Chip Ward, who used to write for High Country News, has just published an informative piece on wolf recovery in Yellowstone — essentially calling it a success story that nobody appears to want to take credit for. One interesting angle: Wolves improve the water supply. How? When there are no wolves to worry about, elk […]
Ed Quillen
The difficult windows of September
Often I have observed that September is our reward for putting up with Colorado the rest of the year: Generally clear skies, warm sunny days that don’t get too hot, brisk mornings, glowing aspen leaves — what’s not to like? Well, as the nights get cooler — our first killing frost typically arrives around Sept. […]
A new twist in an old contention
For more than a century — the first court case was filed in 1901 — Kansas and Colorado have fought over the Arkansas River, with Kansas claiming that Colorado keeps too much of its water. Now there’s a new twist in the long dispute. (The two states can’t even agree on how to pronounce the […]
Remembering Labor on Labor Day
Labor Day comes on Monday. It inspires thoughts of picnics and mountain outings, but it also brings to mind a conversation I had years ago with my state representative — the rare Republican who carried a union card. Several mines had closed. Our area had lost a lot of well-paid steady jobs with excellent benefits. […]
The harm of hallowed ground
Why do we fight over places where bad things happened?
Educational benefits
Some people love to travel, but I am not among them. I have the good fortune to live in a town that’s just the right size. Salida, Colo., is small enough that I can walk to conduct most of my routine errands, and big enough for a supermarket, library, bookstore, pharmacy and the like. America’s […]
New Mexico gets most back from Washington
Since this is an election year, it’s time to ponder politics. Let’s ignore policy and platforms for the moment, and look at money. Which state’s congressional delegation is best at delivering the dollars? The champion team is in the West. According to statistics compiled by the Tax Foundation in Washington, D.C., New Mexico’s representatives and […]
Another way to see immigration
A friend pointed me to an interesting article about immigration from Mexico, especially into the American Southwest. In essence, it argues that this is not some internal U.S. law-enforcement issue that can be resolved by intensive policing, like Arizona’s controversial recent effort. Instead, our Southwest is typical of borderlands throughout the world, and the current […]
Colorado’s bizarre primary
About 20 years ago, the Colorado General Assembly moved the state’s primary election from September to August. Cynics figured there was a reason, something like this: Coloradans are on vacation in August, or at least getting outdoors at every opportunity, so they’re not paying attention to politics the way they would in September. An August […]
Over the River controversy continues
The Bulgarian-born artist Christo specializes in gigantic installations — like wrapping the Reichstag in Berlin, or arranging hundreds of fabric gates in New York City’s Central Park. For the past decade or so, he’s had plans to return to Colorado with “Over the River.” (His first Colorado project, an immense curtain in Rifle Gap, was about […]
The meaning of marmot whistles
How about replacing Groundhog Day with a Feb. 2 Marmot Day?
Not good news for the locals
Afghans might learn from history what happens to people who live above valuable minerals.
Push polls in the Rockies
I had read about “push polls,” but until last week, I had never been exposed to one. A “push poll” may sound like a real poll at first, but as the questions proceed, it’s obvious that the pollster is trying to influence your thinking, rather than find out what you’re thinking, which is what legitimate […]
Going by the law
With production supposed to start soon, I’ve encountered even more criticism of the Nestle bottled-water operation in Colorado’s Chaffee County, where I live. To make up for the water taken to the bottling plant, water that would have otherwise flowed down the Arkansas River to other users with senior water rights, Nestle made a deal […]
Who’s in charge of immigration?
It’s a federal responsibility — not that of state or local government
A Grand Disappointment
This May, National Geographic Press published Running Dry: A Journey from Source to Sea Down the Colorado River. It’s by Jonathan Waterman, who lives on 20 acres near Carbondale, Colo. As someone who follows water issues, I wanted to like this book. But I couldn’t. That’s because I ran across so many errors at […]
Why not fees on Fourteeners?
Proposal might result in fewer tourists — who spend more
