As 1998 came to a close, the oldest male grizzly ever captured in North America was killed by Montana officials. The 28-year-old, 460-pound bear had raided more than a dozen cabins over a two-week period, reports the Hungry Horse News, and had become a potential threat to people. All of the bear’s teeth were broken […]
Heard around the West
A research resource to drown in
Water in the West: Challenge for the Next Century has received a lot of press, including a lengthy description in this paper (HCN, 6/22/98). Much less attention has been paid to the 22 background studies that go with the central report. Not only is the price right (free), but it is almost guaranteed that, whatever […]
Snowmobilers booted from Montana forest
SUPERIOR, Mont. – About 300 snowmobilers from across the Northwest congregated here Jan. 2 for a bittersweet rally. For many, it was likely the last ride to their favorite destination – the 89,500-acre proposed Great Burn Wilderness Area that straddles the border of Montana and Idaho. Two days later, the Lolo National Forest closed 400,000 […]
Wyoming regulators gamble on Amoco cleanup
CASPER, Wyo. – Clad from head to toe in sterile white clothing, environmental engineers have become a familiar sight in this central Wyoming city of 51,000. They come to clean up the defunct Amoco Corp. oil refinery, one of the state’s oldest, and one of its most notorious, hazardous-waste sites. During its boom years in […]
Renegade house with a view – for now
The three-story cedar house with its tall windows and panoramic views stands boldly on an open bluff near the rim of the Columbia River Gorge, where its prominence defies a federal law that says it should not be there. Since the house went up last year, it has become a test of the 13-year-old National […]
The last mine closes in Leadville
For the past 139 years, men and machines have mined along the gulches at the source of Colorado’s Arkansas River, producing metals worth more than $2 billion at current prices. That era ended Jan. 29, when the Asarco Black Cloud Mine, which sits above timberline about 10 miles east of Leadville, Colo., hoisted its last […]
Dear friends
A very good year The board of directors of the High Country Foundation met in St. George, Utah, on Jan. 23 to review 1998’s circulation and financial results and to consider the 1999 budget proposed by the staff. The past year was better than expected. HCN’s circulation grew by 4 percent, ending the year at […]
The Pacific Yew: Chasing a cancer cure with a chainsaw
Above 4,000 feet it rained every day of the summer of 1993. On the Fourth of July, a long night of rain and wind gave way at dawn to a fine sleet that lay on the ground like snow, and didn’t melt for nearly three days. We were somewhere east of Pierce, Idaho, on the […]
An entrepreneurial spirit
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Each fall, Yan Saeteurn hitches a camper trailer to his V-6 Toyota pickup at his home in Redding, Calif., and heads four hours north to what is the locus of the matsutake mushroom harvest. There, near Crescent Lake, Ore., he builds a small wooden […]
It’s our tradition
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Sherlette Colegrove is a 42-year-old member of the Hoopa Valley Tribe in Northern California. She, too, is a member of the harvesters’ alliance. Since 1993, Colegrove has been harvesting plants and mushrooms introduced to her by her grandmother. “When someone was sick, she’d say […]
Freedom of the woods
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Bill Knight is a 42-year-old mushroom harvester and buyer from Shelton, Wash. He got his start 10 years ago, and is a member of the Alliance of Forest Workers and Harvesters, a group providing a unified voice for the Northwest forest harvesters. “Someone takes […]
Plant identification
Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Beargrass is sometimes called “Indian basket grass,” but it isn’t a grass at all. Buyers in the Northwest pay 45 cents for a half-pound bunch of the tough, grassy leaves of this lily, which are sometimes dyed bright colors and added to floral displays. […]
Uncommon Bounty
Note: four sidebar articles accompany this feature story: a guide to identifying edible and medicinal plants, a profile of a mushroom harvester, and mushroom harvester Bill Knight and Hoopa Valley Tribal member Sherlette Colegrove sharing their views in their own words. With a few lengths of steel and the blue flame of a welding torch, […]
Stereotyping hunters is easy
Dear HCN, Thanks for providing an open and honest forum so that we can discuss the myriad issues, such as hunting, that affect the West. In recent issues I’ve read Stephen Gies’ whiny diatribe about the “macabre act of hunting” and Marc Gaede’s bizarre but hilarious evaluation of the human male. I fit their stereotype. […]
Don’t believe that grizzlies are doing just fine
Dear HCN, Many of us who follow the Yellowstone grizzly summer after summer know one thing for certain about the Interagency Grizzly Bear Committee: It is an intensely political organization (HCN, 11/9/98). Like a political party, most of its deliberations are in secret and many of its pronouncements are in the form of propaganda. Propaganda […]
Outfitters do a lot for Grand Canyon
Dear HCN, Whether one supports wilderness for the Colorado River corridor in Grand Canyon or not, to inextricably link it with access for private boaters is wrong and very misleading (HCN, 12/21/98). Part of the reason that there is such a long wait for private boaters to get to the river is that the current […]
Society for Ecology Restoration
When members of the Society for Ecological Restoration meet next September in San Francisco, they will focus on moving stewardship of the land back to the community – away from government or large corporations. To submit abstracts for a talk or poster by March 15, contact Deborah Amshoff, program chair, 2489 Whitney Dr. #1, Mountain […]
Stegner Center Symposium
Two of the country’s experts on water policy will speak at this year’s 4th Annual Stegner Center Symposium, “Where the Rivers Flow: Sharing Watersheds and Boundaries’ in Salt Lake City, Utah. On hand April 16-17 will be Dan Beard, former commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation, and Marc Reisner, author of Cadillac Desert: The American […]
San Juan National Forest Artist in Residence
The San Juan National Forest Artist in Residence program offers artists the chance to stay at the historic Aspen Guard Station in exchange for producing a creative piece that represents their experience in the former ranger station. All types of artists are encouraged to apply by March 1 for the one- to two-week fall stay. […]
College scholarships
The Sierra Club will award four-year college scholarships of $1,000 per year to 10 students from small communities in the Sierra Nevada region. Applications must be postmarked no later than March 5; for more information, write to Jackie McCort of the Sierra Club at 85 Second Street, Fourth Floor, San Francisco, CA 94105-5500, call her […]
