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Saturday, May 24
 

2:15pm MDT

Return of the Wolves with Journalists Eli Francovich and Nick Bowlin
Saturday May 24, 2025 2:15pm - 3:15pm MDT
Voters approved Proposition 114 in November 2020, requiring Colorado Parks and Wildlife to make a plan to begin reintroducing wolves to the Western Slope of Colorado by the end of 2023. The wildlife agency first released 10 gray wolves captured in Oregon onto state land in Grand and Summit counties in December 2023. This discussion will check in on current movements in wolf reintroduction in Colorado with High Country News reporter Nick Bowlin and author, Eli Francovich.

The gray wolf has made an astonishing comeback in Washington. Nearly eradicated by the 1990s, conservationists and environmentalists have cheered its robust return to the state over the last two decades. But Washington ranchers are not so joyous. When wolves prey on livestock, ranchers view their livelihood as under attack.

In Return of the Wolves: An Iconic Predator's Struggle to Survive in the American West, author Eli Francovich investigates how we might mend this divide while keeping wolf populations thriving. He finds an answer in the time-honored tradition of range riding and one passionate range rider, Daniel Curry, who has jumped directly into the fray by patrolling the rural Washington landscape on horseback. Curry engages directly with farmers, seeking to protect livestock from wolves while also protecting and proliferating wolf populations. In The Return of Wolves, we meet an eclectic cast of players—local ranchers, politicians, environmentalists, and everyday folks caught in the middle—and find hope for the future of wolves, and perhaps for our divided nation. 
Speakers
avatar for Nick Bowlin

Nick Bowlin

Nick Bowlin is a freelance journalist and a contributing editor with High Country News. His freelance work has appeared in Harper’s, The Guardian and ProPublica, and has been anthologized in the Best American Science and Nature Writing anthology.
avatar for Eli Francovich

Eli Francovich

Eli Francovich is a journalist who covers the environment, conservation and outdoor recreation in Washington. His work has been published in the Seattle Times, the Chicago Tribune, the Miami Herald, the Charlotte Observer, and elsewhere. He lives in Spokane, Washington. 
Saturday May 24, 2025 2:15pm - 3:15pm MDT
5 Kinder-Padon Gallery

3:30pm MDT

The Business of Everest-Everest, INC. with author Will Cockrell and Jonathan Ellsworth
Saturday May 24, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm MDT
Journalist Will Cockrell discusses his book, Everest, Inc. The Renegades and Rouges Who Built and Industry at the Top of the World with outdoor journalist Jonathan Ellsworth from Blister. 

How did a peak that was at first deemed unclimbable, then downgraded to suicidal, become one that thousands of people could scale? Everest Inc. answers that question.
Anyone who has read Jon Krakauer’s Into Thin Air or has seen a recent photo of climbers standing in line to get to the top of Everest may think they have the mountain pretty well figured out. It’s an extreme landscape where bad weather and incredible altitude can occasionally kill, but more so an overcrowded, trashed-out recreation destination where rich clients pad their egos—and social media feeds—while exploiting local Sherpas.
There’s some truth to these clichés, but they’re a sliver of the story. Unlike any book to date, Everest, Inc. gets to the heart of the mountain through the definitive story of its greatest invention: the Himalayan guiding industry. It all began in the 1980s with a few boot-strapping entrepreneurs who paired raw courage and naked ambition with a new style of expedition planning.

Many of them are still living and climbing today, and as a result of their astonishing success, ninety percent of the people now on Everest are clients or employees of guided expeditions.
Studded with quotes from original interviews with more than a hundred western and Sherpa climbers, clients, writers, filmmakers, and even a Hollywood actor, Everest, Inc. foregrounds the voices of the people who have made the mountain what it is today.

And while there is plenty of high-altitude drama in unpacking the last forty years of Everest tragedy and triumph, it ultimately transcends stereotypes and tells the uplifting counternarrative of the army of journeymen and women who have made people’s dreams come true, and of the Nepalis who are pushing the industry into the future.

Jonathan Ellsworth is the founder of the outdoors-focused media company, BLISTER (blisterreview.com) that’s based here in Crested Butte. Prior to starting BLISTER, Jonathan was a philosophy professor (he did his graduate work at the University of Chicago), a published author (primarily in academic philosophy), and a personal trainer (he trained a former presidential candidate & governor of New Mexico). These days, in addition to running BLISTER and hosting numerous BLISTER podcasts, he gets out in the mountains most days to ski, mountain bike, hike, or trail run.


