Posted inApril 14, 1997: Beauty and the Beast

Desert Conference

An annual rite of spring, the 19th Desert Conference at Oregon’s Malheur Field Station, April 24-27, attracts people from around the country for field trips, networking, a desert rat poetry festival and lots of informative talks. Topics will cover the making of Utah’s Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument, cows and their intrusions into streams and the […]

Posted inMarch 17, 1997: Working the Watershed

Cut the fat out

Cut environmentally damaging subsidies and save $36 billion doing it, urges a report targeting 57 wasteful federal programs. The third annual Green Scissors describes how each program costs both taxpayers and the environment. Ending below-cost timber sales, the report says, could save $1 billion over five years. Twenty-five taxpayer and nonprofit groups contributed to the […]

Posted inMarch 17, 1997: Working the Watershed

Uproar over Owyhee

It’s been 15 years since the Bureau of Land Management wrote a management plan for the 1.3 million-acre Owyhee Resource Area in southwest Idaho, and the agency’s attempt to revise it isn’t sitting well with ranchers and off-road vehicle enthusiasts. BLM officials were caught off guard in November when several hundred critics showed up at […]

Posted inMarch 17, 1997: Working the Watershed

National Conference on Habitat Conservation

Habitat Conservation Plans, agreements implementing the Endangered Species Act on non-federal land, are almost always described as “win-win” situations. But are they truly conserving habitat? How are the species themselves faring? Come find out at the National Wildlife Federation’s first-ever National Conference on Habitat Conservation Plans, May 17 and 18, at Washington, D.C.” s Georgetown […]

Posted inMarch 17, 1997: Working the Watershed

Carbon Monoxide Forecasting for Colorado Springs: 1996-2020

Local planners in Colorado Springs have underestimated both population growth and carbon monoxide pollution so as not to hinder the city’s rapid growth, warns physicist Val Veirs. The director of environmental science at Colorado College, Veirs predicts the sprawling city will violate the federal Clean Air Act within 15 years. His detailed report, Carbon Monoxide […]

Posted inMarch 17, 1997: Working the Watershed

No nagging or preaching here

Stuff: The Secret Lives of Everyday Things John C. Ryan and Alan Thein Durning, Northwest Environment Watch, 1997. 86 pages, illus. $9.95 paperback. When was the last time you heard an environmentalist complain that we’re recycling too much? No street-corner shouter or mealymouthed apologist, John Ryan is the sober, credentialed research director of Seattle-based Northwest […]

Posted inMarch 3, 1997: Hunters close ranks, and minds

Outdoor writer aims to change his culture

The Insightful Sportsman: Thoughts on Fish, Wildlife and What Ails the Earth, by Ted Williams. Camden, Maine: Down East Books, 1996. 299 pages, $14.95 trade paper. “The hard thing about writing real conservation pieces is not finding material, but finding editors who dare to publish it consistently,” says Ted (Edward French) Williams in his preface […]

Posted inMarch 3, 1997: Hunters close ranks, and minds

Wanted alive

Bewildered by declining numbers of boreal toads, the Colorado Division of Wildlife is hoping the “help wanteds’ will yield some clues. The agency is displaying colorful posters at trailheads and outdoor equipment stores, describing the small toads and asking for the public’s help in finding them. Since the boreal toad is uniquely adapted to the […]

Posted inMarch 3, 1997: Hunters close ranks, and minds

Caretakers wanted

Taking care of other people’s property for a living is taking off, says Gary Dunn, publisher of Washington state’s eight-page newsletter, The Caretaker Gazette. The bimonthly newsletter, first printed in 1983, lists some 90 caretaking opportunities in the United States and nine foreign counties. Interest is equal on either side of the equation, Dunn says: […]

Posted inMarch 3, 1997: Hunters close ranks, and minds

An unabashed green’s snapshot of Northwest forest activism

Tree Huggers: Victory, Defeat, and Renewal in the Northwest Ancient Forest Campaign Kathie Durbin. Seattle, Washington: The Mountaineers Books, 1996. 303 pages, illus.; foreword by Charles Wilkinson. $24.95 hardcover. In 1993, Northwest environmentalists were fractured over President Clinton’s Northwest forest plan. While the plan seemed to save millions of acres of old-growth forests, Clinton wanted […]

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