Within the literature of conservation, which in the past has been full of praises to nature’s beauty, Edward Abbey’s full-blown rage is what distinguishes him from others. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/9.25/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Peter Wild
Stewart Udall made conservation national policy
Generations to come will look upon the work of Steward Udall — Secretary of the Interior Department under both Presidents John Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson — as exceptional, a lesson of political survival combined with effective conservation. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/9.23/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Hardin attacks freedom, philanthropy
Garrett Hardin’s confrontations with some of the most basic tenets of Western civilization have piqued racial minorities, sociologists, churchmen, political liberals and conservatives alike. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/9.18/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
John Muir: a cultural hero lost in his mythology
John Muir, the legendary preservationist who wandered the Sierra Nevada, tends to be viewed as a hero dressed in simple guise; a closer look shows him as a complex man, like the rest of us capable of gloom and hesitation. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/9.16/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
The father of Rocky Mountain Park
Enos Abijah Mills, after years living primitively in the shadow of Colorado’s Long’s Peak, had a chance encounter with John Muir that apparently inspired him to work for the preservation of Colorado’s high Rockies. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/9.15/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Mary Hunter Austin defended the deserts with gusto
If anything characterizes Mary Hunter Austin, it is not the disparateness of social reprobation, ill health, or the constant searches of her life, but integration, the harmony of earth and man. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/9.11/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Pinchot ruled the Forest Service back when conservation was king
In the second of a two-part series, author Peter Wild recounts how Gifford Pinchot tramped through the West and schemed with President Teddy Roosevelt, and ultimately became chief of 16 million acres of forest reserves. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/9.9/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Stubborn tree farmer rescues forest
Gifford Pinchot is best remembered as the first head of the U.S. Forest Service, but he was also a man who for 20 years pined for his dead girlfriend, who astounded his own Republican party by appointing women and blacks to office, and who thought John Muir demented. The first in a two-part series about […]
Joseph Wood Krutch, a voice for the deserts
Joseph Wood Krutch probably did more than any other writer to change society’s opinion toward what it had long looked on as undifferentiated wasteland — the deserts of the American Southwest. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/9.6/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Aldo Leopold saw a ‘fierce green fire’ die
Aldo Leopold might have spent his life happily stuck in a romantic age — chewing tobacco with other Forest Service employees, camping in the ponderosa forests and killing the hated wolf — but he possessed two traits that raised him above the average: capacity for perception and the ability to change. Download entire issue to […]
DeVoto, the writer most Utahns can’t forgive
If depression followed Bernard DeVoto as he left the West, it was a mood he eventually harnessed to drive his creativity and become one of the most controversial writers — and one of the most effective conservationists — of the mid-20th century. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/9.1/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Steven Mather rescued languishing national parks
Steven Mather entered the Interior Department before the National Park Service existed, and helped consolidate the national parks under a strong mission of preservation. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/8.24/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
John Wesley Powell explores West
Though John Wesley Powell had enlightened ideas — such as dividing the West into states based on watershed boundaries — most of the reforms he proposed weren’t accepted during his lifetime. The second in a two-part series by Peter Wild. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/8.18/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
John Wesley Powell tests El Dorado
John Wesley Powell told the hard truth about the West, but his advice for a more considerate approach to westward expansion was widely scorned and largely rejected. The first in a two-part series by Peter Wild. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/8.17/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Doggedly working to save Escudilla Mountain
Buzz and Mary Anne Youens anticipated a quiet life when they built a cabin in Arizona’s isolated White Mountains in the early 1970s, but a nearby timber sale turned them into activists. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/8.10/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Success formula: don’t waste time losing
Priscilla Robinson, the director of the Southwest Environmental Service, says that the key to lobbying is to recognize that the political person is a whole person and to give him a chance. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/8.8/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
John McComb: a natural for the job
People envy John McComb, Southwest Representative of the Sierra Club, because they think he gets paid to hike through the deserts and mountains surrounding Tuscon, Arizona. But he works 70-80 hours per week, believing that dedication and patience are two essential qualities for his profession. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/8.3/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
Grand Canyon hike changed his life
Ten years after Juel Rodack and his wife took an awe-inspiring hike into the Grand Canyon, only to emerge and learn of plans for the Marble and Bridge Canyon Dams, the group they formed in response, Arizonans for Water Without Waste, is one of the most influential environmental groups in the Southwest. Download entire issue […]
Escudilla battle eco-tactics explored
An update on Arizona conservationists’ fight to save the state’s third highest peak, Escudilla Mountain, from logging, with comments from local citizen activists on their tactics. Download entire issue to view this article: http://country-survey-collabs.info/issues/7.11/download-entire-issue%3C/p%3E