Speakers
avatar for Jonathan Ellsworth

Jonathan Ellsworth

Jonathan Ellsworth is the founder of the outdoors-focused media company, BLISTER (blisterreview.com) that’s based here in Crested Butte. Prior to starting BLISTER, Jonathan was a philosophy professor (he did his graduate work at the University of Chicago), a published author (primarily... Read More →
avatar for Will Cockrell

Will Cockrell

Will Cockrell has spent more than twenty years as a senior editor, writer, and consultant for national magazines including Men’s Journal, Outside, Men’s Fitness, and GQ. His work has been acclaimed by the American Society of Magazine Editors and the Professional Publishers Association... Read More →
Saturday May 24, 2025 3:30pm - 4:30pm MDT
1 Steddy Theater

4:45pm MDT

The Crazies: The Cattleman, the Wind Prospector, and a War Out West with Amy Gamerman and Justin Farrell
Saturday May 24, 2025 4:45pm - 5:45pm MDT
Join authors Amy Gamerman and Mountain Words alum, Justin Farrell, resident expert on wealth in the West to discuss, The Crazies. 

The Crazies is a Western for a warming planet, full of cowboys and billionaires and billionaire cowboys. But it’s also so much more. It’s an exquisitely reported, ruggedly beautiful elegy for a vanishing way of life and a bighearted inquiry into how you can love a place so much you risk destroying it.

A dazzling piece of narrative nonfiction about land lust and the
American West, The Crazies tells the story of a wind farm that triggers
a 21st century range war between a struggling fifth-generation rancher
and the billionaires next door.

Most locals in Big Timber, Montana learn to live with the wind. Rick Jarrett sought his fortune in it. Like his pioneer ancestors who staked their claims in the Treasure State, he believed in his right to make a living off the land—and its newest precious resource, million-dollar wind.
Trouble was, Jarrett’s neighbors were some of the wealthiest and most influential men in America, trophy ranchers who’d come West to enjoy magnificent mountain views, not stare at 500-foot wind turbines.
And so began an epic showdown that would pull in an ever-widening cast of larger-than-life characters, including a Texas oil and gas tycoon, a roguish wind prospector, a Crow activist fighting for his tribe’s rights to the mountains they hold sacred, and an Olympic athlete-turned-attorney whose path to redemption would lead to Jarrett’s wind farm. A wildly entertaining yarn, the brawl over Crazy Mountain Wind would become a fight over the values that define us as Americans—and a window into how this country actually works. All the while, the most coveted rangeland in the West was being threatened by forces more powerful than anything one man could muster: dwindling snowpack, record drought, raging wildfires.

AMY GAMERMAN is a longtime contributor to the Wall Street Journal's Mansion
section. Prior to, she was a WSJ’s drama critic and a staff writer. Her writing has appeared
in Vogue and Redbook and been recognized with several awards, including from the
National Association of Real Estate Editors. She attended Yale University and King’s
College, Cambridge. Gamerman lives in Connecticut with her husband, writer and editor
Kevin Conley, and their four children. The Crazies is her first book.

Justin Farrell is a writer and professor at Yale, School of the Environment.
He writes on nature, modern belief, and American culture, often using the rural West as a setting.
His work has won national awards and regularly appears in major media. He frequently presents work to policymakers, including the U.S. Senate, the White House, the Vatican, and the United Nations. His research has been published by Science, Princeton University Press, PNAS, the American Sociological Review, Nature Climate Change, among others, and funded by the Environmental Protection Agency and the National Science Foundation.
Justin is a first-generation college graduate and Wyoming native. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Notre Dame. He splits time between rural Wyoming, Denver, and New Haven.

Speakers
avatar for Amy Gamerman

Amy Gamerman

Amy Gamerman is a longtime contributor to the Wall Street Journal's Mansion section. Prior to, she was a WSJ’s drama critic and a staff writer. Her writing has appeared in Vogue and Redbook and been recognized with several awards, including from the National Association of Real... Read More →
avatar for Justin Farrell

Justin Farrell

Justin Farrell is a writer and professor at Yale, School of the Environment. He writes on nature, modern belief, and American culture, often using the rural American West as a setting. His work has won national awards and regularly appears in major media. He frequently presents work... Read More →
Saturday May 24, 2025 4:45pm - 5:45pm MDT
1 Steddy Theater
 
Mountain Words Festival
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