Grand Canyon Trust uses non-confrontational style to help shape future of the Southwest’s Colorado Plateau.


Jackalopes in Japan

Two antlered rabbits recently made their way to Osaka, Japan, from the world capital of the jackalope, Douglas, Wyo. Japanese customs officials found the man-made novelties while searching the luggage of Douglas, Wyo., trade delegate, John Blair. Unable to understand the animals’ identity, officials began to look for jackalope on a list of endangered species.…

An alleged massacre comes under fire

As the story goes, Shoshone-Bannock warriors scalped and murdered nearly 300 men, women and children near Almo, Idaho, in 1861. Now, several historians call the massacre mere campfire folklore. Brigham Madsen, a retired University of Utah professor who recently researched the killing, says no newspapers or U.S. military records in 1861 mention the massacre, and…

Silent swans in Yellowstone

For the first time in recorded history, Yellowstone National Park trumpeter swans added no young to their flock last summer. The decline in cygnets parallels a decrease in the adult population from almost 500 last year to 277 this year. Ruth Shea, of the Idaho Fish and Game Department, believes a major cause is competition…

Indians and water

During the feverish development of water projects throughout the West, most Native American tribes were left out. But under federal law, Indian reservations have senior rights to vast amounts of water – more than Western states could spare even if they wanted to. Thus it is no surprise that today almost every state and reservation…

Reformers needed, not abolitionists

Dear HCN, Jeffrey St. Clair complained in the last issue that no “abolitionists’ were included in the Colorado grazing reform working group. Of course they were excluded! That decision was deliberate. The sharing of goals is a necessary preliminary to any successful resolution of conflict, and the abolitionists declare outright that they don’t share the…

Troubled waters on the Arkansas

-How bad is the water in the Arkansas – Really?” A conference on Colorado’s most popular rafting river will ask that question at an Upper Arkansas Watershed Forum, April 7-8. It brings together water quality and quantity experts to discuss heavy metals pollution, water rights, possible wild and scenic designation for the Arkansas, and a…

She’s against grazing abuses

Dear HCN, My friend Jeff St. Clair listed me as a “grazing abolitionist” in an op-ed piece published in the 3/21/94 issue of HCN. As a candidate for Commissioner of Public Lands in New Mexico, I feel I need to clarify my position on this subject. I am not opposed to public-land grazing, provided it…

A sense of Nevada

At Home in the Wasteland: Nevada Visions of Environment and Community is the title of a forum sponsored by the Nevada Humanities Committee, April 15 at the University of Nevada Reynolds School of Journalism auditorium in Reno. The panel features photographer Peter Goin, geographer Paul Starrs, historians James Hulse and Elizabeth Raymond, teacher and state…

Guide to takings law

In 1986, David Lucas purchased two coastal lots in South Carolina for $1 million. Two years later the state legislature passed the South Carolina Beachfront Management Act, which prohibited Lucas from developing his property because his homes would have been too close to the ocean. Lucas sued the state of South Carolina and eventually took…

Court strikes at Endangered Species Act

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service cannot require private landowners to protect the habitat of endangered species, according to a recent court decision. The ruling by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D.C., stems from a lawsuit challenging federal regulations restricting timber harvesting near spotted owl nests in Oregon and…

Clearcut

We can only wonder how Thoreau would have reacted, beyond suffering simultaneously from apoplexy and a coronary, to the trashing of nature that Clearcut reveals. Not just leaves and grand passages, but entire chapters have been ripped out. *David Brower In Clearcut: The Tragedy of Industrial Forestry, disturbing aerial views bear witness to the elimination…

Saving trees to save bears

In what one official calls a “directional shift” in agency policy, the Forest Service has proposed some of the country’s most stringent guidelines for protecting grizzly bear habitat in a portion of Idaho’s Targhee National Forest. Under the plan, the Forest Service would suspend new road construction and timber harvests for at least 11 years…

Working on writing

At the end of April, hundreds of journalists will gather in Salt Lake City, Utah, and five other cities across the country to work on their writing. “This is a great experience for journalists to get meaningful training at a low cost,” says David Ledford, managing editor of the Salt Lake Tribune and organizer of…

Trees are more than logs

An “idea fair” sponsored by the Forest Service and a coalition of private and public organizations will show how to extract higher value from forest products before they leave timber-dependent communities. “Growing Sustainable Forest Enterprises, An Intermountain Idea Fair” examines how timber can be made into specialty products such as toys or furniture rather than…

Energy Fair

Alternative energy technologies will be on display at the second annual, free Energy Fair April 30-May 1 in Montrose, Colo. Vendors will feature tepees, dome houses, earth-sunken homes, devices to computerize energy conservation and energy-efficient lighting and building materials. Workshops will examine bio fuels and hybrid solar systems, among other topics. Events include baking cookies…

