If Eric Kuhn is right about the Colorado River, then the state faces a dry and difficult future of fighting for water.


HCN board meeting – in cyberspace

To save money during these rocky economic times, the High Country News board of directors held its first-ever board meeting via telephone and the Internet on Jan. 30. Not surprisingly, the meeting focused on HCN’s financial condition and what the organization is doing to survive in today’s down market. Before the holidays, a dip in…

Let Cody pay

Your story, “Political guns,” says: “The park bosses hope to make the Sylvan Pass mission safer by buying three new over-snow vehicles for rescues, ambulance and crew transport. They also want to install more concrete reinforcement for the howitzer position and a hut where rangers can huddle for warmth. But such safety measures could cost…

Long day’s journey

Mr. Thompson’s “Editor’s Note” and Mr. Moore’s article “All Aboard” failed to mention a couple of key points about traveling on Amtrak (HCN, 2/02/09). Although Mr. Thompson and his family paid for berths when they took the train, most Americans who take Amtrak travel in coach class. With children’s tickets at half price, the journey…

Of flotsam and jetsam

As poetry students at a California university, my friend Merie and I walked to class along the beach. We often paused to examine dead seagulls, whose glazed eyes and tar-matted feathers we described in our would-be avant-garde verse. Somehow we never questioned where the birds came from or even why they were dead. Twenty years…

Political Sabotage

Denver Johnston’s letter to the editor claims HCN failed to provide “diverging viewpoints” on the Bush administration in the Dec. 22 issue (HCN, 2/02/09). Unfortunately, the people of the Bush administration who concocted the present disaster did not do so from merely divergent viewpoints, inadequate facts or confused values. They worked diligently and deliberately to…

Remembering Rocky Flats

Regarding your story “The Half-life of Memory,” I had the pleasure of serving on the Rocky Flats Citizens Advisory Board (RFCAB), and in 2000 we had the chance to tour Building 771 (HCN, 2/16/09). The DOE considered 771 to be the most dangerous building in America. The opportunity to walk through a building that was…

Stewardship, not politics

My husband and I count ourselves among those “who care about the West,” and we are activists on behalf of the natural environment. This does not mean, however, that we stand at the political left; nor do we want to be bombarded with liberal bromides. Case in point: “Putting our house back in order” by…

Train in vain

Nowhere in “All Aboard” do I find concern about what increased rail will do to small rural communities like mine (HCN, 2/02/09). We are facing a proposed railroad yard, the ninth largest in the nation, smack across from a state park and a new affordable housing development, which will destroy the upper Santa Cruz Valley,…

An underground uprising

Killing for Coal: America’s Deadliest Labor WarThomas G. Andrews386 pages, hardcover: $29.95.Harvard University Press, 2008. Rusted bits of metal, staircases to nowhere, perhaps a weathered gun tower: These fragments are all that remain of southern Colorado’s coal-mining towns. The casual visitor would never guess how central to Western history their inhabitants were. There is one…

Welcome to the era of scarcity

I have a classic Western postcard tacked to the bulletin board above my computer. It shows two men in a field with shovels raised above their heads, locked in mock battle. Behind them runs an irrigation ditch. The headline reads: “Discussing Western Water Rights, A Western Pastime.” The postcard makes me laugh because I know…

The little island that could

Last fall, a Viking washed up on my doorstep. His name was Soren Hermansen. For the past 10 years, he has spearheaded one of the most audacious experiments in the world: the attempt of 4,000 people living on the small Danish island of Samso to liberate themselves from fossil fuel. A few weeks after being…

Lessons of habitat

Last July, Nancy Eastman was leafing through HCN when she came across a photo of artificial cholla built by California scientists (HCN, 7/21/08). The imitation cacti are intended to serve as nesting sites for beleaguered coastal cactus wrens, but they’re also great gangly jumbles of spikes, pipes and spindly legs. Eastman, an artist and landscaper,…