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The quaking aspen (Populus tremuloides) is one of Colorado’s most iconic trees and maybe its most dramatic. With smooth white ...
As the Mountain Gardener, I often hear folks asking for trees that grow fast. You want shade, privacy, and beauty, and you ...
Shutterstock The Pando Aspen Grove The Pando Aspen Grove stands quietly in Utah’s Fishlake National Forest. What looks like ...
The restoration of gray wolves in Yellowstone National Park has helped revive an aspen tree population unique to the region, a new study has found. Quaking aspen, one of the few deciduous tree spec… ...
The restoration of gray wolves in Yellowstone National Park has helped revive an aspen tree population unique to the region, a new study has found. Quaking aspen, one of the few deciduous tree ...
Gray wolves were reintroduced in Yellowstone National Park in 1995 to help control the numbers of elk that were eating young trees, and it is finally paying off for quaking aspen.
These territorial canines, who live and hunt in packs, were reintroduced to the national park 30 years ago. It’s good news for the park’s quaking aspen.
“Back in Time” is contributed by the Aspen Historical Society and features excerpted articles and images from past Snowmass Sun/Aspen Times issues. We can’t rewrite history, but we can learn from it!
Starting in mid-December and running through early April, people will be able to fly the longest nonstop flight into Aspen from Charlotte, North Carolina.
In this video, visit The Little Nell—Aspen’s only ski-in, ski-out hotel. Nestled at the base of Aspen Mountain, this five-star, five-diamond resort offers unmatched access to the slopes ...