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High Country News

High Country News

A nonprofit independent magazine of unblinking journalism that shines a light on all of the complexities of the West.

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HCN has covered the lands, wildlife and communities of the Western U.S. for more than 50 years. Get to know the West better by signing up to receive HCN’s on-the-ground reporting and investigations in your inbox.

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Craig Childs

Posted inFebruary 1, 2023: The Reveal

Glen Canyon revealed

by Craig Childs February 1, 2023May 23, 2024

What comes next for Lake Powell?

Posted inMay 1, 2020: Lives on Lockdown

During the pandemic, how do you ethically get outdoors?

by Craig Childs March 24, 2020January 24, 2024

Sheltering responsibly doesn’t mean you have to stay inside.

Posted inArticles

Alone on the Green River

by Craig Childs December 24, 2018January 24, 2024

Writer Craig Childs goes boating in Utah and ponders the costs and payoff of solitude.

Posted inJune 11, 2018: Reclaiming the Klamath

What the Ice Age West predicts about our future

by Craig Childs June 11, 2018January 24, 2024

An American creation story.

Posted inNovember 27, 2017: Profit and Politics

Katie Lee, champion of the Glen Canyon, remembered

by Craig Childs November 18, 2017January 24, 2024

Craig Childs recalls the fearless conservationist who loved an undammed river.

Posted inArticles

Anatomy of a flash flood

by Craig Childs September 28, 2015January 24, 2024

After a series of deaths, a writer considers his own close calls in canyons.

Posted inApril 10, 2015: Strangers in a Strange Land

Children in Alaska’s wild country

by Craig Childs April 13, 2015January 24, 2024

As parents, we watch our kids walk into vast new worlds — like it or not.

Posted inJuly 21, 2014: On the Wild Edge

Motorheads gone wild

by Craig Childs July 21, 2014January 24, 2024

An off-roading conservationist navigates some gnarly landscape on the road to more protection for the Utah desert.

Posted inSeptember 16, 2013: Intimate Geographies

Heart-Shaped River: Craig Childs finds his center in Canyonlands

by Craig Childs September 16, 2013January 24, 2024

“Not all maps are made of paper. The best ones are spooled in memory.”

Posted inSeptember 16, 2013: Intimate Geographies

Craig Childs narrates a Canyonlands adventure

by Craig Childs September 16, 2013January 4, 2024

Images from a month-long trip with friends in 1999.

Posted inMarch 18, 2013: Second annual travel issue

Secret getaways of the National Landscape Conservation System

by Craig Childs March 25, 2013January 24, 2024

Note: This story is part of a special HCN magazine issue devoted to travel in the West. Updated 4/9/13 The only map I have shows the way out of Las Vegas — always a good thing to know. It is crisp and folded-up on the passenger seat and it says to take the eastbound interstate, […]

Posted inOctober 15, 2012: Are you a local?

Vagabond writer Craig Childs on 20,000 years of wanderlust

by Craig Childs October 15, 2012January 24, 2024

Savoonga is the place to be on the Fourth of July. The village is a cluster of roofs on the north side of St. Lawrence Island, a treeless hump of capes and dormant volcanoes rising out of the Bering Sea, battered by Arctic weather. The Native Yup’iks here celebrate the holiday with more gusto than […]

Posted inJune 25, 2012: Special travel issue

Tracking Ice Age people in Oregon

by Craig Childs July 11, 2012January 24, 2024

Wind-whipped rainclouds formed a low ceiling over the oceanic buttes and basins of south-central Oregon. The usually sundrenched sage darkened in the weather as I walked, my hood pulled up against the grass-bending tug of the northwest breeze. The air smelled richer than it usually does on the dry side of the Cascades, the sagebrush […]

Posted inDecember 26, 2011: Perilous Passages

No matter how long you live in your small town, you’ll never be a native

by Craig Childs January 13, 2012January 24, 2024

The woman behind the counter asked where I lived. It turns out she grew up in the very same small town, population 300. She said she had to leave it to find a job, moving to the nearest place with a population nearer 10,000.“So you must be the new trash that’s moving in,” she mused. […]

Posted inApril 18, 2011: Muddy Waters

Explorer’s notebook: Craig Childs on the Lower San Juan

by Craig Childs and Cally Carswell April 18, 2011January 24, 2024

Craig Childs reads from his journal and narrates his paddle down the Lower San Juan River, with photos and video he took on the trip. Additional photography courtesy of andrew davidoff, Alaskan Dude, and kla4067. Licensed under Creative Commons. Canyon treefrog recording copyright Jeff Rice and the Western Soundscape Archive.

Posted inApril 18, 2011: Muddy Waters

Muddy Waters: Silt and the Slow Demise of Glen Canyon Dam

by Craig Childs April 18, 2011January 24, 2024

Updated 5/17/11 The Lower San Juan River courses through a rather forsaken landscape of clay hills and redrock plateaus in southeast Utah. At the end of a long, dusty road, there is a boat ramp at the water’s edge where, at any warm time of year, vans and roof-racked Subarus bake in the sun while […]

Posted inFebruary 21, 2011: Palin, politics, and predator control

Craig Childs walks with desert ghosts on the Navajo Nation

by Craig Childs February 21, 2011January 24, 2024

The dogs are getting closer, barking through junipers about a half-mile away. We douse our small can stove, scoop the rest of breakfast into our mouths, and within two minutes are gone. The day before, we were dropped off on a dirt two-track where we hopped a gate and smuggled ourselves into the wilderness atop […]

Posted inMay 18, 2009: The Rise of the Minotaur

The Rise of the Minotaur

by Craig Childs May 18, 2009January 24, 2024

Bull riding explodes from its Western roots into a modern spectacle

Posted inMarch 2, 2009: How low will it go?

Crown of horns

by Craig Childs March 2, 2009January 24, 2024

An encounter with an injured bull elk, and the meaning of fatherhood.

The skull of a child was left behind after pothunters dug
it from a cliff-dwelling grave in the Sierra Madre. REGAN
CHOI
Posted inApril 28, 2008: Pillaging the Past

Pillaging the Past

by Craig Childs April 28, 2008January 24, 2024

Approximately 90 percent of archaeological sites in the Southwest have been vandalized.

Posts pagination

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