Letter to an Old Friend

Letter to an Old Friend

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Not Forgotten

Coyote, Lamar Valley

There you were, bold against the snow in the Lamar Valley, ears erect, snout down, ready to pounce, listening for the self-betraying movement of your prey in its dug-out tunnels a few inches below.

You paid not a bit of attention to me. In one sense, I was glad; it's not worth getting the perfect picture of an animal if doing so means disrupting it, and such disruptions can be harmful or even fatal to the animal. But in another sense, I was a little saddened not to be acknowledged; some part of me, the part that thrives on feeling like a part of the pulse of the wilderness, craved your notice and subsequent acceptance-- not friendship but not fear, either-- just acceptance.

Payson Peak

Other places I have seen or heard you...

The moments we shared stay with me more than any other wildlife encounter that stands out in my memory. More than the time I watched mountain goats dance down the sheer cliffs of Mount Timpanogos as I plodded along the ridge trail. More than the time I saw a cougar in the Absaroka Range. More than the time I thought a bull moose in rutting season in the Wasatch Range was about to charge me. More than the time a black bear in the Sierra Nevada made a bluff charge at my brother and me. More than the time I surprised a young grizzly and found myself within spitting distance of it in the Great Bear Wilderness of Montana's Flathead Range.
 
I like to think you were the same coyote featured in a National Geographic video I’d seen a year or two before. The location was the same. The movements I saw were dead ringers. But maybe that was owing to the remarkable way your brethren have adapted and evolved; it only makes sense that what works would be adopted and repeated by all struggling to survive in the white hell and sublime wonder that is the Yellowstone winter.
 
Cardiac Ridge
 
In all likelihood, you are no longer alive. Your lifespan in the wild is up to 15 years, and you were no pup when I saw you nine years ago. Age could have taken you. The wheels beneath a rushing tourist could have. Maybe you strayed from the protection of your home to find yourself targeted by the poisons, traps, or rifles of your human neighbors. Furthermore, the numbers of your kind have dropped in the Lamar Valley since the reintroduction of the gray wolf became such a success. Your larger cousins, in establishing their dominance, have driven off or killed so many of you. You had become the largest of your kind, much larger than the average coyote; in fact, you and your regional brethren were often mistaken for wolves. 
 
On balance, I am glad the wolves are back, but I still find it sad that their success also comes at your expense when it is you, despite the romantic image of the wolf, who truly embodies the strength and the resilience of the natural order perhaps more than any other animal in the great American West does. And you do. The bison, who shook the earth when they ran and sustained an entire culture that practiced the now-forgotten ethic of taking just what one needs and honoring its lifeblood, were nearly slaughtered and needed the hand of the federal government to save them. It was the same with the grizzlies. And so it was with the wolves. But you have endured and even thrived.
 
Clearing Storm from Cape Royal
 
You have been chased, trapped, poisoned, and shot, but you endure. You can outrun, outwit, or outmaneuver dogs; avoid traps; get through or over fences; and change your habits. Mixed into you are the craftiness of the fox and the endurance of the wolf. You lack the purity of the former’s cunning and the chase-ending lethality of the latter's strength, but you have enough of both to do, on the whole, better than both, for you know how to do what survival demands and have always eluded the best efforts of those trying to exterminate you, no small feat in this age when entire species vanish forever each year solely or primarily because of my kind's activities.
 
 
Badlands National Park, SD
 
Despite the campaigns against you, despite attaining the shoot-at-will label of “varmint” in so many states, you are reputed to live in every U.S. state except Hawaii. You have been sighted and photographed in New York’s Central Park and Washington, D.C.’s Rock Creek Park, hardly bastions of wilderness.
 
Governments of suburbanized areas such as my own hometown, where all is supposed to be middle-class bliss and the worst that ever happens to most of us is a traffic jam making us late for the nightly joy of trying to get our kids to eat what they don’t want to eat, issue warnings to pet owners, saying that coyotes pose a particular risk to cats and small dogs. When I found a mutilated fox on a neighborhood basketball court recently, I did not suspect a shotgun-wielding yuppie, an abnormally aggressive dog, or one seriously rough racoon; I thought of you.
 
I have seen you, as I have already said, in Yellowstone, America’s wilderness heart. I have also listened to you at night there while I shivered in my mummy bag as winter kept its grip on March, and if there is any sound in the American wilderness that can be more haunting and inspiring at once, it can only be the howl of the wolf, the bugling of the bull elk, the scream of the cougar, or maybe the sound of ice crashing from a glacier. I have watched you stalk, slink, and prance in Death Valley, the Grand Canyon, the Wasatch Mountains, and in other places I have probably forgotten. Your songs have kept me awake-- and kept me from wanting to sleep lest I missed a moment of the magic-- in the badlands of South Dakota and deep in the Wind River Range of Wyoming, there in the shadow of the Continental Divide, America’s great backbone in both a geographic and a wilderness sense.
 
