Refugees struggle to find a home in an unfamiliar land.
The Magazine
October 12, 2009: Silenced Springs?
A controversial water project planned by Las Vegas threatens the tiny inhabitants of many remote Great Basin springs.
September 14, 2009: Home
How we find it; how we understand it; how we care for it.
August 31, 2009: The dark side of dairies
Milk may have a wholesome image, but the West’s big dairies are not a healthy place for immigrants to work.
August 17, 2009: From Corn to Cabernet
A burgeoning wine industry could provide a welcome economic boost to farmers on Colorado’s Western Slope.
July 27, 2009: The Most Cooked-Up Catch
A “cap-and-trade” program for Alaskan and West Coast fisheries could save fish and take the edge off the dangerous multimillion-dollar fishing derby of the sea.
July 20, 2009: Thinking Outside the Timber Box
Loggers and environmental activists are determined to restore Montana’s Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest, with or without the help of the Forest Service.
June 15, 2009: Let’s Get Small
Can ‘hamster power’ — distributed generation and small-scale renewable energy projects — save the West, and the world?
June 1, 2009: Voyage of the Dammed
A small band of enthusiasts wants to re-engineer Western waterways with the help of a humble, hardworking professional: the beaver.
May 18, 2009: The Rise of the Minotaur
Bull riding explodes from its rural Western roots to become a modern spectacle along the lines of NASCAR.
May 4, 2009: Salmon Salvation
Obama’s new political order, backed by the legal acumen of Judge James Redden, may help the Northwest’s salmon survive and end the era of the Lower Snake River dams.
April 27, 2009: Got warriors?
On Wyoming’s Wind River Reservation, Stanford Addison – a quadriplegic Northern Arapaho horse gentler – helps Indian boys through their difficult teenage years.
April 13, 2009: The Desert That Breaks Annie Proulx’s Heart
Writer Annie Proulx takes an unsentimental view of Wyoming’s little-known and somewhat scarred Red Desert.
March 16, 2009: Innovate
Westerners have a knack for new and innovative thinking, as this special issue of HCN shows.
March 2, 2009: How low will it go?
If Eric Kuhn is right about the Colorado River, then the state faces a dry and difficult future of fighting for water.
February 16, 2009: The Half-life of Memory
A writer tries to dig up the buried history of Colorado’s Rocky Flats weapons plant, now home to a controversial wildlife refuge.
February 2, 2009: Non-navigable River Blues
An obscure legal ruling muddied U.S. water-protection standards, leaving Western intermittent streams and rivers unprotected.
January 19, 2009: Blood Quantum
Blood quantum – the complicated system that determines membership in most American Indian tribes – could threaten the future survival of those tribes.
December 22, 2008: What a mess
High Country News examines the Bush administration’s effects on the Western
environment and considers what can be done to heal the damage.
December 8, 2008: Out in the cold
When Julene Bair sold the family farm, she severed her lifelong connections with a sense of place and her own childhood.
