July 23, 2012: The Hardest Climb

Black Diamond CEO Peter Metcalf built a climbing-gear business when nobody thought it could be done. But his dream of turning the outdoor industry into a conservation champion remains tantalizingly elusive. Also, exporting coal to Asia incites a motley opposition, saving chimneys and swifts, Utah tar sands, Oregon logging pollution, and more.

June 25, 2012: Special travel issue

Land art in the West, Twilight and the Quileute tribe; three days in New Mexico, Montana, and Reno; Las Vegas gun tourism; Craig Childs on travel to the deep past.

June 11, 2012: The Darkest Shade of Polygamy

Utah and Arizona fail to crack down on abusive polygamous sects which persist even after Warren Jeffs’ conviction; abalone poachers versus wildlife officials; nuclear regulator Gregory Jaczko’s sharp eye will be missed; scientists enlist help for spider surveys and more.

May 28, 2012: The Gila Bend Photon Club

Gila Bend, Arizona: Crumbling remnant of the Old West or the perfect place for utility-scale solar to finally take off?; also, selenium’s problems, hunter-run Super PACS, do conservation-minded subdivisions work?; voluntary endangered species conservation agreements, and more

May 14, 2012: The sediment dumps of L.A.

When Camron Stone realized that a nearby riparian forest was about to be bulldozed by the Los Angeles County Flood Control District, he tried to fight back. Also, the skinny on land grabs by state lawmakers, turning diesel into fertilizer, new science of beetle kill and wildfires, and more

April 16, 2012: The Other Bakken Boom

North Dakota’s Three Affiliated Tribes are struggling with living in the heart of the Bakken Formation, North Dakota’s gigantic oil play; an “all of the above” renewable bill; extreme cartography; how Peter Gleick’s fall hurts California water policy, and more.

March 19, 2012: Water Warrior

Bob Rawlings, publisher of the Pueblo Chieftain, has battled for decades to bring water to southeastern Colorado and, once it’s there, to keep it no matter what. Also, sodbusting farmers plow up the Northern Plains prairie, saving a rare Oregon ponderosa pine, healing art on the Navajo Nation, finding the Old Spanish Trail, and more.

January 23, 2012: Billboard corporations use money and influence to override your vote

In Salt Lake City and other Western communities, billboard companies battle local democracy. Also in this issue: Buying out grazing permits to solve public lands conflicts, mom-and-pop energy companies risk a lot to find new reserves, A lawsuit raises questions about how far environmentalists should go to keep wilderness ‘untrammeled.’, and much more.

December 26, 2011: Perilous Passages

Along the 120-mile-long “Path of the Pronghorn,” migrating animals cross rivers, dodge traffic, battle blizzards and navigate the infrastructure of Wyoming energy development.

December 12, 2011: Out on a limb

As whitebark pines in the Northern Rockies succumb to pine beetles and blister rust, hardworking climbers defy gravity to collect pine cones from canopies to supply efforts to breed more resilient and resistant trees.

November 28, 2011: Growing a Revolution

Viva Farms is a “farm incubator” in Washington’s Skagit Valley, helping aspiring cash-poor farmers like Nelida Martinez start and successfully operate their own businesses.

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