Entries Tagged as 'Top Stories'
Paul Greenberg of The New York Times explores the global decline of the “totemic” bluefin tuna, stemming from commercial overfishing, global sushi “appetites outstripping supply,” and a patchwork of ineffectual “high seas” multinational agreements responsible for maintaining viability of the species.
“Tuna then are both a real thing and a metaphor. Literally they are one of the last big public supplies of wild fish left in the world. Metaphorically they are the terminus of an idea: that the ocean is an endless resource where new fish can always be found. In the years to come we can treat tuna as a mile marker to zoom past on our way toward annihilating the wild ocean or as a stop sign that compels us to turn back and radically reconsider.”
Katie Siber of The New York Times explores the paddling opportunities on the Colorado River above Lee’s Ferry (“sandwiched between Lake Powell and the Grand Canyon” in northern Arizona), where river permits are much easier to come by, the water is flatter, and the couple-day kayaking legs are perfect for beginners.
“One of the remarkable things about the Colorado is that no matter how many people have traveled it and no matter how many have tried to plunder it, from railroad builders to miners and even Hollywood movie crews (parts of “The Greatest Story Ever Told,” “Broken Arrow” and “Charlie’s Angels: Full Throttle” were filmed here), it retains a palpable sense of wildness.
River trips on peaceful stretches like this invite laziness and lingering, so the next morning we lounged about and sipped coffee, did some cursory yoga and inspected the tracks of ringtails and centipedes circling our tents and the bushes.”
Fly fishing gutter balls: writer Allen Morris Jones (Last Year’s River) of Big Sky Journal considers the consequences of losing a healthy Shields River brown trout in his short essay The Lost Fish.
“I sling out my first cast, dropping an ugly rubber leg down into the hole. Presented well, the water gives up nothing. I follow the line with my rod, then retrieve. Roll cast back up to the shallow riffle and watch the line float closer to the bank, smooth and slow. Uninterrupted. It’s dusk, no breeze, the stars are aligned. How could I not catch a fish?”
From Hawaii and Baja to Tasmania and Western Australia to Easter Island and South Africa, Californian surfers Rusty and Greg Long have made a life out chasing the world’s biggest waves. Kitt Doucette of Men’s Journal spends a few days traveling, surfing, and trying to understand what makes these “big-wave hell men” tick.
“Their styles on the water reflect their personalities, with Greg surfing aggressively and competitively, riding deep in the tube and cutting waves to pieces with powerful carves, and Rusty surfing patiently, smoothly flowing between elegant, relaxed turns. Neither brother, though, is about to let the pursuit of a trophy or title get in the way of their good time. ‘Contests are an important part of big-wave surfing,’ Greg says, ‘but the greatest joy for me comes from leaving the first set of footprints on an isolated beach, paddling out into unknown waters, and being the first to ride a wave somewhere.’”
Bay Area sailor, banking heir, and entrepreneur David de Rothschild has built a 60-foot catamaran largely from recycled plastic bottles. In March he decided to sail this environmentally friendly vessel (the Plastiki) across the Pacific to Australia, with the hope of getting people to start thinking more sensibly and critically about our consumptive waste and its long-term impact on the earth and oceans.
Anchored in Christmas Island after 38 continuous days at sea, Jo Royle, the Plastiki’s 30-year-old captain, is interviewed by Sindya Bhanoo of The New York Times about battling the “power of your mind” while at sea, being a woman captain on a boat full of men, and the unique challenges of piloting this vessel:
“The fact that 70 percent of the Plastiki’s buoyancy is created by over 12,000 reclaimed plastic bottles, which lie directly against the flow of water, makes the boat slow and very tricky to maneuver. There were times when you could have been led to believe that we were in fact rowing across the Pacific and not sailing.”
“The land of little rain”: Eastern California’s Owens Valley is known for rugged country and history, longstanding water wars, and diverse rock climbing opportunities. Vanessa Gregory of The New York Times and her husband spend a few days camping, hiking, and climbing the Alabama Hills near Bishop.
“With a final, clumsy motion, I clipped the rope that was tied to my harness into two carabiners at the route’s end. Now totally safe, I was able to relax, lean back from the anchor and appreciate the surrounding Owens River Gorge. I looked south to the river, shaded by cottonwood trees, coursing down between 300-foot-high walls of volcanic tuff.”
The passing in April of the 100-year-old man whose dams plugged up the Colorado and other majestic western rivers suddenly got plenty of attention this week, from sources as different in scope as the High Country News and the Wall Street Journal.
In The New York Times, Douglas Martin quotes Marc Reisner, who in his 1986 book Cadillac Desert: The American West and its Disappearing Water said Mr. Dominy cultivated Congress “as if he were tending prize-winning orchids.”
Here’s Dominy in an interview with Outside magazine in 1999, talking about the push to build Glen Canyon Dam: “‘Of course we covered up some delightful country: country that was inaccessible, country that would never be visited by very many people, which we turned into one of the most beautiful lakes in the world.’”
But our favorite coverage of Dominy’s legacy came yesterday from NPR’s Elizabeth Arnold, whose three-minute podcast includes the surprising reminder that the Sierra Club supported Glen Canyon in return for the bureau passing up on other damming projects.
Noted Croatian-American writer Josip Novakovich (April Fool’s Day, Salvation and Other Disasters, and Infidelities: Stories of War and Lust) explores his Hungarian lineage in the latest issue of Nowhere: Travel Stories.
“My great-grandfather died as a lumberjack near Pecs when my grandfather was only three years old. A tree crushed him. Should that count as Hungarian roots? And I was born during the Soviet crushing of the Hungarian uprising. The thing that intrigued me about Hungary, though, was the Soviet enigmatic and anti-charismatic presence. “
With a “shy smile and almond eyes that peek out from behind a parted curtain of wavy brown hair” Jordan Romero–a teenage climber from Big Bear Lake, California–wants to become the youngest person to ever climb Mount Everest.
“With more and more of his peers playing video games, fighting obesity, and contracting diabetes, he would serve as a powerful counterexample. He wants to inspire American kids to climb their own mountains. Or at least to go outside,” writes Bruce Barcott of Outside Magazine.
“Does the kid really want to do it, or is his hard-driving father taking his own love of adventure (and perhaps his ego) to a dangerous extreme? ‘Jordan’s dad is a little wacky, a little…intense,’ says one climber who’s worked with the family.”
Jeff Erickson of Big Sky Journal drops into Wyoming’s Tri-Basin Divide to explore the headwaters of the Greys River (Snake River cutthroats), LaBarge Creek (Colorado River cutthroats), and the Smiths Fork River (Bonneville cutthroats) in search of three distinct types of native cutthroat trout.
“Like the other Tri-Basin cutthroats, Greys’ denizens tend to be opportunistic feeders, not hatch-specific Einsteins. Cutts are suckers for attractor dry patterns — bring Turck’s Tarantulas, Chernobyl Ants, Madame Xs, Humpies, Wulffs, Renegades, Stimulators, and Trudes and you’ll likely be off to the races. These fish don’t mind looking up for their next meal.”