We Shall Remain: Geronimo

geronimoDon't forget to tune into PBS tonight for Episode 4 of We Shall Remain:

In February of 1909, the indomitable Chiricahua Apache medicine man Geronimo lay on his deathbed. He summoned his nephew to his side, whispering, “I should never have surrendered. I should have fought until I was the last man alive.” It was an admission of regret from a man whose insistent pursuit of military resistance in the face of overwhelming odds confounded not only his Mexican and American enemies, but many of his fellow Apaches as well.

Pete Seeger

screenshot_012New Yorker, April 17th, 2006: Here is a story told to me lately by a man named John Cronin, who is the director of the Pace Academy for the Environment, at Pace University. Cronin has known Seeger for thirty years. "About two winters ago, on Route 9 outside Beacon, one winter day, it was freezing—rainy and slushy, a miserable winter day—the war in Iraq is just heating up and the country's in a poor mood," Cronin said. "I'm driving north, and on the other side of the road I see from the back a tall, slim figure in a hood and coat. I'm looking, and I can tell it's Pete, He's standing there all by himself, and he's holding up a big piece of cardboard that clearly has something written on it. Cars and trucks are going by him. He's getting wet. He's holding the homemade sign above his head—he's very tall, and his chin is raised the way he does when he sings—and he's turning the sign in a semicircle, so that the drivers can see it as they pass, and some people are honking and waving at him, and some people are giving him the finger. He's eighty-four years old. I know he's got some purpose, of course, but I don't know what it is. What struck me is that, whatever his intentions are, and obviously he wants people to notice what he's doing, he wants to make an impression—anyway, whatever they are, he doesn't call the newspapers and say, 'I'm Pete Seeger, here's what I'm going to do.' He doesn't cultivate publicity. That isn't what he does. He's far more modest than that. He would never make a fuss. He's just standing out there in the cold and the sleet like a scarecrow. I go a little bit down the road, so that I can turn and come back, and when I get him in view again, this solitary and elderly figure, I see that what he's written on the sign is 'Peace.'"Cold Splinters: The River Is WideMP3: Pete Seeger - The Flowers Of Peace

Justice Souter in New Hampshire

What a cool judge.NYT:

Justice Souter was born in Massachusetts but moved to New Hampshire when he was 11, settling into his grandparents’ farmhouse on Cilley Hill Road. After going to college and law school at Harvard, he returned to New Hampshire to practice law and quickly became the state’s attorney general, scaling the White Mountains in his down time.“A lot of people would live up here and hate it,” said Wilbur A. Glahn, a lawyer who has known Justice Souter since 1975 and still hikes with him in the summer. “But David has got a real love for the people and the land and the simple things here. I’m not sure I know a lot of people who are more connected to a place than he is. It’s a very strong, kind of visceral feeling that he has.”

RMNP Requires Bear Canisters

RMNP Ranger: So do you want to rent a bear canister if you'll be out in the backcountry?Me: Nah, I think we'll be good.RMNP Ranger: Highly recommend it.Me: Yeah, well, I guess...actually, no we're fine.RMNP Ranger: You're sure?Me: Jim, do you want to get bear canister? Ranger says we should.Jim: No, man.Me: Ok, thanks, we're fine.Starting May 1st, Rocky Mountain National Park is requiring bear canisters on all overnight trips. (via Backpacker)

We Shall Remain: The Trail Of Tears

screenshot_011The third episode of We Shall Remain, Trail Of Tears, aired last night, and if you haven't been watching these documentaries on PBS, you should. Yeah, there's the American Experience historical documentary acting, but Wes Studi made an appearance in last night's episode, so you can't get too hell bent on that. The documentaries are interesting because, ultimately, they show that the Native Americans played an active role in their own history.The Trail Of Tears refers to the march that southeast Native Americans made to Oklahoma after being relocated by the Indian Removal Act of 1830. Last night's episode focused on the Cherokees, who set up a European legal system, became Christian, and adopted their education system to the Western world, only to be forced out by the government and local militia. 4,000 of the 15,000 Cherokees that walked to Oklahoma, while singing Christian hymns, would die and never get to see the the new life that they made for themselves.Next week's episode focuses on the infamous leader of Chiricahua Apaches, Geronimo.We Shall Remain on PBS

Old Man Of The Mountain Goes Glass

I got back from a nice night of camping yesterday to find an envelope from the New Hampshire Department Of Motor Vehicles waiting for me in my mailbox. Finally, my replacement driver's license is in my wallet. I lost my license a little while ago, and instead of going up to the New York DMV, I sent 10 dollars in the mail to New Hampshire (my folks live in Portsmouth, NH) for a replacement. It was a pain in the ass carrying around my passport everywhere I went. Literally.Point of the story is that an artist has proposed to replicate the New Hampshire symbol, The Old Man Of The Mountain, with a glass structure that people would be able to walk into. The Old Man crumbled to the ground in May of 2003, but it still adorns just about everything in The Granite State. Seems like a really really bad idea. Let the Old Man rest in peace. Full story is at GoBlog.

