Blog

What’s Nature Really Worth? Adding Up the Value of Earth’s “Services”

By Dr. Robert Thorson Mothers work hard for their families, often without much acknowledgement by the world at large. The same is true for Mother Nature, whose behind-the-scenes contributions to human well-being are vastly underappreciated. Economists have begun to identify and put a price tag on household “mother services.” I do not refer to the […]

Why Leave Power Lines in Harm’s Way?

By Dr. Robert Thorson Seven days without electrical power! Aside from the obvious disruption, delayed schools, annoyance and wasted food, the recent outage was a blessing in disguise for regional culture. It has helped me appreciate other kinds of power, fostered better neighborhood connections, promoted reading, helped kids relearn the meaning of outdoor play, rubbed […]

Hello, New Breed

By Dr. Robert Thorson Shoot first, ask questions later. That was my first thought when I learned that a big-game hunter from Idaho had shot a hybrid cross between a grizzly and polar bear in the high Canadian Arctic. The hunter, Jim Martell, apparently had violated the hunter’s first axiom: “Know what you are shooting […]

Government Workers Minding the Store

By Dr. Robert Thorson Before we change federal administrations, I want to sing the praises of a group that I hope will no longer be needed. I refer to Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility. This is no sinecure of desk-hugging bureaucrats seeking to pad their salary and benefits. Instead, its members risk retaliation by reporting […]

Fishing Lessons

By Dr. Robert Thorson Ahhh! Summer vacation. Time to relax and go fishing. Not quite. Fishing has become so high-tech and scientific that I sometimes wonder why it’s still so much fun. Answer? Because there’s so much learning going on. Fishing technology is fascinatingly complex. There’s high- resolution underwater acoustic imaging. Global positioning systems. Bathymetric […]

Lebanon Lake Owners on the Hook for Cleanup

By Dr. Robert Thorson A lake is the landscape’s most beautiful and expressive feature. It is earth’s eye; looking into which the beholder measures the depth of his own nature.” If Henry David Thoreau, were alive today, and writing about Amston Lake on the border of Hebron and Lebanon, he might also say: “It is […]

Dickens Was Right About Climate Change

By Dr. Robert Thorson Charles Dickens opened his Victorian-era novel “A Tale of Two Cities” with these famous lines: “It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness . . .” I found Dickens’ contradictions particularly helpful for understanding the […]