Sunflower, Sage Creek Wilderness
 
Many of the Native Americans saw you and the raven as gods or god-like characters for your intelligence and your trickery, and you fill their lore (fitting, perhaps, that when I saw you that day a raven was just a few feet away from you). You play a vital role in the creation myths of the Navajo. Whoever dreamt up Pecos Bill had you raising him from childhood. Even Looney Tunes paid you a tribute of sorts by making your name a play on the word wily; in those cartoons, you never caught Road Runner, but you never quit, and it wasn’t long before I found myself in your corner. Although you are not solely or even principally of the mountains, in many ways you demonstrate the spirit of the mountains, who, as Aldo Leopold once said, are the only ones who have lived long enough to listen objectively to the howl of the wolf (and maybe the call of the coyote-- my addition), and the mountains would not be the same without you.
 
Mesquite Flat
 
You are more than a symbol. You are a survivor. You are an icon. You are an indelible part of the heart of the wilderness. You were here before we were and will probably be here after. There are many who hate you, and some of them may have fair reasons for it, but I still feel a thrill every time I see you.
 
And I miss you. After all these years, I still look at your picture and think about you, wondering what ever became of you. I hope it was noble. Good night, sweet prince.* The rest is silence.**
 
* Horatio to Hamlet just after the latter's death.
 
** Hamlet's final words.
 
 


Comments

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Viewing: 21-40 of 50
Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Sep 15, 2016 5:49 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: World Wide Wiliness

Yup, I've heard them in Shenandoah and seen their scat but have never seen them. I did see one at Great Falls once.

johnmnichols

johnmnichols - Mar 25, 2008 8:07 am - Voted 10/10

Great writing

Very well written Bob! Coyotes are definitely making a huge comeback in the Southern Appalachians -- I see more and more of them every year. It's too bad the red wolf re-introduction did not work out in the Smokies years ago, because that would have really added to the local ecosystem.

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Mar 27, 2008 12:39 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Great writing

Thank you, John. I, too, had hoped the red wolves would make it. I have not seen any coyotes yet up here in the Virginia Blue Ridge, but I know they are around and I look forward to seeing one someday.

BobSmith

BobSmith - Mar 27, 2008 5:15 pm - Voted 10/10

Re: Great writing

But the red wolves are doing extremely well in eastern North Carolina. Their populations are increasing and health of individual animals is good. In addition, the coyote has not yet moved into that part of the state. If the red wolves continue to populate the wild areas, it's not likely that the coyotes will be able to move in and dislodge them once the red wolf is established.

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Mar 27, 2008 12:40 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Wolf

Thanks for reading it, Husker!

argothor

argothor - Mar 26, 2008 12:08 pm - Voted 10/10

All things wild

Another well written piece. But why should I be surprised for anything I have read from you is from the heart about all things wild, whether it is about remote mountains, or now, a beautiful animal.

Thanks Bob. I hope you enjoyed you trip to Death Valley and Zion and eagerly await what you have to say about that trip.

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Mar 27, 2008 12:42 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: All things wild

Thank you very much for your encouraging words.

It was a great trip to Death Valley and Zion, and it will fuel a few mountain, route, and trip report pages. But most of all, it was a wonderful escape, with perfect weather, from the realities of life to places where I find the things that really matter.

Joe_Parvis

Joe_Parvis - Mar 27, 2008 1:14 pm - Hasn't voted

Thanks

Bob - Thanks for inspiring and thoughtful piece. Coyotes live on Green Mountain behind my house (near the western edge of Denver suburbia). Recently we installed new windows to keep out the drafts, and the only downside is it's harder to hear the coyotes wild yipping and calling in the night, as sleep comes. I am looking forward to spring/summer, for the warmth, the garden, the bbqs, and, not least, the open window and the calls floating in at the edge of dreams.

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Mar 27, 2008 6:57 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Thanks

Thank you, Joe. And that little bit at the very end of what you wrote is quite nice itself. Well, spring and summer are coming; enjoy the sights AND the sounds!

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Mar 31, 2008 12:59 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Great Read

Thanks a lot! By the way, that link you once posted on that Johnny Cash and Oscar the Grouch song was one of the best things ever. I've showed it to several people, and it entertained the hell out of my kid the other night.

tyler m

tyler m - Apr 6, 2008 1:49 am - Hasn't voted

Well put, sir!

I'm from nevada, and i really appreciate somebody acknowledging the coyote (pronounced kai-oat). These are the real symbol of the west to us here in the great basin. not feral/wild horses. thanks alot for the post.

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Apr 6, 2008 12:57 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Well put, sir!

Thank you for reading it, and thank you for the supportive words. It's good to know that others appreciate these amazing animals.

madeintahoe

madeintahoe - Apr 11, 2008 11:54 am - Voted 10/10

Thank You!

