Seven “Saving the Wilds” Stories for Oregon Wild
What better way to end 2024 than with compiled stories of often unheralded women and men saving…
What better way to end 2024 than with compiled stories of often unheralded women and men saving…
“Our responsibility as life tenants is to make certain that there are wilderness values to honor after…
When facing dark times, it can help to look to the past and take heart from the…
“Without the call there is no echo.” Ed Yong, Immense World Whirling in moonlight and stars, spotted…
“I believe our kinship with all life is at stake. Unless enough of us spend time in…
Puckery sweet huckleberries lined the upper Badger Creek trail within easy reach. Ancient western red cedars flared branches like bird wings. Noble firs, Douglas-firs, and silver firs rose columnar and elegant among Engelmann spruce, western white pine, and mountain and western hemlocks. A Pacific wren dueted with a silvery stream. Badger Creek Wilderness, at 29,000 acres, protects many centuries-old trees and ecosystems of breathtaking diversity.
“The place to observe nature is where you are.”– John Burroughs, Signs and Seasons Peregrination is my…
On July 17th, I had the pleasure of giving a reading at the historic Wallowa Lake Lodge,…
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