Posted inDecember 24, 2012: The new Wild, Wild West

A sampler of U.S. environmentalists working in British Columbia

Mitch Friedman, head of Conservation Northwest, a Washington-based group whose advocacy reaches into British Columbia, has an unusual way of estimating the strength of the environmental movement: by the number of “activists per square mile.” In B.C., he says, that number is “very low — there are whole mountain ranges without a single citizen watchdog, […]

Posted inDecember 12, 2011: Out on a limb

The environmentalists’ whitebark pine air force

In the summer of 2009, the Natural Resources Defense Council and EcoFlight conducted a comprehensive aerial survey to assess the damage mountain pine beetles were causing in whitebark pine forests in the Yellowstone National Park region. They devised a Landscape Assessment System — a low-flying airplane using “geo-tagged oblique aerial photography to assess the cumulative […]

Posted inDecember 10, 2012: The Evolution of Wildlife Tech

A sampler of wildlife tech

PingersRadio transmitters, sometimes called “pingers,” are a classic monitoring method. Powered by batteries, they transmit very high frequency signals that are picked up by antennas or satellites. Until recently, the batteries’ weight and size couldn’t be reduced enough to use transmitters on small animals and fish. But now, says Doug Bonham, a freelance circuit-board designer […]

Posted inGoat

HCN’s take on Western elections

(Updated November 8) Political trends established over the last several years, or decades, in the American West mostly continued in yesterday’s elections — providing more evidence that our region is not coherent politically, but instead is really two opposing sub-regions. Democrats held or even gained ground in the coastal states (California, Oregon and Washington) as […]

Posted inOctober 29, 2012: Red State Rising

Voters shape energy policy by choosing utility regulators

Cam Cooper raises pedigree Angus cattle along the Big Hole River, a beautiful, rural region of southwest Montana. Like most ranchers, her politics are “quite conservative,” she says. “I generally vote Republican.” But this November, she’ll vote for at least one Democrat: John Vincent, an ally in Cooper’s battle against a new transmission line that […]

Posted inGoat

Glimpses of moderation this election season

Like a lot of you, I’m feeling depressed in the runup to the November 6 elections. The relentless attack ads demonizing every candidate around the West, and our further fragmentation into hostile camps — six political parties qualified for Wyoming’s ballot alone, a new record for that state, for instance — I’m beginning to think […]

Posted inArticles

In Montana, ‘Dr. Trout’ battles the planet’s most dangerous diseases

In his day job, Marshall Bloom is the associate director for scientific management at the Rocky Mountain Laboratories, a cutting-edge federal research campus in an unlikely place: Hamilton, Mont., a town of about 4,500 in the beautiful Bitterroot Valley. Nearly 500 workers in dozens of lab buildings are dedicated to studying “emerging infectious diseases” like […]

Posted inSeptember 3, 2012: Identity Politics, Montana Style

Rehberg and Tester: Policy differences

Jon Tester, a conservative Democrat: Sen. Tester sponsored the controversial measure that took Northern Rockies wolves off the endangered species list in 2011 — a move praised by ranchers and elk hunters. It triggered disagreements among environmentalists. (Some liked it and some condemned it.) He also: • Sponsored a bill that guaranteed 678,000 acres of […]

Posted inJuly 23, 2012: The Hardest Climb

Coal-export schemes ignite unusual opposition, from Wyoming to India

On India’s sweltering Western coast, Bharat Patel heads a group of traditional fishermen called Machimar Adhikar Sangharsh Samiti, which loosely translates as the Association for the Struggle for Fishworkers’ Rights. Meanwhile, up in the arid breaks of southeast Montana, Mark Fix wants to preserve the rural character of his 9,700-acre ranch along the Tongue River, […]

Posted inApril 30, 2012: A Mexican rancher struggles to shift from cattle to conservation

How conservation works south of the border

Note: This is an expanded version of a sidebar published in the High Country News magazine, accompanying a main story profiling Sonoran rancher Carlos Robles Elías and an editor’s note providing more perspective. The first nine items here correspond to numbered locations on the sidebar map of Northwest Mexico; below those nine, there’s a list […]

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