I wrote most of the following post/essay before the
presidential election of 2016. I was as surprised, as many were, with the
results. Ironically, I think this post/essay might speak to some of the reasons
behind the results, which, it seems, a lot of people have been pondering.
I can’t speak for other places in the U.S., rural areas,
small towns, industrial towns, coal country etc. but here in the North Cascade
the driving force behind many local people’s choice for president is, I think,
disenfranchisement of rural and small town populations.
If the reader is wondering, I voted for Clinton, though I despise
her husband. I do know a lot of local people here who voted for Trump. I think
a lot of people here feel invisible and powerless and this was their way to
speak out and be heard in a region that is overwhelmed by wealthy and powerful
area, namely Seattle, but also much of the greater Puget Sound area. A lot of
folks living in these areas profess to be liberal and progressive yet so much
of the rhetoric I hear coming from these areas supports
natural resource policies that are regressive or oppressive to rural communities.
A commentator I heard on the radio summed it up quite well
saying something to the effect that Washington State is considered to be a blue
state but in reality it is one blue dot (Seattle) in a sea of red. This is of
course a simplification, the republicans do quite well in this state as far as
holding seats in the state legislature but, for so many things Seattle calls
the shots. What the rest of the state thinks or wants or even needs doesn’t
count.
I think rural and urban people hold many distorted views of
one another. This is probably the natural result of a world where many people
are overcommitted and algorithms continually steer us to the same or similar
people and places on our electronic devices. This undoubtedly exacerbates a
natural disconnect that probably always existed between people of rural and
urban backgrounds and it also undoubtedly exacerbates the distortions in our
views of one another. We might not have talked much to each other in the past.
We talk and interact even less now.
The big difference between distorted urban views of rural
people and distorted rural views of urban people being that, distorted rural views
of urbanites has little to no impact on urbanites (possibly the present presidential
election situation excepted, at least for liberal leaning urbanites). For example, I live in
a sparsely populated area where people are spread out. There is no organized
voting block. And the towns that do have elected mayors are small and their voting
blocks are often insignificant. As a rural citizen I feel largely powerless to realistically
effect any change in public policy.
The urban environment has a critical mass of people in a
small area, plenty of infrastructure and a large talent pool of people
available to make the difficult task of organizing large groups of people
behind any given cause much easier than in a rural area. Thus it is relatively
easier to create large, significant voting blocks which drive a lot of the
public policy that rural people have to live with. Some of this public policy
is tolerable or even good but some of it is based on distorted urbanite views
of rural areas.
The following post/essay explores one of these organizing
efforts and the distortions that I, as one coming from a rural background, see
in it. As I have stated, I have my own distortions, prejudices and filters. I
will leave it to the reader to determine if the arguments I have laid out have
merit and the grievances I have voiced are justified. Thus ends my preamble to
the preamble of a rather long post/essay.
About three years ago I received e-mail from Braided River
Publishing, the publishing arm of the Mountaineers Club in Seattle, about a
book and “communications campaign” about the North Cascades. The e-mail was
soliciting photographs for the
book. The photos would be paid for (which was surprising to me, quite often
such solicitations ask for donations of photos in the name of the cause). No
other input was asked for.
I knew what this was about. I had been aware for several
years that a number of people, most of whom don’t live in the North Cascades,
were attempting to get North Cascades National Park expanded. I had also read
in newspapers that park expansion proponents were going to try to build support
for it outside the North Cascades since they weren’t having a lot of luck
locally. The book “The North Cascades: Finding Beauty and Renewal in the Wild
Nearby” written by authors who don’t live here in the North Cascades was one of
the results of their efforts.
I assume this book is to be part of the “communications
campaign” about the North Cascades and an effort to sell the expansion of North
Cascades National Park and other preservation schemes to a greater public who also
doesn’t live in the North Cascades. The authors of this book don’t participate
in the everyday life of the people who do live in the North Cascades and they
only spend a limited amount of time here on vacation or on “retreats”. In this
book they have put together an artfully spun tale with a lot of dynamic, pretty
pictures and half truths that are all the more deceptive because they have the
aura of truth about them.
This book is designed to influence and persuade people who
don’t know much about the North Cascades to get behind efforts to preserve even
more land over and above the large area that is already preserved. This will be
at the expense of small local communities who are in the minority and have very
little voice. The attitudes and philosophies of the authors of this book are
the epitome of what helps create the poverty that, in turn, creates the problems
experienced by the people who live in the North Cascades and no doubt in rural
areas everywhere.
I knew that this book wouldn’t have any local perspective
outside of a select few people who work for North Cascades National Park or
some other government agency or who may actually live here but make their
living elsewhere. And, while I think that these folk’s perspective is certainly
valid, it doesn’t tell whole story. The ideas the authors of this book are
presented with an air of inevitability, like Manifest Destiny “the Forest
Service road system will shrink”. It wasn’t clearly stated but seemed to be continually
inferred that because no kind of industrial uses or development should be
allowed in the rural communities of the North Cascades, there is really nothing
else besides tourism and catering to the elite few whose situation in life
allows them to access remote mountainous areas. So, the thread of the book
goes, the people who live in the North Cascades will just have to get by on
tourism and that is enough. Nowhere does it address many well-known shortcomings
of an economy based largely on tourism which, in most cases, and certainly in
the North Cascades, produces few family wage jobs.
Ask yourself: Would you like to try to make a living, buy a
house, raise a family solely on the wages provided by service jobs in a highly
seasonal tourism industry that is only really viable for about 6 months a year?
Is that a future you would want for your children? If this is not good enough
for the majority of people, and I suspect it is not, then why should this be
the sole option for anyone who happens to live in the North Cascades and
doesn’t want to commute to work several hours or more each day?
