Posted inAugust 5, 1996: Disappearing railroad blues

We love our parks

Congressional hopefuls take heed: It pays to support national parks. Three-quarters of voting Americans say their representative’s record on parks is important, according to a 1996 survey conducted by Colorado State University for the nonprofit National Parks and Conservation Association. The 46-page survey, American Views on National Park Issues, found that only 4 percent of […]

Posted inAugust 5, 1996: Disappearing railroad blues

If you’re looking for scarlet mormons

Tropical butterflies have landed in Colorado. The Butterfly Pavilion and Insect Center just outside of Denver features scarlet mormons, zebra longwings and more than 100 other varieties that fly through glass-enclosed buildings. While at least 30 butterfly centers have emerged in the past decade – most of them associated with zoos – the 7,800-square-foot pavilion […]

Posted inAugust 5, 1996: Disappearing railroad blues

Partners for an unspoiled place

The Greater San Juan Partnership sells a combative bumpersticker – -Keep It Country!’ – and a collaborative message: Newcomers and old-timers can work together to preserve the rural character of the southern Rockies. The fledgling partnership takes its inspiration from the San Juan Mountains watershed, which board member Todd Murchison calls the largest unspoiled place […]

Posted inJuly 22, 1996: Glen Canyon: Using a dam to heal a river

The history of two canyons, in photographs

Out of the flood of books on the Colorado River, two recent illustrated volumes caught our eye. Robert H. Webb’s Grand Canyon, a Century of Change features pairs of matched photos, old and new. The author, a hydrologist involved with Glen Canyon Environmental Studies, spent seven months replicating hundreds of photographic views from the Stanton […]

Posted inJuly 22, 1996: Glen Canyon: Using a dam to heal a river

Instream Flows: Minimum Doctrine/Maximum Controversy

The 21st annual Colorado Water Workshop at Western State College in Gunnison Aug. 7-9 focuses this year on Instream Flows: Minimum Doctrine/ Maximum Controversy. For more information, contact the Colorado Water Workshop, Aspinall Wilson Center, Western State College, Gunnison, CO 81231 or call Pam Ayers at 970/ 943-7156. For those whose job requires detailed knowledge […]

Posted inJuly 22, 1996: Glen Canyon: Using a dam to heal a river

Helping Small Towns Survive

Jackson, Wyo., will host the fifth annual training institute for community development specialists, sponsored by the Heartland Center for Leadership Development, Oct. 10-14. This year’s focus is Helping Small Towns Survive. Contact the Jackson Hole Institute, care of the Heartland Center for Leadership Development, 941 “O” Street, Suite 920, Lincoln, NE 68508 (800/927-1115). This article […]

Posted inJune 24, 1996: Catron County's politics heat up as its land goes bankrupt

Still stealing trees

Since the U.S. Forest Service disbanded its special timber-theft task force nearly a year ago, investigations of large-scale timber theft have ground to a halt. That’s the conclusion of Unindicted Co-Conspirator, a report by the nonprofit Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) and the Governmental Accountability Project (GAP), a Washington, D.C.-based group that protects government […]

Posted inJune 24, 1996: Catron County's politics heat up as its land goes bankrupt

Mountain outposts of empire

Although the Sangre de Cristo Mountains are almost synonymous with New Mexico, the range – the longest in the United States – extends about 110 miles into Colorado. Tom Wolf, a writer and one-time forestry student, explores these northern Sangres in Colorado’s Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Starting with the Anasazi and continuing through the Spanish, […]

Posted inJune 24, 1996: Catron County's politics heat up as its land goes bankrupt

Lessons of Lewis and Clark

Our Natural History: the Lessons of Lewis and Clark describes the wilderness of the American West as the two explorers encountered it during their journey 1804-1806, and compares it to today’s American West as shaped by industrial civilization. Long the subject of historians, the famous journals also offer author Daniel B. Botkin, a leader in […]

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