Reflections on wilderness at 50, Craig Childs riding with motorheads in Utah, and what a historic moment for the Clean Air Act means for climate.


A wild paradox

I first encountered wilderness in the early ’80s, when many of the law’s backers and I were purists. I was backpacking for the first time, exploring West Virginia’s Cranberry Wilderness. I have always used crutches to get around and had never carried a pack for any distance. The experience was more difficult than I anticipated.…

An artist’s road to redemption

The PainterPeter Heller288 pages, hardcover:$24.95.Alfred A. Knopf, 2014. If it’s possible to paint in words alone, to create a wildly colorful story of grief in sentences layered like one of van Gogh’s swirling night scenes, Colorado author Peter Heller accomplishes it in his second novel, The Painter, narrated by artist Jim Stegner. A fly fisherman…

Visitors from Maine to Montana

Summer’s in full swing in Paonia, Colorado, our tiny hometown. The North Fork Valley’s sunny weather, scrumptious fruit and fine wines draw lots of visitors, and we’re always delighted when friends old and new drop by our office. Andreas (Andy) Mink, who reports for the Sunday edition of Neue Zurcher Zeitung, Switzerland’s leading paper, spent…

Farmers for clear water rule

I read your coverage of the proposed new clean water ruling by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency with interest (“Muddy waters of the U.S.,” HCN, 6/23/14; “Is the Clean Water Act under attack?” hcn.org, 6/24/14), and wish to add a few sentiments to the mix. For more than 100 years, the Rocky Mountain Farmers Union…

We’re prepared to buy back our own land

On June 9, 1855, the Cayuse, Umatilla and Walla Walla people agreed to a treaty that ceded 6.4 million acres of land to the United States, in what would become northeast Oregon and southwest Washington. In return for that lavish gift, 250,000 acres were reserved for the tribes, “all of which tract shall be set…

WWII code talkers, cleaning Utah caverns and more

COLORADOAnyone who reads a blog called Government Executive now knows that some U.S. Environmental Protection Agency staffers are not just unhappy; they also appear un-housebroken. In the agency’s Denver office, for example, there have been several incidents of “inappropriate bathroom behavior, including defecating in the hallway.” Managers said they were trying to find the culprit…

Love that dirty river

Every year, I dutifully respond to those High Country News reader surveys in the fervent hope that you will devote more of your valuable real estate to urban-oriented stories about our region’s social injustices. Well, there is a Santa Claus, and he delivered a wonderful gift to me in the form of Daniel Person’s pitch-perfect “River of No Return”…

Motorheads gone wild

An off-roading conservationist navigates some gnarly landscape on the road to more protection for the Utah desert.

Mustang modification

The Horse Lover: A Cowboy’s Quest to Save the Wild MustangsH. Alan Day with Lynn Wiese Sneyd, Foreword by Sandra Day O’Connor264 pages, hardcover:$24.95.University of Nebraska Press, 2014. You’ve heard of The Horse Whisperer. Now, meet The Horse Lover, a cowboy on a mission to save wild mustangs – 1,500 of them, all nickering and…

On booms and their remains

Click here to see a full gallery of Sarah Christianson’s photographs of the Bakken oil boom. In 1973, during North Dakota’s second oil boom, then-Gov. Art Link declared, “When we are through with that and the landscape is quiet again … let those who follow and repopulate the land be able to say our grandparents…

Photos of Bonneville Salt Flats

The Bonneville Salt Flats: Two Decades of Photography by Peter Vincent Peter Vincent with essays by Peter de Lory, Philip Linhares, Tom Fritz and others, 272 pages, hardcover: $85. Stance & Speed. 2013. “Salt fever”: That’s what drives thousands of people each year to gather with their hotrods, cars and motorcycles on the Utah-Nevada border,…

Predatory Ugliness

Jonathan Thompson’s terrific piece about the payday loan business (“A pimp in the family,” HCN, 6/23/14) spotlights some of the ugliest elements of the financial services business. Predatory lenders have found a lucrative niche in the largely unregulated world that flourishes in poor communities with immediate cash needs – like Native American reservations. Indeed, as…

Support what you preserve

It’s nice to see more land set aside for conservation and our future children and grandchildren, but this must be accompanied by federal funds to support the infrastructure (“What the president can do right now for conservation,” HCN, 5/26/14). That means our dear leaders need to allocate enough money for people to monitor the parks,…

The Latest: Interior commits to restoring bison on select lands

BackstoryJust a few free-roaming bison herds remain in the West. Roughly 4,000 bison inhabit Yellowstone, but they are hindered by ranchers who fear they spread brucellosis, which can cause cattle miscarriages. The park and state agencies limit the herd’s roaming and remove “excess” animals by hunting, slaughter and transplanting to other areas (“The Killing Fields,”…

The Latest: Mining battle update at Utah’s Tavaputs Plateau

BackstoryUtah’s tar sands could yield from 12 billion to 30 billion recoverable barrels of yet-untapped oil, so in 2008, Calgary-based U.S. Oil Sands proposed mining the remote Tavaputs Plateau. Though the planned 213-acre mine is small, a profitable tar sands operation could set a precedent, and environmental groups like Moab-based Living Rivers have fought it…