Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

Abnormal amphibians

Have you ever been mucking about in the local swamp and found a one-eyed frog or a five-legged salamander? If you have, you’re not alone. In the last decade, malformed amphibians have turned up in about a dozen states around the country, including Washington, Oregon, California and North Dakota. Herpetologists, the scientists who study amphibians […]

Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

Fleeting forests

For more than two decades, Utah wilderness advocates have been chanting, “5.7! 5.7!” Now, a similar cry is rising in Idaho: “8 million! 8 million!” There are 8 million acres of unprotected roadless land in Idaho’s national forests, according to Idaho’s Vanishing Wild Lands, a report by the Wilderness Society. The number is falling fast. […]

Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

Close those roads

Up Stevens Gulch near Paonia, Colo., some Coloradans want to drive all-terrain vehicles on logging roads the Forest Service once promised it would close off. Now, the agency is offering two more timber sales, which means even more road construction, and then more ATVs. The Colorado Wildlife Federation, Colorado Environmental Coalition and the Western Slope […]

Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

Quincy Library Group

Michael Jackson, co-founder of the Quincy Library Group, known for its controversial plan for northern California forests, will speak in Olathe, Colo., Sept. 5. The Delta/Montrose Public Lands Partnership, a coalition similar to the Quincy Group, is hosting environmental attorney Jackson, who will speak at 2 p.m. at the Olathe Community Center and participate in […]

Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

Trailfest 1997

Hikers and trail activists will converge on Vail, Colo., Sept. 6-7 for a Continental Divide Trail Alliance conference, Trailfest 1997. There will be workshops and outdoor demonstrations about the 3,100-mile trail, which was designated a National Scenic Trail nearly 20 years ago, but which still needs work to connect trekkers from Canada to southern New […]

Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

Montana Environmental Information Center

Members and friends of the Montana Environmental Information Center will rendezvous in the Bitterroot Valley Saturday, Sept. 13, to exchange stories and revitalize. The gathering at the Teller Wildlife Refuge near Corvallis, Mont., will include workshops on transportation, weeds and the proposed gold mine near Lincoln. All are welcome. For information, call 406/443-2520. This article […]

Posted inSeptember 1, 1997: Radioactive waste from Hanford is seeping toward the Columbia

Waterton-Glacier International Writers Workshop

For people interested in writing about nature and conservation, the Waterton-Glacier International Writers Workshop Sept. 25-27 features workshops and speakers such as John Rimel, publisher at Missoula’s Mountain Press, The Nature Conservancy’s Jim Mepham and many Canadian writers, including Candace Savage. There will also be backcountry hikes, lake cruises and trips to area ranches, watersheds […]

Posted inAugust 18, 1997: The West that was, and the West that can be

A Colville Valley homecoming

In the early 1800s, when Europeans first made their way into the Northwest, Washington’s Colville Valley turned into a melting pot. Canadian, Iroquois and Cree trappers joined the Salish, followed by Jesuit missionaries, Hawaiians and Scottish, Irish and French-Canadian fur traders in peaceful settlements along the Columbia River. To explore the blending of cultures in […]

Posted inAugust 18, 1997: The West that was, and the West that can be

Working ranches

The Sonoran Institute, a Tucson, Ariz.-based nonprofit, wants to help ranchers save agricultural lands. Its new illustrated handbook, Preserving Working Ranches in the West, says every four minutes, an acre of working land in Colorado is lost to development. Sonoran Institute spokesman Jon Shepard says ranchers in Arizona’s San Rafael Valley are finding economically viable […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Water Partnerships

As the West’s demands on water increase, so does the need for cooperation among agricultural, city and recreational interests. Collaboration, an idea with increasing popularity in the West, will be addressed July 30-Aug. 1 at the 22nd annual Colorado Water Workshop in Gunnison, Colo. Water Partnerships: Can Competing Users Cooperate to Manage a Vital Resource […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

The Bear Essential

Attention writers: The free magazine, The Bear Essential, is holding its first annual Edward Abbey short fiction contest, deadline Sept. 2. Editor Tom Webb tells us judges want unpublished “quality work with a Western environmental aspect” and that winners receive $100 to $500. For more information, write The Bear Essential, P.O. Box 10342, Portland, OR […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Ecological Consultants for the Public Interest

The nonprofit Ecological Consultants for the Public Interest, founded five months ago by Boulder, Colo., lawyer Randall Weiner, has already made headlines. On behalf of a Denver neighborhood exposed to a hydrogen-chloride spill, the environmental consulting firm sued Vulcan Chemical Co., which had failed to provide adequate warnings and information to residents. The neighborhood has […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument

The government’s planning team for the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument is seeking ideas. The team, which includes the BLM and Utah’s Advisory Council on Science and Technology, wants proposals for papers on the geology, paleontology, biology and archaeology of the new monument. Scientists and planners at a symposium in November will assess the papers and […]

Posted inJuly 7, 1997: While the New West booms, Wyoming mines, drills ... and languishes

No parking in the parks

The public has spoken: America’s national parks are crowded. Consumer Reports asked 40,000 of its subscribers to rate their experiences in America’s national parks. The survey found that along with spectacular scenery, Yellowstone and the Grand Canyon offered headaches over parking, bad roads and too many people. Yellowstone, the nation’s first national park, ranked 27th […]

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