environmental books, visit the Sopris Foundation’s Web site for its handbook, A Call to Action. Jammed into 32 entertaining pages is everything from Grist Magazine’s “Energy saving tips for the very lazy,” to energy expert Randy Udall’s cerebral link between a Joni Mitchell song and his thoughts on carbon dioxide. […]
Is it possible …
It is possible for a ranch to maintain a healthy ecosystem during a drought – and stay in business? Ranch expert Kirk Gadzia is leading an Outdoor Classroom on Rangleland Health at Jim and Joy Williams’ ranch near Quemando, N.M., Sept. 14-15. Gadzia, co-author of the National Academy of Sciences book Rangeland Health, believes watershed […]
The fission of a New Mexican nuclear family
In this richly layered novel, author Bradford Morrow peels back the geography of New Mexico to reveal its unforgiving core of rock and scree. The Land of Enchantment is also a landscape haunted by nuclear testing during the 1950s, and it is within this rough physical and emotional terrain that Morrow sets his tale about […]
No shoes, no problem
With bats in the attic, skunks and marmots under the floor, deer mice in the corners and cluster flies throughout the house, Kathleen Meyer may want to sleep on the deck, but at least she no longer has to shit in the woods. In Barefoot Hearted: A Wild Life Among Wildlife, Meyer, author of the […]
