The challenging snowshoe route to the summit of Sun Top Lookout in Washington's Mount Baker Snoqualmie National forest offers a great workout, a historic forest lookout, and fantastic views of Mount Rainier and surrounding peaks.
The challenging snowshoe route to the summit of Sun Top Lookout in Washington's Mount Baker Snoqualmie National forest offers a great workout, a historic forest lookout, and fantastic views of Mount Rainier and surrounding peaks.
Oregon Senate passes rent control, Muslim group buys hotel rooms for WA homeless, Vancouver MP quits cabinet post in scandal, Eugene's missing & murdered women, Brandi Carlile's amazing Grammy moment, and a BC painter's home filled with fake masterpieces.
Portland-based poet and artist Dao Strom combines photos, text, and music in a multimedia exploration through traces of Vietnamese culture and mythology, including the music of folksinger Pham Duy and in images of herself wearing a pair of wings at historic sites in Vietnam.
Portland multimedia artist, poet, musician and photographer Dao Strom talks with Cascadia Magazine about the echoes of history in her work, returning to Vietnam, a continual sense of not-belonging, and her new book You Will Always Be Someone from Someplace Else.
Court rules BC fish farms must test for virus, Vancouver empty rental rules decrease vacancies, Seattle's Pramila Jayapal leads progressives in US Congress, photography by Bianca Recuenco, and an excerpt from Sharma Shields' new novel The Cassandra.
Announcing Cascadia Magazine's new fiction editor, NDP-Greens hold on to BC legislature, WA looks to change vaccination laws after measles outbreak, Canada may have overspent on BC pipeline by $1 billion, counting Salem's homeless population, Karen Thompson Walker on intellectual motherhood & more...
Seattle research center makes advances toward an HIV cure, critical Nanaimo by-election, nonprofit helps minority-owned cannabis businesses in OR, why did WA carbon tax fail?, seastars are dying, a Ghanian artist's residency in Eugene, and poetry by Karen Finneyfrock.
A Seattle medical research center known for its work on cancer is getting closer to a cure for HIV. Niki Stojnic talks with a virologist and advocates for HIV-positive people about what the pathway to a cure might look like.
A report from the standoff between First Nations and police over BC gas pipeline, why is border patrol raiding Greyhound buses? Starbucks dude considers running for prez, Oregon makes prescribed burns easier, an essay about the December 2018 storm in BC, and poetry by Sarah Stockton.
New poetry by WA poet Samuel Green, helping Seattle's black residents fight displacement, will OR legislature act to save the state's public schools?, dead jellyfish washing up on Cascadia coast in big numbers, a new exhibit of Indigenous art & activism at UBC, and multimedia poetry by Portland's Dao Strom.