News

When Maddison Thelen returned to work a second season as a guide for Glacier Guides and Montana Raft, she found herself in a company-wide meeting featuring a big announcement: alongside their guiding ...
Klamath Falls sits at the crossroads of Oregon’s most dramatic landscapes, where volcanic mountains meet expansive wetlands and high desert plateaus, creating a haven of tranquility that feels worlds ...
A trio of rivers in southeastern Minnesota offer perfect opportunities to fish for smallmouth, and to do so on foot.
The removal of four dams from the Klamath River last summer has reopened over 400 miles of historical habitat for migratory ...
Four dams fell. Now, Indigenous youth are paddling the Klamath from source to sea, reclaiming a river — and a part of ...
Arts and Culture El Dorado continues an exhibition series exploring recreation and the natural world in El Dorado County with ...
After an all-sides agreement and lengthy scientific study, the country's biggest dam removal project should be on track to restore the Klamath River. But the momentum behind this promising project ...
The construction of the Lower Four Snake River Dams made Lewiston, Idaho the furthest inland port in the United States. The lower river is now used by barges, which carry everything from winter wheat ...
Whitewater rafting is a popular activity on Colorado's Poudre River. Five outfitters offer guided trips from late spring through summer. No experience is necessary, and outfitters provide equipment.
If you were to go kayaking or rafting on a mountain river in the Rockies, you’d likely think you’re safe from dangerous wildlife. Not the case, as one kayaker found out when a grizzly bear spotted it ...
Within the over 73 square miles of land along the lower Klamath River, the Yurok Tribe will now be permanent managers, focusing on ecosystem health for fish, wildlife and the broader forest. In 2002, ...
It's being called the largest land return deal in California's history. Yurok Fisheries Department Director Barry McCovey tells NPR's Scott Detrow what it means for the Yurok Tribe and for the land.