Elisha McArthur wants women and girls to feel the power of rowing their own raft

Tracy Ross
Tracy Ross writes about the intersection of people and the natural world, industry, social justice and rural life from the perspective of someone who grew up in rural Idaho, lived in the Alaskan bush, reported in regions from Iran to Ecuador and as a parent of kids growing up during the age of accelerated climate change.
Before coming to The Colorado Sun, she was a correspondent for Outside Magazine, an editor at both Backpacker and Skiing magazines, and the author of the critically lauded memoir The Source of All Things, about overcoming child abuse through connection with and adventure in the outdoor world.
She is the co-producer of a movie — Hard Miles — based on her Bicycling Magazine story Street Kids, about boys from a school for adjudicated youth in Colorado who she rode to the Grand Canyon with in 2014.
She lives in Nederland with her husband, 12-year-old daughter, Hollis, and, occasionally, her two grown sons, Scout and Hatcher.
Topic expertise: I specialize in stories affecting rural communities, from energy development to recreation to affordable housing and hunting. I also write about the outdoor economy, sports and culture. And whenever possible I dip my toe in arts that intersect with rural communities and the outdoors. I have a strong interest in social justice.
Location: Nederland, former land of Frozen Dead Guy Days current Carousel of Happiness
Education: It took me 12 years and four colleges to graduate because I kept getting distracted by real world adventures. But schools: Cornish College of the Arts, St. John's College (Santa Fe), University of Alaska Fairbanks, CU Denver (graduated at 30 while pregnant with my first kid). Also: I attended Interlochen Arts Academy (boarding school) for part of my high school, which had perhaps more impact on my life and education than any higher education.
Honors & Awards: National Magazine Award in essay category 2009 (beating Harpers, The New Yorker, and Antioch Review). Lowell Thomas award for investigative journalism 2015. I consider getting a book deal in 2009 an award. Multiple inclusions or notable mentions in Best American Sports Writing, Best American Travel Writing and Best American Magazine Writing.
Contact:
X (Formerly Twitter): @writertracyross
Instagram: @heli_girl_1970
Facebook: Tracy Ross
Colorado tourism still impacted by COVID-19 and inflation, new report shows
The state reached a record high of $27.7 billion in travel spending and 90 million visitors in 2022, as it continues to feel the “aftershocks” of the pandemic
Rural Colorado to benefit from $85 million for workforce development — including nursing resources — amid shortage
Colorado needs thousands more nurses a year to keep up with growing demand amid staffing shortages and retirements in the health care workforce. But a $1.3 million grant to the Colorado State University Pueblo graduate school and nursing program as part of an $85 million state project is intended to keep adequate health care flowing […]
An entrepreneur is one big step closer to capturing methane leaking from Colorado coal mines
White River National Forest district ranger calls Coal Basin mine project “precedent setting”
Jared Polis, Western governors push geothermal energy development during Boulder conference
Colorado’s governor chose geothermal exploration as his top focus when he was voted chair of the Western Governors’ Association in 2022. A year on, a new report reveals the potential is hot.
The Biden administration wants to make conservation equal to ranching and mining in the West. The GOP won’t have it.
The Republican-led House Committee on Natural Resources voted Wednesday to withdraw a BLM rule it links to “Biden’s preservationist agenda.”
Colorado wildlife officials release warning following fawn kidnapping, moose’s fatal jump from parking garage
CPW warns hikers not to pick up seemingly abandoned fawns and other young animals in the wild, as it will do more harm to them than good.
U.S. Paralympic, Olympic ski and snowboard teams merge in push for inclusivity
The merger further levels the playing field for winter para athletes by pumping more money into training, elevating their profile
CPW slashed hunting licenses to save wildlife. What about Colorado towns that rely on hunters?
Thousands fewer tags and shorter seasons means thousands fewer hunters and a lot less spending in towns like Craig, Meeker and Rangely
From the back of a van to a $1.9 million facility, adaptive sports have become core to Colorado skiing
Ignite Adaptive Sports and Eldora ski area are partnering on a new 12,000-square-foot, multi-million-dollar building set to open in 2024.