Two Wyomingites are trying to set the record straight about “real” cowboy attire. Studying old photos, mail-order catalogs and interviewing relatives of early range-riders, Tom Lindmier and Steve Mount conclude that the big-hatted denim look popularized by Hollywood is all wet. Their book, I See By Your Outfit, says that 19th century cowboys were more […]
Heard around the West
What’s best for a crumbling treasure?
Plans to rescue Glacier’s hotels could be a sweetheart deal for big business in a national park
Ski town workers find homes in the hills
Squatters say camping on public land is the only affordable option
Coalition ushers a mine off sacred ground
Agreement will fill a hole dug for the fashion industry
Dear Friends
A sad goodbye When you live in a small town, you have to wear a lot of different hats. Here in Paonia, pop. 1,600, for example, the mayor runs a laundromat and carpet-cleaning business and drives a school bus. Many people work several jobs and volunteer at the schools, the public radio station, the ambulance […]
On the path to a greener church
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. An organization with as much heft as the Catholic Church, and with 2,000 years of history, does not move quickly or simply. The Columbia River Basin pastoral letter, scheduled for release in November, has been five years in the making. But even five years […]
Excerpts from the pastoral letter draft
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. We offer here a pastoral reflection, derived from Christian teachings about creation and ecology developed over the ages from their biblical origins. We speak with the voices of faith and compassion, and ask those with greater scientific and social expertise to enter into dialogue […]
Holy water
The Catholic Church seeks to restore the Columbia River and the church’s relevance to the natural world
Heard around the West
Every tourist with a camera makes the same joke at scenic turnouts where the drop is precipitous: “Back up just another step – no, just kidding!” It’s part of tourist myth – that someone actually asked a spouse to back up near a canyon, and then it was “Goodbyeeeeee.” Here’s a variation, and it’s all […]
Wilderness needs strong advocates
Dear HCN, I would like to respond on behalf of the Great Old Broads for Wilderness to the Steve Hinchman interview Ed Marston did for the July 31 edition. I know Steve and respect and admire the work he has done on the West Slope. Recently, as executive director of the Colorado Environmental Coalition, I […]
‘A gentle giant’
Dear HCN, Thanks for the tribute to our late friend Lynn Dickey (HCN, 6/19/00: Dear Friends). She was a gentle giant, for sure. It always amazed me that she was in the world of rough and tumble politics but not of that world. She was always a calming influence. I remember the United Mine Workers […]
Learning from the old-timers
Dear HCN, I appreciated the interview with Steve Hinchman in the July 31 issue. It’s encouraging to know that there are other people who understand the problems that “recreation-based environmentalism” is causing in the rural West. Although I considered myself an environmentalist back when the movement was still the grassroots underdog, I’m terrified now at […]
Not in the family
Dear HCN, Sure have been enjoying my HCNs lately, but as roving critic laureate, I must insist that Lou “White Dork” Bendrick be informed that WEASELS ARE NOT RODENTS (HCN, 8/14/00: Native American Wannabes: Beware the Weasel Spirit). They are not only not in the same FAMILY, they are not even in the same order. […]
Doug Hawes-Davis replies
In his criticism of our new feature film, Killing Coyote, Russ Mason is only defending his life’s work, which is understandable. Mason states that “film shot by NBC was used by Hawes-Davis to portray “….tightly bound coyotes being injected with the latest birth control potion,” after being “… dragged from its pen.” ” The first […]
An outrageous review
Dear HCN, I read Hal Herring’s review of the documentary, Killing Coyote, in the July 31 issue of High Country News with great interest. So much so, in fact, that I bought a copy of the video. Mr. Herring describes a visit by Doug Hawes-Davis to the Logan Field Station of the National Wildlife Research […]
Republicans attack sovereignty
WASHINGTON Native Americans throughout the West say they’re disgusted with Republicans in Washington state: Delegates at the state GOP convention this summer passed a resolution to abolish tribal governments. John Fleming won his party’s support when he complained that as a non-Indian living on the Swinomish reservation in northwestern Washington, he can’t vote in tribal […]
Cement glues citizens together
A southern Colorado city could lose its newly clean reputation PUEBLO, Colo. – Cecil Ross remembers when his city was known as “Pew Town.” The wheat farmer says pollution from the state’s largest steel mill once filled the city’s air with foul-smelling odors and chemicals. Today, standing on his ranch three miles from Pueblo, Ross […]
Ranchers forgo their federal lease
IDAHO Cows and salmon don’t mix; at least that’s the message rancher Rollin Baker says he has received repeatedly from the National Marine Fisheries Service. So Baker and his partner, A.D. Watkins, recently relinquished their federal grazing privileges near Bear Valley Creek in Idaho’s Boise National Forest. The ranchers say strict rules aimed at protecting […]
Who’ll clean up a mining mess?
Idaho wrangles with the feds over a Superfund site COEUR D’ALENE, Idaho – For years, a handful of locals in Northern Idaho have grumbled that federal cleanup efforts were botched and that Bunker Hill, the largest Superfund site in the country, was still unsafe after 20 years. Now, the cleanup is supposed to wind down […]
The Latest Bounce
Lyle McNeal, the professor who helped restore churro sheep to the Navajo Reservation, won his suit for $44,000 in back pay from Utah State University. The suit highlighted the role of a land-grant college, with McNeal arguing that he helped the tribe build community (HCN, 1/31/00: Searching for pasture). University officials unsuccessfully defended their position […]
