Conservation
Meet the Sea + Soil Collective
The Future of Oregon’s Wild and Scenic River System
This Boy Wants to Save the World from Plastic
An All-Women Voyage to End Ocean Pollution
River Dams Have Decimated the Chinook Salmon Population
Threats to Fisheries Are Pushing Fishermen to Advocate
A New 261-Mile Bikepacking Route Through Colombia
What Dam Removals Can Do for a River
A Letter to Humanity from Mother Earth
Why Paradise Valley Shouldn’t Be Mined
The Fight to Save Louisiana’s Coastline
Meet California’s Best Big-Tree Hunter
Saving the Last Great Super Tuskers
Three Waterwomen on Conserving the Ocean
A Search for Vanishing Dark Skies
A Rare Trout Is Revitalizing New Mexico
California’s Redwoods Are for Everyone
One Man’s Dedication to Running Rivers
You Should Care About Roadless Areas
Paddling the Olympic Peninsula
A Dam That Exiled an Entire Region
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When one looks out over the vast Kremenchuk reservoir in Ukraine, it’s impossible not to be entranced by its beauty. But the man-made lake has drastically impacted the local towns and environment. When the Dnieper River was dammed to create it, over 100 people were evicted from their homes without compensation or assistance. For filmmaker Vadym Sapatrylo, this film, The River: Beauty and Hate, portrays the emotional response the structure invoked.