Salmon fishing banned

For the first time ever, salmon fishing in the Pacific Ocean has been banned. The prohibition, imposed by a federal panel, applies to waters off Washington, Oregon and California, though not to Alaska or British Columbia. “The combination of effects has created a natural disaster,” says Robert Turner, director of fisheries for the state of…

Rural co-ops must change

Under a draft proposal by the Western Area Power Administration, over 600 publically owned utilities and rural electric associations must add renewable resources and energy efficiency to their planning procedures or forfeit their right to buy cheap federal hydropower. WAPA’s Draft Energy Planning and Marketing EIS, released March 25, would require all utilities that buy…

Old power poles electrocute eagles

Last March, Clent Bailey found an electrocuted golden eagle beneath a power pole near Roswell, N.M. Bailey, who works as a biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, then uncovered an electrocuted hawk under the eagle, a victim of the same “problem pole.” The experience launched Bailey’s campaign to retrofit poles and strengthen regulations.…

Movable metaphor for the West now a video

The three Pinedale, Wyo., artists who transformed cows into ambulatory art last year now have a video commemorating the event. Thanks to a $4,000 federal grant, Duane Brandt, an art teacher at Pinedale High, along with his wife, Pip, and Sue Thornton, painted the words of a Wyoming pioneer on the backs of 74 pregnant…

Scratching for a living

Dan Popkey, a columnist with the Idaho Statesman, noted irony in the Idaho State Land Board’s decision to overturn a grazing lease won at an auction by an environmental group. The board returned the lease to the Ingrams, a ranching family from Challis, Idaho, after hearing the ranchers’ emotional plea to protect family agriculture in…

The West is hard at work, destroying its past

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau? The Colorado Plateau is internationally famous for its canyons and spectacular natural beauty, but it also contains the largest concentration of prehistoric ruins, rock art and artifacts in the world. Those traces of its past are being lost,…

Radiation experiments raise ethical questions

SEATTLE, Wash. – The Clinton administration and major universities are apologizing for Cold War radiation experiments on humans, but the man behind the largest such experiment in Washington state maintains he did nothing wrong. Dr. C. Alvin Paulsen used X-rays on the testicles of 64 prisoners at the Washington State Penitentiary in Walla Walla during…

Fly-by tourism may be throttled at Grand Canyon

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story, Who speaks for the Colorado Plateau? Although Congress passed legislation in 1987 limiting where tourist-toting planes and helicopters could go over Grand Canyon National Park, the number of flights has nearly doubled. The National Park Service says noise pervades almost every nook and cranny…

Dear friends

We want advice If all goes well, subscribers should soon receive the annual High Country News survey. The paper’s surveys don’t ask what kind of car you drive, or your annual income, or where you vacation. But we do ask questions to guide us in putting out the newspaper. And if you haven’t responded to…

Grazing reform: A plan to chew on

Interior Secretary Bruce Babbitt launched his second attempt at grazing reform last month, issuing a giant 224-page draft plan to revamp grazing practices on 170 million acres of Bureau of Land Management rangeland. Like his initial proposal last summer, the revised plan would double grazing fees and tighten environmental regulations. But, in a major departure,…

New policy pits seasonals against parks

ZION NATIONAL PARK, Utah – Michael Parshall wondered how much longer he’d be able to build trails for the National Park Service. His problem wasn’t with his job at Zion National Park, but with an advanced and crippling case of colitis. “I knew that I was getting sick in 1989, but I didn’t go to…

How federal agencies and range scientists wasted a century

Rangeland Health: New Methods to Classify, Inventory, and Monitor Rangelands The Committee on Rangeland Classification, Board of Agriculture, National Research Council; National Academy Press, Washington, D.C. 1994. Paper, 180 pages. Order from: The Society for Range Management, 1839 York St., Denver, CO 80206; 303/355-7070; $22. Review by Ed Marston What have those guys been doing…

Clifton, Arizona: A town no one knows

CLIFTON, Ariz. – We must have stuck out as an exotic bunch of dudes driving through this remote mining town of a couple of thousand people in southeastern Arizona: One student from South Korea, one from Japan and one from Germany. It was Christmas break at Arizona State University, and we had ventured out to…

An open letter to Andy Kerr in rural Oregon

ENTERPRISE, Ore. – I don’t know you, Andy, although we’ve met a couple of times. You came into my bookstore 12 or 15 years ago, then we met again the evening of Allan Savory’s grazing talk. I’ve heard your voice on TV and seen your face in the newspapers over the years. I remember one…