• HIGH COUNTRY OBSERVATIONS Episode: 006 STRAINING THE SYSTEM: Capacity, Policy, and the Future of the Forest Service
    Apr 24 2026

    Today is National Arbor Day. And at the same time, you’re seeing headlines suggesting the United States Forest Service is “shutting down.”

    This episode looks at what’s actually happening.

    Forests in the United States are not just natural systems, they are managed systems, shaped by law, policy, funding, and operational capacity. And the Forest Service does not operate independently of those forces.

    From wildfire mitigation and forest thinning to permitting, staffing, and funding constraints, the system that manages millions of acres of public land is under increasing pressure.

    That pressure is not new.

    But it is becoming more visible.

    This episode breaks down how the system works, what it is designed to do, and where it reaches its limits. We look at the role of Congress in funding, the influence of the executive branch, and the legal and procedural frameworks that shape what can actually happen on the ground.

    The result is not a system that is simply “shutting down.”

    It is a system operating under constraint including limited capacity, competing mandates, and rising expectations.

    On Arbor Day, the focus is often on planting trees.

    This episode focuses on the system responsible for managing the forests we already have.

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    16 mins
  • HIGH COUNTRY OBSERVATIONS Episode: 005 HOLDING THE LINE Fire Risk & the Limits of Control
    Apr 24 2026

    Wildfire in the American West is not just a natural event, it is shaped by law, policy, and the limits of institutional capacity.


    From the Big Burn of 1910 to the Yarnell Hill Fire, this episode examines how the modern wildfire system developed, how it operates today, and where it fails under pressure.


    We break down the role of Congress, the executive branch, and the legal framework, highlighting cases like United States v. Grimaud, to understand how public lands are actually managed.


    The result is a system constrained from both directions: limited capacity, limited execution, and rising expectations.

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    24 mins
  • HIGH COUNTRY OBSERVATIONS Episode: 004 BOUNDARY WATERS A Line Drawn in the North
    Apr 18 2026

    The Senate is voting on whether to reopen mineral leasing upstream of one of the most intact freshwater systems in North America: the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness.


    This episode breaks down what that decision actually means.


    Not just headlines, but the structure behind the policy.


    From federal land withdrawals to Congressional Review Act reversals, this is a closer look at how public land decisions are made, and what’s different when the landscape in question is a fully connected watershed.


    Because in systems like this, impact isn’t contained.


    It moves.


    This isn’t just a debate about mining.

    It’s a question of risk, scale, and long-term consequence in a place where recovery isn’t guaranteed.


    High Country Observations, Stay Outside

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    12 mins
  • HIGH COUNTRY OBSERVATIONS Episode: 003 ORIGIN AND CONSEQUENCE, MCOOL for Beef
    Apr 17 2026

    Country of Origin Labeling sounds simple.

    Know where your beef comes from.

    But in practice, origin moves through a complex system, across borders, processors, and markets, before it ever reaches a consumer.

    In this episode of High Country Observations, we break down MCOOL as policy, not talking point. How labeling works, why it was challenged internationally, and what it means for U.S. ranchers operating inside a global supply chain.

    This is not just about consumer information.

    It is about price signals, market structure, and who benefits from how beef is labeled in the United States.

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    8 mins
  • HIGH COUNTRY OBSERVATIONS Episode: 002 RETURN OF THE WOLF
    Apr 16 2026

    The gray wolf has returned to the American West, but not without consequence.

    Once nearly eradicated from the lower 48, wolves have become one of the most visible symbols of modern conservation success. From their reintroduction into Yellowstone National Park in 1995 to their controversial return under voter mandate in Colorado, the wolf now sits at the center of a deeper question:

    What does recovery actually mean in the modern West?

    In this episode of High Country Observations, we move beyond the headlines and into the structure beneath them, federal law, state authority, ecological outcomes, and the lived reality on the ground.

    This is not a story of good or bad.

    It is a story of tradeoffs.

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    12 mins
  • High Country Observations Episode: 001 CONFRONTING THE BEAR
    Apr 11 2026

    Grizzly De-listing and the Future of Yellowstone Recovery

    The Greater Yellowstone grizzly bear has become one of the greatest conservation success stories in North America.

    From roughly 136 bears in 1975 to over 1,000 today, the population has rebounded under decades of federal protection through the Endangered Species Act.

    But success raises a harder question:

    What does “recovery” actually mean in modern wildlife conservation?

    In Episode 001 of High Country Observations, we break down the push to delist the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem (GYE) grizzly bear, by examining the law, the science, and the reality on the ground.

    This is not just a wildlife story.

    It’s a test case for how conservation works when it succeeds.

    Topics Covered:

    • The history of grizzly bear recovery under the ESA

    • Population growth and current management thresholds

    • Federal vs. state control over wildlife

    • Legal battles surrounding delisting efforts

    • What happens next if protections are removed

    Read the full Field Notes + sources:

    https://substack.com/@highcountryobservations

    Follow HCO:

    X:https://x.com/HighCountryObsv

    Instagram: @HighCountryObservations

    #Conservation #GrizzlyBear #WildlifePolicy #EndangeredSpeciesAct #PublicLands #Hunting #WesternHistory #Colorado #Outdoors #EnvironmentalLaw

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    29 mins