“Luck and life in pronghorn country” – An Essay by Nina McConigley

Faculty member Nina McConigley was recently featured with an essay in High Country News. Read an excerpt and find a link to the full text below:

Luck and life in pronghorn country

“Cantaloupe!”

My daughter points across the prairie at the buff-colored animals in the sagebrush and sedges.

“Antelope,” I correct her.

“Cantaloupe,” she says solemnly.

Technically, we’re both wrong: They are pronghorns — “speedgoats,” as my husband calls them. It’s late summer, and spindly-legged baby pronghorns graze next to their mothers. They are learning the land, and I imagine they, too, are being corrected. Our dog, a spaniel mix, every so often peels forward at top speed, chasing after a jackrabbit that is almost as big as he is. The flash of the rabbit’s white rump and the futile chase make my daughter shout with glee. I call him back, leashing him and telling him to stop harassing the wildlife. Both rabbits and antelope cross the prairie with ease, their movements meteoric across the land.

Read the full piece here: Nina McConigley | High Country News