United States | Street food
Roadkill is now on the menu in Wyoming
Crashes between cars and wildlife are too common. Salvaging roadkill can help
|Denver
A NEW DELICACY is available in Wyoming. It is fresh and cheap—but probably a little gamey. Last month it became legal for Wyomingites to collect roadkill that they accidentally hit themselves, or that they happened upon. Not all animals are fair game. Grizzly bears, some grey wolves and endangered species are off-limits.
This article appeared in the United States section of the print edition under the headline “Street food”
United States February 12th 2022
- Democrats have fared surprisingly well in Congress’s new maps
- Rival Jewish congregations feud over America’s oldest synagogue
- A group of nuns goes viral for Jesus
- Is Donald Trump losing his grip on Republican voters?
- Roadkill is now on the menu in Wyoming
- What the carjacking wave says about American policing
- Messing up, Biden-style
More from United States
America’s bet on industrial policy starts to pay off for semiconductors
Trump will not reverse the chip subsidies, but will he reinforce them?
Most Americans think moderate drinking is fine
They are unaware of the cancer risk
Mike Johnson has his old job back, for now
But the GOP has the tightest House majority in nearly a century
When treating snakebites, American hospitals turn to zoos
The zookeeper will see you now
Los Angeles against the flames
Always vulnerable, the city is increasingly susceptible to fire
The US Army needs less good, cheaper drones to compete
It seems obvious. So what is stopping it from happening?