High Country News

A walk through a question

AT FIRST GLANCE, everything in the Quinault rainforest on that early July day was exactly as it should be: mild and wet, 60 degrees, with a layer of pale gray clouds forming a high ceiling above the emerald forest. Droplets of last night’s rain beaded on the leaves, sparkling like jewels.

My friend Squash and her girlfriend, Amanda, who were visiting from San Francisco, gaped at the towering Sitka spruces and shoulder-high sword ferns as we walked along the East Fork Quinault River trail. We were camping on the Olympic Peninsula in Washington, where over 11 feet

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from High Country News

High Country News6 min read
The Complex Case Of Growing Native Plants
HOUSEHOLDS ACROSS the West are increasingly ditching the smooth green lawns of the stereotypical American dream and attempting to grow native plants instead — a practice Indigenous communities mastered centuries ago to sustain themselves. The new app
High Country News6 min read
How States Make Money Off Tribal Lands
BEFORE JON EAGLE SR. began working for the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, he was an equine therapist for over 36 years, linking horses with and providing support to children, families and communities both on his ranch and on the road. The work reinforced
High Country News6 min read
The Co-opting Of Cowboy Poetry
WHEN JUSTIN REICHERT was 18, he caught a ride with a friend from his family’s farm in McPherson, Kansas, to Elko, Nevada, 1,200 miles away. It was 1992, the seventh year of Elko’s National Cowboy Poetry Gathering, a series of readings and musical per

Related Books & Audiobooks