Los Alamos is burning. My wife stands in front of the TV in our home in Lewiston, Idaho, watching CNN with her hands to her face, tears in her eyes. She is whispering softly, a litany of actions from deep in her memory. “They have to pack their things. They have to take the family […]
‘Los Alamos is burning’
Hikers stumble into an old dispute
Land-grant heirs say until their land is returned, the Continental Divide Trail won’t go through
Another compromise plan falls flat
Note: in the print edition of this issue, this article appears as a sidebar to another news article,”Stirrings in the San Rafael Swell.” In Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt’s State of the State address in January, the two-term Republican announced what he called an “unprecedented opportunity.” The opportunity was a huge land swap of state and […]
Stirrings in the San Rafael Swell
A recreation explosion forces some action in Utah’s deadlocked wilderness debate
Activist calls for cease-fire on wolves
Others say killing problem wolves was part of the deal
Dear Friends
Errare humanum est … Reader Robert Stuart asks: “I wonder if columnist Jon Margolis misquoted the statement ‘oderint, dum metuant’ – ‘let them hate, provided that they fear.’ I thought this statement was made by Caligula, not Cicero …” In a story Feb. 14 we referred to a “Sandia National Forest.” Gary Schiffmiller tells us […]
A few facts about weeds
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Between 1985 and 1995, the spread of weeds – exotic plant species – increased on public rangelands in the West from 4 million acres to 17 million acres. Unlike native species, exotic weeds have no native insects, fungi or diseases to control their growth […]
Are cows the ultimate weed seeders?
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. When Joy Belski thumbs through the dozens of federal weed-management plans now circulating throughout the West, she almost always finds one thing missing. “The agencies will mention that trucks, hikers, ORVs and roads contribute to the spread of exotic weeds,” she says, “but they […]
The weedy future of the Great Basin
Fire and cheatgrass conspire to create a weedy wasteland
Save Our Sagebrush
In the Great Basin, fires create a chance for redemption
Heard around the West
A knitting society in Sequim, Wash., is making little wool sweaters to outfit little penguins who were drenched by a tanker’s oil spill in Australia. The one-foot-tall fairy penguins need the sweaters both for warmth and for protection. When the penguins preen their bodies the oil poisons them. “They look so cute,” said a member […]
Lovers of land and culture
Lovers of land and culture, writers, and scientists will explore the relationships between religious traditions, sacred stories and scientific facts at the 17th Sitka Symposium, June 15-21 in Sitka, Alaska. Writers can submit manuscripts for critique by May 19. Contact the Island Institute at 907/747-3794 for more information, or write to Box 2420, Sitka, AK […]
30-minute documentary, “Voice of the Centenarian: Hazel Wolf’
Lifelong social and environmental activist Hazel Wolf will be honored in a 30-minute documentary, “Voice of the Centenarian: Hazel Wolf,” narrated by Carole King. The producer is seeking footage of Wolf, who died in January. If you have material of her in action – making speeches, protesting, meeting with politicians – contact Gayle Podrabsky, 206/285-7806 […]
Indian Country Today’s Pow Wow 2000
Celebrate the traditions of America’s native people with Indian Country Today’s Pow Wow 2000 guide, a comprehensive schedule of Native American pow wows across the nation. The guide includes the Gathering of Nations Pow Wow in Albuquerque, N.M., and National Indian Days in White Swan, Wash. Each listing includes contact number for more information. To […]
We can do it ourselves
It was 1970, and people were dropping out in droves. Wood stoves were replacing electric heat, milk cartons were transforming wax into candles. Someone noted that more pottery was created during the ’70s than during the history of mankind – perhaps an exaggeration. One of the gurus for back-to-the-landers 30 years ago was a woman […]
Telluride’s MountainFilm
If the past is guide, the 22nd MountainFilm in Telluride this May will be more than the sum of its parts. The individual elements will be impressive – a day-long opening symposium on the Andes and miles of celluloid about nature, other cultures, and jocks playing on rocks, glaciers and rivers. But the power of […]
A bear of a plan
Grizzly bears could be reintroduced to the Selway-Bitterroot Wilderness Area in a little more than a year, if a final environmental impact statement proceeds as planned. The Fish and Wildlife Service’s preferred alternative of the grizzly plan calls for a citizen’s management committee to oversee reintroduction of a non-essential experimental grizzly bear population. The Interior […]
Logging doesn’t cut it
A sea of evergreens, uninterrupted by roads or clear-cut; an eroding mountainside, barren of everything but stumps and broken branches. Ancient Forests: The Power of Place, a 30-minute educational video, uses this contrast to paint a compelling picture of logging’s siege on Northwest forests. The video from Green Fire Productions, a nonprofit filmmaking organization, takes […]
Look at that big plant!
Some fertilizer sold in Washington state since 1996 contained uranium and other wastes from the production of nuclear reactor fuel; in fact, before the state’s Department of Agriculture issued a stop-sale order on Feb. 17, over 390,000 gallons of the material had been distributed. State health officials found out about the product after a Seattle […]
Green and steel – together at last
When junk bonder Charles Hurwitz bought up Kaiser Aluminum and Pacific Lumber, then accelerated cutting of ancient California redwoods and locked out his employees, he didn’t know he was creating a new political movement. Yet outrage at Hurwitz’s tactics forged an unconventional alliance between labor and environmentalism. Just six months ago, locked-out United Steelworkers members […]
