Living on Wilderness Time

Front Cover
University of Virginia Press, 2015 M03 6 - 320 pages

Melissa Walker set out on a journey that many women of her generation have mapped only in their dreams. Like many American chroniclers before her who have surrendered to the aimless pleasures of the road, Walker had no geographical destination in mind, but she did have two definite goals—one personal, one political—for her journey. She was looking for the peace and solitude of the backcountry, certainly, but she also wanted to learn the dynamics of preserving wild places and to devote herself to that cause. In the Sky Islands of southern Arizona, on the banks of the Popo Agie River and the Wind River Mountains in Wyoming, in Yellowstone, Grand Teton, Rocky Mountain, and Olympic National Park, in Gila and Glacier Peak Wilderness, she encountered the hazards of wild animals and extreme weather, and she began to reassess what parts of her life she could control.

Living on Wilderness Time is a book for those who have visited wild places and want to return, and for others whose overcommitted urban lives make them long for land where time is measured differently and human beings are scarce. Above all it is a call to join those who, like Aldo Leopold, see wilderness as vital to the human community.

Melissa Walker is vice president of National Wilderness Watch, chair of the Georgia chapter of Wilderness Watch, serves on the Southern Appalachian Council of the Wilderness Society, and is the author of Reading the Environment and Down from the Mountaintop. She has been Professor of English at the University of New Orleans and Mercer University and a fellow of Women’s Studies at Emory University. Walker lives with her husband in Atlanta, Georgia.

From inside the book

Contents

Hurry Sickness
3
Home
14
Rock Springs
20
Alone in the Dark
33
Cows in the Wilderness
40
Home on the Range
52
Golden
58
Lion
69
Holden Village
79
Bear Poachers and Mushroom Wars
92
Canyons and Slickrock
102
Death in the Navajo Nation
115
This Is Texas
121
Settling In
135
Shopping
141
Copyright

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Popular passages

Page 83 - 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.
Page 22 - It's not the pale moon that excites me, that thrills and delights me...
Page 161 - Grass (1947) here are no other Everglades in the world. They are, they have always been, one of the unique regions of the earth, remote, never wholly known. Nothing anywhere else is like them: their vast glittering openness, wider than the enormous visible round of the horizon, the racing free saltness and sweetness of their massive winds, under the dazzling blue heights of space.
Page 122 - In the beginning we had common concerns and passions—the outdoors, physical fitness, writing—and we often talked about what we were going to do with the rest of our lives.
Page 20 - This often repeated ritual continued throughout my parents' long lives, and long after we'd left home my sister and I were expected to go along for the ride whenever we visited. Some weeks after my father died and a few months before her own death, I suggested a daunty to my grieving mother, who couldn't quite bring herself to admit that Daddy was gone. As we drove down a familiar red clay road and stopped on the banks of the Oconee River, tears rolled down her cheeks. "I've been pretending he's...
Page 18 - ... road winding through acres and acres of pines. Home is a stand of blooming peach trees in the spring and a pecan orchard raining nuts all over the ground in the fall. It's a towering oak tree I planted as a seedling and the antique rose that's the last remnant of my grandmother's once carefully tended garden. Home is the way the trees grow, the land lays, and the scent of a skunk or honeysuckle lingers in still air.
Page 11 - ... white wilderness." A wasteland, as an area unused or useless for agriculture or pasture. A space of sea or air, as in Shakespeare, "I stand as one upon a Rock, environ'd with a Wilderness of Sea" (Titus Andronicus). The oceans. A place of danger and difficulty: where you take your own chances, depend on your own skills, and do not count on rescue. This world as contrasted with heaven. "I walked through the wildernesse of this world" (Pilgrim's Progress). A place of abundance, as in John Milton,...
Page 24 - In the battle between the monetary value of timber and the connection he felt to the forest, I can't say that either won out. He seemed to live with the tension created by conflicting values: trees for money, the woods for feeling alive. I grew up in this tension, and I live there still.
Page 14 - Home ~~^; ALMOST EVERYTHING I remember about childhood took place in a small town in south Georgia. Much of what I remember happening inside houses is tinged with anxiety or boredom, but as soon as I place myself in the...

About the author (2015)

Melissa Walker was vice president of National Wilderness Watch, chair of the Georgia chapter of Wilderness Watch, served on the Southern Appalachian Council of the Wilderness Society, and was the author of Reading the Environment and Down from the Mountaintop. She had been Professor of English at the University of New Orleans and Mercer University and a fellow of Women's Studies at Emory University, and lived with her husband in Decatur, Georgia.

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