Latino communities in California’s Central Valley struggle with water pollution, plus the West’s rising importance as a helium producer, Hal Herring’s take on oil and gas exploitation along Montana’s Rocky Mountain Front, and more.
The Magazine
June 10, 2013: Paradise at a Price
Can environmentalists and affordable housing activists in Jackson, Wyoming settle their differences? Plus, using nautical records from centuries past to model climate modeling technology, the economic gains of wildfire, Latino radio incorporates public service, and more.
May 27, 2013: Haywired
Can the enormous, intricate and fragile electric grid play nice with increased renewable energy production? Plus, Alaska’s bald eagles, selling a Utah ghost town, hummingbird-inspired drones, and more.
May 13, 2013: Right-wing Migration
Conservative newcomers to Northern Idaho fight against the region’s Democrats, and themselves. Plus, the Southwest’s drought continues, midget faded rattlesnakes get a closer look from researchers, HCN follows a Montana wolf hunt, and more.
April 29, 2013: A New Forest Paradigm
Reassessing the 20-year-old Northwest Forest Plan, wolf trapping in Idaho, Idaho ranchers find common ground with the BLM while fighting range fires, and more.
April 15, 2013: Sacrificial Land
Desert dwellers wonder if renewable energy farms will dominate the Mojave Desert, how the federally-induced sequester will impact the West, California’s new carbon cap and trade market goes into effect, and more.
March 18, 2013: Second annual travel issue
A BLM junkie explores little-known lands; a sea kayaker paddles the Inside Passage; and other tales of travel and adventure from around the West.
March 4, 2013: Uncertain Landing
Mammoth Lakes, California and the rest of the ski industry face climate change. Also, Obama nominates a recreation industry magnate as Secretary of the Interior, the information age renders remote archeological sites increasingly accessible, Lake Mead reveals a long-sunken ghost town, scientists track the surprising and increasingly urban movement of mountain lions, and more.
February 18, 2013: Farming on the Fringe
San Luis Valley irrigators search for new ways to live within the limits of their water-short world. Also, the Sierra Club opts for civil disobedience against Keystone XL, tribes tangle over how to disperse settlement money, the BLM takes a stand over a southwestern river, and more.
February 4, 2013: Making Good on the Badlands
The Oglala Lakota may soon manage the first tribal national park, but transforming the bombed-out landscape won’t be easy. Also, the West debates gun control, cleaning up hardrock mine pollution isn’t easy, a letterpress newspaper alive in well in rural Colorado, restoring rivers, and more.
January 21, 2013: Special issue: Natural resources education
Education in the oil and gas fields, teaching students about public lands, the re-emergence of Outward Bound, teaching Los Angeles teenagers to water sample, Great Old Broads for wilderness laugh and learn, Round River teaches through places, and much more in our special education issue.
December 24, 2012: The new Wild, Wild West
A mining rush promises to transform Canada’s backcountry and threatens Alaska’s salmon; BLM plans for the National Petroleum Reserve in Alaska; fighting for floodplains; an underwater forest holds keys to historic drought; Custer reenactments, and more.
December 10, 2012: The Evolution of Wildlife Tech
We’re learning a lot by tracking millions of animals, but are we losing some of the heart of wildlife biology? Also, more energy means more water use, ocean acidification threatens oysters, a development conflict in the Grand Canyon, and more.
November 26, 2012: Casting for Common Ground
A timber company tries to do the right thing as a tribe fights for its ancestral lands. Also, enviros buy out oil and gas leases in forests, unusual bedfellows support state-run banks, genetically modified seeds take the next step forward, a climate artist, and more.
November 12, 2012: Nowhere to run
Is there a way through the Wests’s bitter wild horse wars? Also, learning from the Gila wildfire, the “war” on coal, deformed frogs, finding hipsters in Green River, Utah, and more.
October 29, 2012: Red State Rising
Utah’s powerful economic engine hinges on a potent combination of capitalism and collectivism. Also, political coverage, including looks at money in Western races, redistricting, Nevada politics, the Latino vote, and important races you’ve never heard of.
October 15, 2012: Are you a local?
Issue Summary: Our annual Books and Essays issue features essays about finding our place in the West by Craig Childs, Hannah Nordhaus and Sarah Gilman, author profiles, and many reviews of new books.
September 17, 2012: Pallids in Purgatory
On the overworked Missouri River, searching for signs that pallid sturgeon haven’t reached the end of their line. Also, superhero scientists unleash new weapons in the fight against invasive cheatgrass, the politics of public health, fire scientists duke it out over what the West’s forests should look like, and more.
September 3, 2012: Identity Politics, Montana Style
Is Senate candidate Denny Rehberg of Montana really who he says he is? Also, looking into refinery safety, air pollution around gas fields, a closer examination of federal land swaps, and more.
August 20, 2012: Troubled Taos
A New Mexican town known for its art scene is home to a fractured community where distrust of Anglo newcomers plays out in a fight over whether Hispano old timers have a right to land. Also, examining Jerry Brown’s California water plan, an interview with Alaska’s lieutenant governor, and saving threatened Utah prairie dogs.
