September 27, 1999: The Millworker and the Forest

A hike through the old growth of Olympic National Park with former millworker Jim Podlesny reveals more than one way to look at a giant Douglas-fir, and also at the life of a one-time logging community.

September 13, 1999: Troubled Oasis

In Nevada, Walker Lake is slowly disappearing, as local farmers, an Indian tribe and conservationists battle over the rights to the water that once filled the lake.

August 30, 1999: Who’s stopping sprawl?

In this special issue: city-dwellers’ usual support for the Endangered Species Act can be severely tested when an endangered species is found in or near their own backyards.

August 16, 1999: Standing up for the underdog

After a century of poisoning and shooting the black-tailed prairie dog at will, ranchers are up in arms over the push by conservationists to have the animal listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.

August 2, 1999: Jon Marvel vs. the Marlboro Man

Jon Marvel, Hailey, Idaho, architect, founded the Idaho Watersheds Project to target public-lands grazing, but his notoriously in-your-face, confrontational style has roused a lot of controversy along the way.

June 21, 1999: The disappearing farm

On the Great Plains, some beleagured farmers are pinning their economic hopes on local cooperatives, such as a pasta-making factory in Leeds, N.D.

June 7, 1999: Mining the past

The history of the copper-mining town of Butte, Mont., sparks a searching meditation on the meaning and value of work and the place it holds now, as the Old West becomes the New West.

May 24, 1999: The last weird place

Eccentric desert rats and clean-cut park rangers sometimes meet in a culture clash over how to manage one of the hottest, driest and strangest places in North America – Death Valley National Park.

May 10, 1999: My beautiful ranchette

A ranchette owner defends her home and lifestyle in a subdivision near Bozeman, Mont., a Western historian considers Montana’s long history of being panicked about growth from his ranchette in the beleaguered but beautiful Bitterroot Valley, and other essays.

April 26, 1999: Visionaries or dreamers?

Earth First! founder Dave Foreman and conservation biologist Michael Soulé founded The Wildlands Project, a scientifically based plan to save endangered wildlife by restoring and reconnecting the scattered islands of wilderness remaining in the West.

April 12, 1999: Is trapping doomed?

Wildlife trapping – which has a long history in the West – today comes into fierce conflict with environmentalists, animal advocates, and residents upset by the risk traps pose to domestic dogs.

March 29, 1999: Wheeling and dealing

Land swaps, in which the Forest Service and BLM trade odd parcels of public land for ecologically valuable private land, have a long history in the West, but some say the trades too often profit land spectators at the expense of the public and the land.

March 15, 1999: Selling off the Promised Land

In Montana, the Church Universal and Triumphant re-invents itself as its charismatic founder, Elizabeth Clare Prophet, retires, and new leadership offers part of the sect’s Royal Teton Ranch for conservation easements and federal land trades.

March 1, 1999: Working the land back to health

David Brower tells us all environmental victories are temporary and all defeats permanent. This special issue tests that proposition, with feature articles on environmentalists seeking consensus on how to restore to the Coconino National Forest near Flagstaff, Ariz., to health after a huge forest fire, and an effort in southeastern Oregon to bring together environmentalists, ranchers and BLM staffers to find a way to restore the badly overgrazed landscape.

February 15, 1999: Uncommon Bounty

Western Indian reservations and former logging towns are among economically depressed communities seeking to cash in on the new market for gourmet and medicinal plants, but some worry that the boom of “wild crafting” plants may not be entirely benign.

February 1, 1999: Saving the Platte

Environmentalists, farmers and state and federal agencies try to find some kind of consensus even as each reaches for a share of the overused Platte River as it flows from Colorado, through Wyoming and across Nebraska.

January 18, 1999: Desert sprawl

In Tucson, Ariz., where a dozen acres are cleared for development each day, environmentalists and concerned locals try to find ways to rein in runaway growth, and to save the desert and its remaining endangered cactus ferruginous pygmy owls.

December 21, 1998: Grand Canyon Gridlock

So many people want to take a river trip through the Grand Canyon that limits set by the Park Service – which many say favor commercial outfitters over private boaters – create an administrative nightmare for the agency.

December 7, 1998: Vail and the road to a recreational empire

Some worry that Vail and the other booming ski resorts along Colorado’s I-70 corridor – which are more lucrative than ever as they become year-round resorts – are turning the state into an Alpine theme park more like Switzerland than the Rocky Mountains.

Gift this article