In Nevada, Walker Lake is slowly disappearing, as local farmers, an Indian tribe and conservationists battle over the rights to the water that once filled the lake.


Pillar of Sand

Yes, we are in the post-industrial age, and the production of autos, houses, airliners and other “goods’ can be taken for granted. But Sandra Postel in Pillar of Sand warns that there is no such thing as a “post-agricultural age.” Because irrigated agriculture provides 40 percent of the globe’s food today, and because in the…

They’re both right!

Dear HCN, I find the exchanges between Tom Power and Ed Marston perplexing (HCN, 8/2/99). They are both right! My colleagues and I have surveyed over 7,000 randomly selected persons in the West over the last 10 years. In all these surveys people consistently say they either moved to or live in the West for…

Fur and loafing

Cartoonist Phil Frank, creator of the San Francisco Chronicle’s cartoon strip, “Farley,” has devoted a lot of ink since 1986 to the political travails of Yosemite National Park in California. This is a park so loved – and so roaded – it is visited by more than 3 million people each year. In hilarious fashion,…

After the ranchers go, sprawl comes

Dear HCN, Your front page story on Jon Marvel points to the fact that you seem to have no clear vision of how to save the West from inappropriate development and urban sprawl (HCN, 8/2/99). I got the same feeling when I read your feature story on Wyoming a while back. You and your bright,…

Medicine Bow National Forest

In Wyoming, the Friends of the Bow, Biodiversity Associates and the Snowy Range Group Sierra Club are leading a hike to unprotected wilderness in the Medicine Bow National Forest on Sept. 18. To join this outing in the Rock Creek roadless area near Arlington, Wyo., call 307/742-7978. This article appeared in the print edition of…

Stand in the place where you live

Dear HCN, Dan Flores’ essay on ranchettes in Montana’s Bitterroot Valley interested me, since I am a fellow Bitterrooter who makes a living working for the very ranchetteers he discussed (HCN, 5/10/99). I do tree planting, ecological restoration and native landscaping for them, and so I’ve done much brainstorming on what makes a “good ranchette.”…

Indian Land Consolidation Symposium

-Taking a Stand on Indian Land” is the motto for this year’s Indian Land Consolidation Symposium, sponsored by The Indian Land Working Group. Workshops will focus on the group’s legislation aimed at consolidating ownership of land on Indian reservations, and the newly introduced tribal computer database called TAAMS. The symposium will be held in Palm…

Toilet water and other woes

Dear HCN, I used to live in the subdivision below Susan Ewing’s in Montana’s Gallatin Valley (HCN, 5/10/99). As a geologist with experience in groundwater consulting, I became involved in our neighborhood’s concerns about the impacts on our wells of yet another proposed subdivision in the area. While Montana’s intermontane valleys host abundant groundwater supplies…

The Northwest Environmental Defense Center

The Northwest Environmental Defense Center holds its annual retreat on the Oregon coast at Westwind YMCA, Sept. 24-26. Keynote speaker is Kieran Suckling, executive director of the Center for Biological Diversity. For more than 25 years, the center has been a student conservation law organization, located at the Northwestern School of Law at Lewis &…

MINExpo International 2000

MINExpo INTERNATIONAL 2000 is billed as the largest mining exposition in the Western Hemisphere. It happens in Las Vegas, Nev., Oct. 9-12. For details, contact Kim Boscia, MINExpo coordinator, 1130 17th St. NW, Washington, DC 20036 (202/463-9799); e-mail: kboscia@nma.org or check out www.minexpo.com. This article appeared in the print edition of the magazine with the…

Wilderness Act Handbook

A 68-page handbook helps decipher the nuances of the 1964 Wilderness Act. The Wilderness Act Handbook, published by the Wilderness Society, includes the entire language of the act with a section-by-section interpretation of the legalese. For a revised copy, send $5 to the Wilderness Society, 900 17th St. NW, Washington, DC 20006 (202/833-2300), or buy…

Continental Divide Trail

People who like to work hard in high places are needed to help maintain the Continental Divide Trail. Winding for 3,100 miles from Montana to New Mexico, the trail traces the rugged backbone of the Rocky Mountains. Volunteers, who will monitor and maintain 3- to 25-mile segments, can contact the Continental Divide Trail Alliance, P.O.…

Twenty-five Years of Self-Determination and Economic Development

Native American nation-building is the topic of a Tucson, Ariz., conference, Twenty-five Years of Self-Determination and Economic Development: What Have We Learned? The Nov. 11-13 conference will look at problems Indian communities confront, including joblessness, touchy tribal-state-federal relationships, and how to manage natural resources. Contact the Udall Center for Studies in Public Policy, the University…

1999 Congress on Recreation and Resource Capacity

The 1999 Congress on Recreation and Resource Capacity is bringing the public and private sectors together to discuss the future of recreation on the nation’s public lands. The congress will meet Nov. 29-Dec. 2 in Aspen, Colo. Sponsors include the Bureau of Land Management, Blue Ribbon Coalition and National Parks and Conservation Association. For details,…

The Wayward West

Endangered chinook salmon have put the brakes on a new traffic light at a dangerous intersection in Puyallup, Wash. Because the light will be funded with federal money, the city must complete a biological assessment to determine if construction will harm salmon or other wildlife. Nearby resident Pam Bott told AP a two-month delay is…

New Millennium First People’s World’s Fair and Pow Wow

Organizers of the “New Millennium First People’s World’s Fair and Pow Wow” say representatives of more than 100 tribal nations will be present to help bring in the year 2000. It all happens at Rillito Raceway Park in Tucson, Ariz., Dec. 31-Jan. 9. For details, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to American Indians World Fair,…

