Looking out on the rain now washing away last weekend’s snow here in Spokane, Washington, I envy the folks at High Country News’ home base in Colorado, where a healthy dose of white stuff is flying around the Rocky Mountains (though not, as of press time, in Paonia). The people of the Four Corners are particularly grateful, given the persistent drought that has gripped the region lately.

Frequent HCN contributor (and former editorial fellow) Ben Goldfarb’s book Eager: The Surprising, Secret Life of Beavers and Why They Matter made The Washington Post’s list of “50 notable works of nonfiction in 2018.” An excerpt from the book, “How beavers make the desert bloom,” appeared earlier this year in the magazine (HCN, 9/3/18). In its one-sentence description of Eager, The Washington Post asks: “Can those paddle-tailed, buck-toothed dam builders offer humans some help in restoring our ailing environment?” We here at HCN know that Ben’s answer is a resounding yes. Congratulations, Ben, on a “dam” fine book!
Meanwhile, an article from former editorial fellow Lyndsey Gilpin appeared in the Columbia Journalism Review. In “What I’ve learned in two years trying to shift narratives about the South,” Lyndsey describes how she tries to tell nuanced stories about the region in her upstart publication, Southerly.
Ted Wood, who photographed oil and gas development — and the people affected by it — for our story, “When Your Neighborhood Goes Boom,” (HCN, 10/29/18) stopped in at the Paonia office just before Thanksgiving. Ted, who says the story drew a lot of attention on Colorado’s Front Range, was passing through Paonia with Amanda Prentiss and a crazy Boston terrier named Tilly, on a road trip that included Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Basalt, Colorado.
A group of 15 people from the Montrose Rec Center in nearby Montrose, Colorado, spent well over an hour touring the Paonia office Nov. 15, asking probing and intelligent questions, such as, “What kind of mistakes do you especially watch out for in fact-checking?” Copy editor Diane Sylvain joked about always double-checking names and definitions, specifically noting the correct explanation of NEPA. Guess what: In “Sagebrush Rebel appointed to Interior Department” (HCN, 11/26/18), we failed to do just that. The federal environmental law NEPA is the National Environmental Policy Act, not the National Environmental Protection Act. We regret the error, and not for the first time.
This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the headline A most welcome winter.

