A former lookout finds the woman who used to guard her tower.
Erin Halcomb
Lust for fungi
A writer has a holy experience while mushroom hunting in southern Oregon.
Fifty summers and 360 degrees
One woman’s lifetime spotting fires
CSI: Critter Crime
An Oregon laboratory thwarts wildlife crime around the world
My, what a small family tree you have
In the Northern Rockies, gray wolves may face the problems of inbreeding
The new land rush
In the West’s mountains, old mining claims are the latest real estate hotspots
John Nichols and his 19th miracle
NAME: John Nichols VOCATION: Author of 19 books offiction and nonfiction, including The Milagro Beanfield War, The Sterile Cuckoo, Conjugal Bliss, The Voice of the Butterfly and If Mountains Die. AGE: 66 Thoughts on Death and THE Afterlife “You just die. It’s over, Rover.” Advice: “Part of surviving is not to stress yourself out and […]
Weathering the academic storm
Dan Donato’s controversial study on salvage logging turned his life upside-down
Oregon internees to get honorary degrees
These days, Portland’s Expo Center hosts everything from roller derby to dog shows. But few of the Oregonians who attend can recall when the Expo was used for a much grimmer purpose. At the onset of World War II, Japanese Americans were corralled on the grounds for months, awaiting the construction of internment camps. Sixty-five […]
Ravens to threaten tortoises nevermore
The last person to see a raven feasting on baby tortoises in the California desert may be a federal agent, looking through the scope of a rifle. Ravens have been charged with contributing to the decline of the threatened desert tortoise, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is proposing to restore balance by shooting, […]
The Klamath dams by the numbers
Removing the four salmon-blocking dams on the Klamath may prove even cheaper than regulators first thought. The California Energy Commission just re-ran the numbers, comparing the costs of removing the dams versus retrofitting them for fish passage. The results, released March 24, say it would cost PacifiCorp $114 million less to breach the dams than […]
Lewis’ Web
NAME: Randy Lewis VOCATION: Professor of microbiology MARRIED: To his high school sweetheart CURRENT FUNDERS: National Institutes of Health, National Science Foundation, Air Force BREAKTHROUGHS: Sequenced genes for several Rocky Mountain arachnids, including cat face, garden, wolf, jumping, and brown widow spiders. KNOWN FOR: Wearing gray or tan Wranglers. FAVORITE TIME OF DAY: Lunch. “It’s […]
The Gila’s Monster
Cottonwoods support the banks of New Mexico’s Gila River, and sycamores shade endangered Southwestern willow flycatchers and threatened loach minnows. For those who live near it, the Gila – the state’s last free-flowing river – is both a source of water and a font of contention. In 2004, the Arizona Water Settlements Act re-distributed some […]
A wolf’s life
NAME: B7 WEIGHT AT RELEASE: 74 pounds AT DEATH: 97 pounds ESTIMATED WEIGHT IN HIS PRIME: 120 pounds RELEASED: Indian Creek, Idaho, Jan. 20, 1995 ESTIMATED AGE: 13.75-14.75 years old ORIGINAL PACK: The Oldman River, Alberta KNOWN FOR: Being the last of the 29 wolves introduced into the U.S. from Canada in 1995 EMBARRASSING FACTS: […]
Help is on the way for the nation’s forest workers
Working in the woods: It’s never been easy or steady. Ethical contractors say they can’t compete because the Forest Service awards contracts to the lowest bidder. And as the low bidders race to the bottom with offers below the true cost of the work, they’re leaving behind a trail of injured workers, labor violations, and […]
Dear Friends
WINTER BOARD MEETING High Country News board members and staff traveled to Berkeley in late January to do some work, enjoy a little sunshine, and — with help from some old friends — put on a show for our Bay Area readers, present and future. Our idea of a show is, of course, fairly serious: […]
Dear Friends
FOUR MONTHS OF INDENTURED SERVITUDE This winter, Erin Halcomb is trading in her chain saw for an HCN intern’s computer. Erin, a Colorado native, spent the past five winters in Oregon, thinning trees and teaching environmental education. During the summers, she worked as a fire lookout. Erin first came to Oregon in 2001, when she […]