Beautifully written, very emotional, touching and sweet! Thank you for respecting your friend and all coyotes! They are all wonderful creatures which I adore! I love to see them and hear them..we do have a lot here in the Tahoe Basin. It is a blessing for me to be sitting at my computer and look out my window and see one slowing walking across my yard back into the forest.
They are so beautiful, I love them
Thank you again for sharing your beautiful story!

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Apr 11, 2008 1:31 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Thank You!

Thank YOU for reading and for sharing your kind remarks. I envy that you live in such proximity to them and to other wild animals. I hope I will enjoy the same someday soon.

Corax

Corax - Apr 20, 2008 12:42 pm - Voted 10/10

Beautiful

A beautifully written piece with melancholic undercurrents. It made me think about the reason why I roam the world climbing.
The meetings with inhabitants of the wilderness is one of the reasons I go to those outback places. For example 8000m peaks are great destinations, but instead of wilderness, animals and solitude, you find loud & cocky climbers, garbage, huge tent villages and many of the other (for me) bad sides of the climbing. I rather climb something smaller, less known and meet a couple of wolves, see untouched nature and enjoy the silence.
Thanks for this nice story. You write very well.

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Apr 21, 2008 10:01 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Beautiful

Thank you for the kind words. In the way you write your own pages, I see many of the reasons I go to the mountains. I think you put it best recently in the forum when you wrote, "Off to the mountains for some fresh air again." Fresh air indeed, and a welcome change from the human world. I just wish I could live it the way you seem to instead of having to settle for a few weeks a year. On the other hand, it makes those weeks that much more precious to me.

What you say about the 8000m peaks resonates. Here in the U.S. outside Alaska, we have the 14,000' peaks, our version of the 8000 peaks, so to speak. I once had an interest in climbing all of Colorado's fourteeners, but I abandoned that goal just shy of halfway through as I realized it wasn't worth the crowded parking lots, the trash on the trails, the idiotic behavior I sometimes encountered at the summits, etc. I became much more interested in the peaks I was seeing from those summits instead. My real love is the wilderness mountains of Wyoming and Montana, and it's to those places I keep returning to rediscover my spirit and learn more about myself and the wild parts of the world.

I'm glad you got out of Tibet okay after your arrest! And you provided an interesting, informative perspective that wasn't widely reported here. Thanks for doing that.

robfitz

robfitz - Apr 24, 2008 10:22 pm - Hasn't voted

Coyboyography

Anybody ever listen to Ian Tyson song about mr. Coyote? Even though Mr Coyote has eaten a dog I loved, I love Mr Coyote. he adapts. We shud learn.............

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Apr 25, 2008 9:54 am - Hasn't voted

Re: Coyboyography

Good words. Thank you.

imzadi

imzadi - Nov 19, 2008 11:23 am - Voted 10/10

Maturing

As I "grow up"...I find that I'm changing who I thought I was. I grew up in a small city (Augusta, ME) in the middle of a typical neighborhood. I grew up knowing the dangers and the nuisance of most wildlife...coyotes especially. Part of me always felt a small pull to wildlife...and to the beauty that is nature (even as a young, fat, lazy child...I would "climb" the 1.0 mi trail to the "summit" of the local mountain-at 1389 feet!- to enjoy the view...even though it damn near killed me at the time)...but, I was brought up one way and that is what it was all about.

Your article pulls even further at that part of me that always knew there was more to nature than what WE can get from it.

Thank you, again. You truly do speak for my heart.

Bob Sihler

Bob Sihler - Nov 19, 2008 8:37 pm - Hasn't voted

Re: Maturing

Thanks for your mesage. I never really saw wildlife as a nuisance, not even deer when they eat all the plants in one's yard; they are, after all, just trying to make a living in a world that was once theirs but which we carved up. There are limits to that tolerance, of course, but I do tend to side with the animals' interests. I guess I've felt that way since I was a kid, always delighting in wildlife and wishing I could be closer to it, always saddened by the harm I would see done to it by people-- cleared forests, drained lakes, filled streams, roadkill, poisoned and trapped animals, etc.

However, I understand your point; there are matters on which I've changed, becoming much more moderate over the years, and it mostly comes from maturing and seeing a bigger picture and also being able to see other people's points of view.

To be fair, I must admit I've never lived in a way that wildlife could hamper my livelihood by killing livestock or eating crops, and I'm sensitive to those concerns, but it often seems that people on that other side refuse to see any middle ground themselves, and I gradually have lost patience and interest in their concerns. The constant feuding over the wolves around Yellowstone is a perfect case in point. I, of course, want the wolves to be there, but I also support programs to reimburse ranchers for confirmed wolf-caused kills and I accept that problem wolves sometimes have to be killed. But those opposed seem just to want them all gone and keep reciting arguments based on fear, ignorance, and dishonesty; there is no interest in coexistence and it is instead all about them. Hence, their recalcitrance drives compromise-minded people like me away and hardens my views.

Viewing: 21-40 of 50


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