| Sometimes We Forget Article |
Parents  Loading... Articles
| | 
| Page Type: Article Activities: Hiking, Mountaineering, Trad Climbing, Sport Climbing, Toprope, Bouldering, Ice Climbing, Aid Climbing, Big Wall, Mixed, Scrambling, Via Ferrata, Canyoneering, Skiing | Page By: thephotohiker Created/Edited: Mar 7, 2008 / Sep 2, 2008 Object ID: 386332 Hits: 4058  Loading... Page Score: 90.85% - 47 Votes  Loading... Vote: Log in to vote |
 Layout designed for best viewing on a "1024 x 768" screen
Chief Joseph, a statesmen-like leader of the Nez Perce  
|
Prospector Jerry Johnson searched for precious metals during the 1880s and 1890s      
|
|
Sometimes we forget
      The past
      Mountains, wilderness, experience
      Hiking, climbing, feeling alive
            Believing, we are owed.
Andrew Erickson was a fur trapper who survived living alone during the harsh winters  
|
Skookam Woodman lived his life as part of (and not apart from) the Bitterroot Mountains
|
|
Time
      Movement
      Fire
      Ice
            Building mountains
Time
      Heat
      Chemistry
      Creating life
            Changing mountains
Time
      Bacteria
      Plants
      Single cells
            Changing mountains
Time
      Worms
      Reptiles
      Mammals
            Changing mountains
Time
      Aboriginals
      Indians
      Whites
            Changing mountains
Time
      Trappers
      Miners
      Woodsmen
            Changing mountains
Time
      Climbers
      Hemp
      Hobnails
            Changing mountains
Time
      Nylon
      Steel
      Gear
            Changing mountains
Johnny Decker
|
|
George Ring
|
|
Bill Bell
|
|
Sometimes we forget
      The past
      Changing mountains
      Believing, we,
            Are owed ?
Looking west at of a few of the Bitterroot Mountains (from Hamilton, MT to Victor, MT) - best viewed in original size
|
Winter in the Bitterroot Mountains
|
Admit it. Each of us who thoroughly enjoys "the wilderness" has felt – probably more than once – that we’re owed such experiences. We convince ourselves that, if for no other reason, wild places should be preserved so we can continue to indulge our desire for solitude. In this, I am as guilty as anyone. But...
A moment’s reflection brings the realization that I’m not the first person who visited any particular wild area of the mountains. Indians, trappers, prospectors, hunters, and farmers walked the mountains, each bushwhacking through deadfall, following animal trails, scratching a living from the land.
Mario Locatelli - a modern-day mountaineer
|
Forced to earn a subsistence existence, those were the first to visit and exploit the wilderness. Their efforts to survive, improved pathways into the wild and gave us fairly easy approaches to the mountains we visit in the back-country today. They were "real" woodsmen and mountaineers, wearing hobnail boots and using hemp rope with no specialized equipment to help conquer the rock.
Mountain Heather
|
So, now we sit comfortably at our desks, living far above a subsistence level with the income and free time to allow for recreation, visiting SummitPost and philosophizing about the future, often thinking someone owes us the preservation of the wilderness mountains.
There is an old saying, the source of which I’ve long since forgotten, which goes something like, "There are no philosophers with empty stomachs." I try to remember that when I find myself thinking someone else owes "me" the preservation of wilderness and recall that most of those who preceded us were only trying to make a living – to survive.
I will not blame them for making choices which now seem to have been damaging and incorrect. Rather, I thank them for making it possible for allowing me to "stand on their shoulders" and do my best at emulating what were the "true" woodsmen and mountaineers.
Bud Moore's book, The Lochsa Story, Land Ethics in the Bitterroot Mountains, from which several of the above images were extracted is a good read - both entertaining and informative.
Two things I found especially interesting - his stories about the men and women who helped shape the way the Bitterroots were and are viewed by most people and our government, plus Bud's belief of how the Bitterroot area should be managed, how he came to those conclusions, and how his views of "management" changed through the years.
Images
|
|