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Writin' The River

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Ambivalence of Wilderness

12/22/2015

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​A few weeks ago I took a short trip up to the Mogollon Rim, and found myself hiking around the West Clear Creek area.  I encountered a line of barbed wire fencing which bore this sign:
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​Quite frankly, I think the point of this post is that I’m not sure how I feel about this sign – or rather, the idea behind this sign, what this sign represents.  On the one hand, I am gladdened to know that the state has set aside tracts of land for wilderness, land that will presumably remain relatively pristine and untouched by logging, logging roads, and the ubiquitous Winnebago RV.
 
Still, I wonder what it means that to be behind this sign, behind this permeable boundary represented by barbed wire (barbed wire, of course, is the quintessential symbol of civilization for every westerner).  What does it mean to the tree in front of this sign versus one of the pines behind it?  Do foraging elk care what this barbed wire represents?  Do the bear?
 
“Wilderness” is defined by an online dictionary as “a wild and uncultivated region, as of forest or desert, uninhabited or inhabited only by wild animals; a tract of wasteland” (dictionary.com).  According the Wilderness Act of 1964, “A wilderness, in contrast with those areas where man and his own works dominate the landscape, is hereby recognized as an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain.”
 
Such definitions fit the legal designation, the denotative meaning of the sign, but there is another meaning of wilderness, a more connotative definition that hinges on the root word “wild.” That which is wild is natural and unrestrained, and how can a state restrain through barbed wire borders that which is properly, by definition, unrestrained?  Doug Peacock, author of Grizzly Years, used a different definition, saying “it ain’t wilderness unless there’s a critter out there that can kill you and eat you.”   I love this definition.
 
This is not to suggest that there is something morally superior about being mauled by a bear, but that there may be something morally superior in choosing to tread where one is not guaranteed of being the apex predator.  Here is the psychological value of wilderness for mankind, especially in the highly complex, technologically driven cultures of first-world nations.
 
It’s good for the state to designate land as “wilderness” in order to protect it from the ravages of civilization, both the rapacious industries of logging and mining as well as the well-intentioned consumption of RV campers.  But don’t be fooled; it’s not really wilderness until you feel the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end. 
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December 15th, 2015

12/15/2015

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Saturday I spent a rewarding afternoon with the Chandler Police Department.  Not in an official capacity, but as a student in their Motorcycle Safety Course.  They hosted about thirty fellow riders for a full day of training in the finer art of motorcycle control, handling, and safe riding.

It is always interesting to me, as an educator, to watch other educators at work, and never more so than when the topic is dramatically different than my own field.  Teaching a physical skill like controlling a motorcycle is far different than teaching the almost internal skills associated with writing, but at the end of the day, there are more similarities than differences.  The officers, who had probably fifty years combined experience in both riding and teaching, were able to diagnose at a fair distance the precise movements I needed to employ to negotiate my turns more smoothly and cleanly, and they were able to articulate these changes in ways that made sense to me.  I only hope that I am so insightful and succinct in my writing instruction to my own students.

If you're in the greater Phoenix area, check out the Chandler PD.  This was their first training day, but won't be their last.  Look for another one in the spring, and if you're on the west side of the valley, call on the Peoria PD, who conducts similar training for the public. Protecting, serving, and helping us all stay safer on the highways.

​

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