Wolves and cows don’t mix

A pack of endangered Mexican wolves that developed a taste for beef headed back to captivity in early August. The Arizona Game and Fish Department captured seven wolves from the Pipestem Pack after they attacked cattle north of Clifton, Ariz. Three Pipestem pups have since died of parvovirus, a canine disease they apparently picked up…

The Economic Benefits of Parks and Open Space

The title of a report from the Trust for Public Land says it all: The Economic Benefits of Parks and Open Space: How Land Conservation Helps Communities Grow Smart and Protect the Bottom Line. As cities create parks, city economies usually improve and property values go up, say report authors Steve Lerner and William Poole.…

Quincy experiment to begin

The Quincy Library Group claimed a hard-fought victory last month after the U.S. Forest Service doubled logging on three California forests while protecting habitat for the northern spotted owl. After years of bitter battles against environmentalists, attorney and group co-founder and Michael Jackson can’t help gloating. “This is absolute complete vindication,” he says. The Forest…

Enough said

Dear HCN, Now that you have turned the bulk of an issue over to defending the prairie dog, and presumably you have it out of your system (HCN, 8/16/99), as a subscriber I can only hope that you will get back to the business of journalism and work on issues of true significance to the…

Lyons is unfair to Idaho

Dear HCN, Stephen Lyons’ article on the Aryan marchers in Coeur d’Alene, Idaho, was terribly misleading and distorted against Idaho (HCN, 8/16/99). When I moved to this area in 1977, I had no idea about the Aryans. It wasn’t long before I learned of them firsthand. We would all like Butler and his group to…

The different faces of bigotry

Dear HCN, Regarding Stephen Lyon’s essay “An ugly message marches down an Idaho street” (HCN, 8/16/99): The rise to power of the Nazi Party in 1933 was both surprising and rapid. Few people then anticipated the process or magnitude of events to come. Just shortly before, Germany had been a refuge from the wave of…

Lyons is a stereotyper

Dear HCN, Steve Lyons rips on the Aryan Nations as a pack of dimwits (HCN, 8/16/99). Fine, I’m with him there, but it seems Lyons is so blinded by his own politically correct views that he didn’t catch himself perpetrating yet more stereotypes. As an expatriate Montanan, I resented the “Ford-with-Montana-plates’ sound bite. Since when…

Heard around the West

Two public officials hit the road recently. One had a great time, while the other groused. The fun was had by Utah Gov. Mike Leavitt, who made his first trip ever to Yellowstone National Park. “Excitedly,” says the Salt Lake Tribune, Leavitt reported to the Western Governors’ Association that he had “walked right up to…

Troubled Oasis

Note: two sidebar articles accompany this feature story: “Speaking from experience” and “Agency cheerleader.” HAWTHORNE, Nev. – At sunset, Walker Lake glows from the floor of this desert valley, its silver-smooth surface reflecting the colors of the open Nevada sky. On the lake’s western shore, Mount Grant in the craggy Wassuk Range peaks at more…

Isn’t it about time for a New West celebration?

This summer, every town big enough to boast a high school, and more than a few that have trouble keeping a post office in business, hosted a festival. Even though these small-town celebrations go by different names – Wild West Days, Gold Rush Days, Pioneer Weekend, Founders’ Day, Old West Festival – they hold much…

Speaking from experience

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. Gary Nelson has been the Canoe Tour Director for the Mono Lake Committee for nearly 11 years. “We take people out here on Mono Lake and say, ‘Here are the shrimp, here are the flies, here are the birds who eat the shrimp and…

Save the Earth! (Drop dead)

I have a plan to get us out of this environmental mess we’re in. But first I’ll need some volunteers. I’m looking for anyone who thinks there are too many of us, that our consumptive tendencies are squeezing the life out of this planet and that our very presence is a cancer. Environmentalists and zero…

Agency cheerleader

Note: This article is a sidebar to this issue’s feature story. John Singlaub is the manager of the Carson City, Nev., office of the BLM. During his 20 years with the agency, he’s worked in four states at every level of the organization, and he’s known as a man of action. In Colorado, when the…

Dear Friends

Rendezvous The mountain men had their rendezvous; those who care about the West’s public lands have their High Country News potluck. If you have been to one, you know that while the food is good, the conversation is better. And no one will make a speech or ask you for money. The next potluck will…

Tempers flare over winter plan

Gardiner, Mont., is a sleepy town in the winter. Yellowstone National Park’s northern gateway community virtually closes down when the park’s roads do. The local fly shop rents cross-country skis, and a handful of cafés serve burgers for lunch. A few sight-seers drive into the park at dawn and dusk in search of the park’s…

Ranch is a squirrel sanctuary

When cattleman Frank Anderson settled into a remote house in rural Idaho, ground squirrels were the furthest thing from his mind. But once the critters emerged from hibernation, he could hardly ignore them as they devoured the chow he left outside for his dogs. “The bloody things were eating more dog food than the dogs,”…

Bear spray manufacturers get a hit of reality

MISSOULA, Mont. – One summer night in 1977, Bill Pounds awoke to chewing and grunting sounds outside his tent. The disabled Vietnam vet had set up camp near Hungry Horse Reservoir in northwestern Montana. “Coming from Arkansas, I thought it was a wild hog,” he says. Then he remembered that there are no wild hogs…

A spray can is no substitute for smarts

Note: in the print edition of this issue, this article appears as a sidebar to another news article, “Bear spray manufacturers get a hit of reality.” Even if armed with an effective bear spray, backcountry users should not let down their guard, says Gary Moses, bear specialist at Glacier National Park. Grizzly attacks are infrequent,…