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HERE, WE CAN REALLY MAKE A DIFFERENCE

Don’t Buy Fool’s Gold
Seventy percent of Alaskans, including many native communities, oppose destructions of natures salmon factory, Bristol Bay, by Pebble Mine, which will be one of the largest, if not the largest, gold mine in the world. Photo courtesy of the Renewable Resources Coalition.

During a bout of insomnia last night, I watched CNBC to see if any of the talking financial heads thought my retirement funds might stop disappearing, and there it was. Perhaps the biggest environmental, wildlife habitat and water quality problem we don't like to discuss. Yes, it's touchy, but that has never stopped me, so why start now.

We all need to stop buying fool's gold. 

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LET'S GET OUR WORDS STRAIGHT

Wilderness is Multiple Use
A remote lake in the Absaroka-Beartoth Wilderness. Photo by Bill Schneider.

Have you ever heard somebody say they prefer "multiple use" over Wilderness? I have what seems like a thousand times, and every time I hear it, I say, silently, to myself, wrong!

So, it seems like a good time to say it out loud because the words, "multiple use" have been lost in the Wilderness. 

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2008 COMMENTS WORTH REPEATING III

The Wilderness Drought and How the Green Group Feud Keeps it Alive

Over the past two years, I've been periodically posting selections of my favorite comments from readers of my columns and articles. I plan to continue doing this, but differently. Instead of listing comments chronologically, I've edited them into general subject areas. In this case, here are a few insightful comments that came in over the past few months on several articles on the wilderness drought and the green group feud that keeps it alive and if not endless. Enjoy.

Editor's Note: For a complete list of Comments Worth Repeating, click here.
 

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NewWest.Net Conferences

Designing the New West

The Designing the New West: Architecture and Landscape in the Mountain West Conference is wrapping up here in Bozeman at the historic Gallatin Gateway Inn. Put on by NewWest.Net and sponsored by the Sonoran Institute, the conference brought together designers from all over the country to explore innovative design ideas, identify best practices, and better understand how to bridge the gap between good architectural theory and sometimes-messy building practices in the fastest growing region in the nation.

A mix of presentations and engaging panel discussions tackled pressing Western issues like sustainable development, land design and the special challenges of urban, rural and resort design, historic preservation and affordable housing.

Click on the photo or here for a slideshow of the days' events. Click "more" for a recap of the conference. 

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IS THIS SO MUCH TO ASK?

More Fly-Fishing-Only Rivers, Please

Before all the non-flycasters get excited about the headline, I should say that I like all kinds of fishing, not just fly fishing, a problem that has made my life a constant struggle against poverty. In fact, I have more spinning and baitcasing rods than fly rods, and probably use them more, too.

Nonetheless, today, I'm feeling sorry for those anglers who only use fly rods. I think fisheries managers should throw them a bone by designating a few stretches of a few rivers as fly-fishing-only--especially a few rivers with steelhead in them. 

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WHY SOME AREN'T WORTH REPEATING

Comments Worth Repeating, 2008, II

This is another of what's becoming a long series of posts highlighting insightful comments by the readers of NewWest.Net. This time, though, before reading them, here's a comment of my own, a comment on comments.

I welcome any comment, even those critical of me or NewWest.Net, but some comments are definitely more effective than others.

To read them all, click on the Comments Worth Repeating Chronology 

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