The Prairie Plains Resource Institute got its start 16 years ago when its founders gathered seeds from prairie grasses near Aurora, Neb., and planted them along a muddy creek in town. By restoring this small 15-acre corridor, “we were making a new history,” says institute manager Bill Whitney. Since then the land trust has sponsored […]
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Living with wildlife
As suburbia swells into wild country throughout the West, conflicts between humans and wildlife increase: Deer graze in gardens and dogs lope into the hills after packs of singing coyotes. Occasionally, a black bear wanders close to a subdivision or a mountain lion lunges for someone’s pet. To keep such inevitable encounters as positive as […]
Still stealing trees
Since the U.S. Forest Service disbanded its special timber-theft task force nearly a year ago, investigations of large-scale timber theft have ground to a halt. That’s the conclusion of Unindicted Co-Conspirator, a report by the nonprofit Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility (PEER) and the Governmental Accountability Project (GAP), a Washington, D.C.-based group that protects government […]
Rocky Mountain Rendezvous: Renew Yourself in the High Country
Conservationists from around the world will gather in Keystone, Colo., July 7-10, to discuss ecosystem management. The 51st annual conference of the Soil and Water Conservation Society, Rocky Mountain Rendezvous: Renew Yourself in the High Country, features speakers Wainwright Verlarde of the Jicarilla Apache Tribe and Forest Service Chief Jack Ward Thomas. Contact Nancy Herselius […]
Biodiversity Protection: Implementation and Reform of the Endangered Species Act
Biological diversity and the Endangered Species Act are hot topics and the themes of the University of Colorado School of Law’s 17th Annual Summer Conference, Biodiversity Protection: Implementation and Reform of the Endangered Species Act, June 9-12, in Boulder, Colo. For more information, contact Katherine Taylor, Natural Resources Law Center, Campus Box 401, Boulder, CO […]
Ten at risk
10 AT RISK The Clarks Fork of the Yellowstone in Montana and Wyoming is one of the nation’s wildest rivers outside Alaska. It’s also the most endangered, according to American Rivers. For three years running, it’s topped the group’s annual report, North America’s Ten Most Endangered and Threatened Rivers. The reason: Plans for the proposed […]
Saved by the hair of a bear
Saved by the hair of a bear This summer when Yellowstone grizzly bears enjoy a nice back-scratch, they could be saving their own hides. Researchers from the Yellowstone Grizzly Foundation will set up triangular corrals of barbed wire at various locations in hopes that the bears will rub against the wire and leave a little […]
Yard Sale
The Uintah Mountain Club in Vernal, Utah, is a small but active group, and it produces one of the best newsletters we get to see. The April issue annouces that members Denise and Jon Hughes will have a “yard sale, literally,” on May 5 at 2554 South 500 East. Bring a shovel and $2 per […]
Burning down the house
Under a new federal policy, fire managers will be allowed to put protection of natural resources ahead of property when they battle blazes on public lands. That policy is the major contribution of a new report issued jointly by the departments of Interior and Agriculture. “In the past people expected their homes to take priority,” […]
Healing a dirty town
Chip Ward, an environmental activist from Grantsville, Utah, started the West Desert Healthy Environment Alliance (HEAL) because citizens noticed abnormally high rates of illness in town. But when the group approached the state Bureau of Epidemiology for information, the agency said that though cancer rates were high, its research showed no discernible pattern among the […]
Pennies on the Railroad
The annual Wild Idaho! conference at Redfish Lake on May 17-19 is called Pennies On The Railroad, in reference to the flattened condition of Idaho environmentalism this year. Panel discussion will focus on the dysfunctional management of the Endangered Species Act and the effects of salvage logging on streams and wildlife. Louisa Willcox of the […]
Wildlife and Trail Recreation
Can mountain bikers and wildlife coexist? Find out at a conference on Wildlife and Trail Recreation: Integrating Demands in the Wild/Urban Interface, hosted by the San Juan National Forest Association, May 10-11 in Durango, Colo. John Mumma, director of the Colorado Division of Wildlife, will give the keynote address. To register, call the San Juan […]
MountainFilm Festival
Telluride, Colo., hosts the 18th annual MountainFilm Festival May 24-27, featuring over 40 films plus seminars and discussions with the film makers. Speakers include Dick Durrance, captain of the first U.S. Olympic skiing team in 1936, and Paul Watson, head of the Sea Shepherd Conservation Society. For more information and tickets, contact MountainFilm at 970/728-4123. […]
Talking Gourds Retreat
Poets and performing artists are invited to join author Dolores LaChapelle for the 1996 Talking Gourds Retreat, an artists’ workshop on “deep ecology,” hosted by the Telluride Writer’s Guild and the Ah Haa School for the Arts. The gathering, held June 28-30 at the Faraway Ranch near Telluride, Colo., includes performances and drumming. Call Judy […]
Rendezvous at Cove-Mallard
The Cove-Mallard logging area in central Idaho, scene of protests and arrests, may attract 500 people for this year’s Earth First! Rendezvous, June 30 through July 7. The event marks the group’s fifth year of campaigning to save trees in the largest roadless area in the lower 48 states. Mike Roselle, one of Earth First!’s […]
Last chance for wetlands
Is the marsh in your neighborhood in danger of being bulldozed for a strip mall? In fast-growing Washington state, where experts estimate 33 to 50 percent of wetlands has been lost, that scenario isn’t farfetched. But the Washington Wetland Network (WETNET), founded by the Seattle Audubon Society, can help. WETNET is composed of more than […]
Retreat
-It is better to conquer yourself than win a thousand battles.” “The Buddha. The Vallecitos Mountain Refuge in New Mexico’s Carson Forest will hold three eight-day meditation retreats from August through September for environmental and social activists. Not for networking or strategizing, these retreats provide silence, meditation training and spiritual renewal for a limited number […]
Stop the flooding
The devastating floods that swamped Oregon early this year could be reduced in the future by restoring former wetlands and woodlands in the Willamette River floodplain. That’s the conclusion of a study commissioned by River Network, a Portland, Oregon-based conservation group. The 60-page study, written primarily by Kevin Coulton of Philip Williams & Associates, an […]
Christensen goes quarterly
In the maiden issue of Great Basin News, editor and publisher Jon Christensen lays out the mission: “We believe the time is right to bring the Great Basin together to understand itself, to relish its own iconoclastic visions, to ponder its own quirky fate. You might consider this a test of that idea.” Christensen, who […]
Managing Natural Resources
Utah State University holds an annual Natural Resources Week symposium, and this year’s get-together April 17-19 focuses on Managing Natural Resources at the Urban Interface: The Challenge of a Changing West. Speakers include Richard Knight of Colorado State University, Luther Propst of the Sonoran Institute in Tucson, and sustainable-business advocate Paul Hawken. Contact Conference and […]
