In this issue we take a deep look at hunting and its meaning for the West. We dive into a Washington-Canada cross-border hunt that also served as strategic attempt to get Canada to recognize a tribe it considers ‘extinct.’ In Alaska, a hunter pursues a mountain goat but gets another adventure entirely. We take a look at cash-strapped states that sell high-priced trophy tags and allow sportsmen to hunt where, when and what they want – to the dismay of some. In Wyoming, a hunting family faces the prospect of chronic wasting disease on their kill. We also check in on the Klamath River, which now has the legal rights of personhood in Yurok tribal court. And we look into a new study that finds antibiotic-resistant bacteria proliferates in coastal waterways.

Moonlight reflects across the still waters of the Columbia River where Kettle Falls once roared. It was the most important fishing location for the tribes of the upper Columbia before the construction of Grand Coulee Dam erased it. Credit: Joe Whittle for High Country News

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Snake River dams

Thanks for this important article on the shifting politics of the movement to breach the four Snake River dams in southeast Washington (“Courts can’t keep salmon from the edge of extinction,” HCN, 10/14/19). It needs to be added, however, that the court-mandated National Environmental Policy Act, or NEPA, review, a draft of which is expected…

Treat all firefighters equally

Editor’s note: Pablo Aguirre received this letter from his brother, Francisco X. Aguirre, a participant in Arizona’s Inmate Wildfire Program, who asked him to share it with High Country News. This letter has been edited for length and clarity. Thank you for highlighting the heroics and challenges of imprisoned Arizona wildland firefighter crews in your…