Poisoned Waters

Evening On Puget SoundPoisoned Waters:

"The '70s were a lot about, 'We're the good guys; we're the environmentalists; we're going to go after the polluters,' and it's not really about that anymore," Jay Manning, director of ecology for Washington state, tells FRONTLINE. "It's about the way we all live. And unfortunately, we are all polluters. I am; you are; all of us are."

Watch Poisoned Waters in full on PBS' FRONTLINEMP3: Otis Redding - You Don't Miss Your Water

GSI Outdoors

EnamelEnamel is a little bit heavy, sure. It doesn't pack down real small, no. But is there a better place to put the food you're cooking or the coffee you're pouring? I don't think so. Enamel is tough. It's good looking. It lasts a long time and makes you feel a little like putting on a Mets hat and driving cattle across the desert. And the best part? It's cheap.GSI Outdoors makes it well and has a wonderful selection of it here. The Spokane, WA company says it perfectly: "If enamelware can survive the ardors of the Oregon Trail, we're sure that it can handle anything the modern world dish out."And of course, they also sell their nFORM line of cooking gear for ultra light backpacking needs.GSI Outdoors

Wildflower Field Guide

The sun has been-a-shinin' lately, so when you're out doing that hiking and camping thing that y'all love to do, the likelihood of passing some wildflowers on the trail is getting higher. If you're out on a prairie in the Land Of Lincoln this summer and you're not sure if you're staring at a Cliff Onion or a Sawtooth Sunflower, you can take a picture and mosey on over to this amazing wildflower resource (it's not specific to the midwest) to figure out what it was you were admiring just two hours previous. If you're like me and don't know a damn thing about these colorful little pretties but have always wanted to impress your friends, then click here and let out a big sigh that you're on the Internet and not outside.I guess if you're one of those people who likes to do their research before you leave the house, there's always a book. Probably a better idea.

Everyday is Earth Day

Earth DayYou can't leave your house without being constantly reminded of Mother Earth's slow demise. Everyone in the world is trying to be more "green" and thousands of companies want your business because of their alleged dedication to the environment. As I'm sure you know, today is Earth Day, a celebration of our environment that started as a grassroots movement in 1970. Earth Day seems rather outdated in these times, but according to organizers, a billion people will observe Earth Day this year, making it the largest secular civic event in the world. What does that mean? Probably nothing. MP3: Ron Wood - Mystifies Me (thx)

Monkey Wrench Gang + Loudon Wainwright III Ctd...

Smith and the doctor passed around the firewater. Abbzug, who did not as a rule drink booze, opened her medicine pouch, removed a Tampax tube, took out some weed and rolled a second little brown cigarette twisted shut at one end. She lit up and passed it around, but no one cared to smoke with her except a relectant Hayduke and his memories."The pot revolution is over?" she said."All over," Doc said. "Marijuana was never more than an active placebo anyway.""What nonsense.""An oral pacifier for colicky adolescents.""What utter rubbish."The conversation lagged. The two young women from San Diego (a suburb of Tijuana) sang a song called "Dead Skunk in the Middle Of The Road."- Edward Abbey, The Monkey Wrench Gang, 1975Youtube: Loudon Wainwright - Dead Skunk

The Monkey Wrench Gang

Monkey Wrench Gang In 1985, as part of The Monkey Wrench Gang's 10th birthday, Robert Crumb illustrated Edward Abbey's classic novel about eco-sabotage. The book is Abbey's most famous work of fiction that tells the story of an unlikely group of misfits - Seldom Seen Smith (a river guide), George Hayduke (an ex-green beret who measures the distance between places by how many six packs he can drink while driving), Doc Sarvis (a surgeon from New Mexico who loves to burn billboards) and Bonnie Azbug (Doc Sarvis' tough love "partner") - who reek havoc on the American Southwest by destroying the dams, bridges, and machines that they believe are destroying it. The Monkey Wrench Gang is widely recognized as the literature that spawned Dave Foreman's and Mike Roselle's Earth First.Dream Garden Press is the place to go to get this version of the book. I highly highly recommend spending the extra few bucks. The illustrations are wonderful and there are a few great pictures of the two men hanging out in Arches National Park.In addition to the the book, Dream Garden also sells some t-shirts of the Crumb illustrations that are cheap as hell for how great they are. They're not the "dad shirts" that you might be expecting. Go ahead and buy one. Cold Splinters is the proud owner of the Hayduke Lives! version.Look: Original Cover of The Monkey Wrench Gang

Vasque Sundowners

The burgundy Vasque Sundowners I used to own were some of the best boots I ever had the pleasure of slipping onto my size 10.5 feet. They were the Paul Newmans of hiking boots: strong, durable, and classically good looking. Vasque recommends wearing them not only on the mountain but to the supermarket as well. I concur. Unfortunately mine are now in shoe heaven as a few years ago my dumb ass put them a little too close to the fire while drying them out after wading down a river in the Catskills. The tongues were burnt to a crisp and they were eventually retired.Good lord, what a good looking boot.