Will there ever be enough water in California’s Bay Delta to satisfy farmers, keep fish alive and quench the thirst of millions of people?

A long journey home
California tribe wants to bring back salmon from New Zealand
Teaching Whitney to cook
Environmental awareness can be learned in the kitchen
Sportsmen protest New Mexico antelope hunting system
Program gets poor marks from local hunters
Coyotes move into Colorado’s Front Range
Residents and coyotes clash in the suburbs.
Activist brings diversity to green orgs
Marcelo Bonta helps color the environmental movement
The BLM’s conservation experiment
Salazar directs agency to put conservation first – in some places
State trust lands serve public
What’s equivalent in area to Washington state, lies mostly west of the Mississippi, and raises well over a billion dollars for public education each year? State trust lands. These unique “public” lands were granted by the federal government to every state that joined the Union, starting with Ohio in 1803, in the belief that townships…
A place to park — and live
I completely sympathize with and understand the problems faced by Jen Jackson (HCN, 11/22/10). Many Western tourist towns have become unaffordable for the ordinary people who are, ironically, indispensable, working in hotels, restaurants and recreational businesses. The towns should find some way to accommodate their trailers or RVs. But in “Heard Around the West,” you…
Anatomy of a medusahead invasion
Medusahead, an invasive annual grass, is poised to become a major rangeland menace. “It’s just starting its major advancement,” says Roger Sheley, an Agricultural Research Service ecologist in Oregon. Sheley believes most Western rangelands are vulnerable, especially those already plagued by invasives. “Medusahead represents another step in the decline of these systems.” Devilish and useless:…
California’s Tangled Water Politics
The Sacramento and San Joaquin Delta, formed where the two rivers meet in California’s Central Valley before flowing into San Francisco Bay, is the largest estuary on the entire West Coast of the Americas. But much of the Delta is a remote, labyrinthine wateriness that, for most people, exists only in the mind, wrapped in…
Diving deeper into the Bay Delta
It would have been easy to frame this issue’s cover story from just one viewpoint — that of a dedicated environmentalist, say. It would have gone something like this: Profit-loving California farmers and voracious megacities are so greedy for water that they’re destroying what’s left of the once-sublime Sacramento and San Joaquin Delta ecosystem. Period.…
Excavating John
The Book of JohnKate Niles225 pages, softcover: $22.85.O Books, 2010. John Gregory Wayne Thompson, the eponymous hero of Kate Niles’ second novel, The Book of John, moves between the southwest Colorado desert and the cold beaches of Washington’s Neah Bay, in the process retracing his personal life and loves. An archaeologist, John is 50 years…
Infinite problems, small solutions
The Fate of Nature: Rediscovering Our Ability to Rescue the EarthCharles Wohlforth417 pages, hardcover: $25.99.St. Martin’s Press, 2010. In The Fate of Nature, Alaskan reporter and author Charles Wohlforth argues that the planet’s salvation depends upon our willingness to overcome our innate selfishness. Beginning with the basic question — what makes us human, anyway? –…
May your holidays be bright
We’ll see you again around mid-January — we’ll be taking a longer-than-usual publishing hiatus in December, to better align our printing schedule with the holidays, work on exciting stories for the new year, and overdose on eggnog and fudge. In the meantime, be sure to visit us on the Web at www.hcn.org for fresh blog…
Carl Sagan is rolling in his grave
Just what we need: HCN endorsing pseudoscience (HCN, 11/22/10). Sam Western exhibits a pathetic lack of critical reasoning in his puff piece about Vern Bandy’s supposed dowsing abilities. Bandy’s claim to have accurately dowsed thousands of wells is apparently supported only by his own records. As the son of a well-driller, it is hardly surprising…
An uncomfortable truth
Jen Jackson’s report describes a society that wants service industry workers and others to provide us with services we wouldn’t dream of living without (HCN, 11/22/10). But when those workers’ low-wage jobs don’t allow them to purchase or rent “acceptable” or “conventional” housing, we shun them as neighbors. We don’t want to be confronted with…
Seeing is believing
My husband, Ron, has the same kind of dowsing ability described in your profile of Vern Bandy (HCN, 11/22/10). His grandfather “witched” with a fork from a peach tree. Ron purchased a metal rod and has used it a number of times. He was project manager on the remodel of the senior center in Lake…
Reclamation reality check
The artist’s rendering of the post-reclamation Rosemont Copper Mine shows a striking difference in landforms between the graded mine-waste pile and the surrounding undisturbed terrain (HCN, 11/22/10). Particularly noticeable is the difference in what geomorphologists call drainage density, or the total length of drainage channels per acre. The unvarying slopes and rock rundowns in the…