I am here to emphatically say that an economy based solely
or largely on tourism is not the only option in the North Cascades.
Unfortunately I lack the skills and resources to do this as effectively as the
authors of the book. Be that as it may, I feel something needs to be said about
the state of affairs in the communities of the North Cascades (specifically
mine of which I am most familiar). Since I feel “The North Cascades: Finding
Beauty and Renewal in the Wild Nearby”, hereafter referred to as “the book or
this book”, is the epitome of the problems faced by the people who live in the
North Cascades, in this essay I will try to provide a rebuttal of sorts to this
book. The most effective way I could come up with was to provide direct quotes
by the book’s authors and then add my commentary on those quotes. My apologies
if I didn’t get the quotes exactly right every time. I make no apologies for what
I think.
It seems that nowadays image is much more powerful than
reality, especially if you aren’t subject to the realities misrepresented by
the images you receive. I wouldn’t at all be surprised if it has always been
this way since before written history. The creators of this book are, for the
most part, professionals who specialize in creating and selling images and
ideas. They have a well oiled machine or process with a well honed message,
calculated to persuade by tugging at people’s emotions. I would not be
surprised if public relations specialists and focus groups were employed to
help figure out the best words and turns of phrase to be canned and distributed
as messages and mantras. The main author, William Dietrich, fairly crows about
how these tactics were employed in preservationist campaigns of the 1960’s. The
people behind this book are well positioned in areas where the wealth and power
of our society is concentrated, where networks that include many powerful
people can be easily built and where there are wealthy people to solicit for
funds. They don’t actually live in the North Cascades where there is no money.
I do live in the North Cascades. So did my dad. And so did
my grandparents, my grandpa coming here in 1888. I don’t have an editor or PR
staff. And it will quickly become obvious to the reader that I could really use
an editor. I am writing this on own time at night, during the dregs of my day.
I am usually very tired and would rather be sleeping by the time I sit down to
write. I haven’t spent much time honing my writing skills and writing is
difficult for me. I dread sitting down in front of the computer every night.
The task of trying to hammer thoughts and words into something coherent is even
more difficult because, when I am attempting to do this, it is usually after my
bed time and I am dead tired from working all day.
My messages won’t always be on point and many of the tangents
I take could probably become essays in their own right. My messages are not
slick or groomed for maximum effectiveness or carefully calculated to persuade
people though I am definitely trying to persuade the reader to think more
deeply about the North Cascades and the people who live here. I realize that in
this writing I might alienate some people that I think rather highly of. This
is regrettable but I think what I have to say needs to be said.
I am quite sure that I don’t speak for everyone who lives in
the North Cascades and I can only speak with authority on the northwestern part
of the North Cascades, where I live and am most familiar. But I am just as sure
that there are a significant number who do live here who would agree with the
majority of my views. These people are seldom heard in most discussions about
land management issues for a number of reasons, including lack of time, lack of
public forums that are readily accessible to them and lack of communications
skills. This doesn’t mean that these people are stupid or that they don’t care. For
By chance I have tended to be more bookish than my peers and
probably possess certain communications skills, no matter how rudimentary, that
many of my peers don’t. This doesn’t make me smarter than my peers. They are
every bit as intelligent as the next person. I am probably just a little better
at communicating through writing. Make no mistake though, compared to the
creators of this book, I am a rank amateur. Incidentally, because the creators
of this book are better at communicating than me and my peers, this also doesn’t
make them smarter than us.
Here is the point of view of someone who has lived, and made
a living, in the North Cascades for decades, whose people have been here for
generations. Ask yourself : Do most of the authentic people in world walk
around with slick sales pitches ready to hand? Or, even if a person is well
spoken, do they occasionally stumble or ramble? I can only hope reader
understands this and will give the following words a fair examination as
tedious as this may become at times.
In the introduction (pp. 18, 19) of this book the publishers
make it clear that their main focus is preservation. At the start, they use the
word conservation, i.e. “leaders of conservation groups” but they use the word
preservation almost exclusively in the rest of the text.
They try to make it seem like the book will take an
even-handed approach to the subject of the North Cascades, stating that there
was disagreement among leaders of conservation groups involved in making the
book on what should be preserved and how but didn’t want to “take sides”. They
then go on to explain why more preservation is needed in the North Cascades,
stating as threats to the North Cascade along with industrial uses like timber,
water use and mining; pollution, climate change, roads, housing, recreation and
tourism.
If they are not “taking sides” how come there is no one from either
the mining or timber industry featured in the book? Timber, at least can be
done as sustainably as anything else, there is a mountain of science on this.
And timber produces much better wages than tourism. And, as far as the
pollution and climate change goes, the overwhelming majority of that comes from
the places where the authors live. It is the byproduct of the economy that
supports their existence.
Historically, industrial activities like timber harvest were
one of the most important economic engines in rural areas and small communities
in the North Cascades. These activities not only provided good jobs that
allowed people to raise families and buy homes but they also generated tax
revenues that helped support public facilities and infrastructure. It appears to
me that these people and economies are seen by the creators of this book, most
of whom don’t live in the North Cascades and most of whom contribute very
little to the well being of the communities here, as a threat to their utopian
vision of the North Cascades. When the authors visit here occasionally they
don’t want their “experience” ruined.
I honestly think the creators of this book would be much
happier if all of the local types, the people with the memories and long
personal history in this place, would just disappear. This is already happening
at a rapid pace. If many of the visions contained in this book come to pass, it
will accelerate.
Conservation and preservation are not the same thing. The
aim of conservation is the sustainable use of natural resources. The key word
is “use”. In other words using the land to meet society’s needs for raw
materials without damaging the land’s capacity to produce these raw materials.
An analogy would be if a resource were held in an account like in a bank,
sustainability would be living off the interest of that account without
touching the principal.
The aim of preservation is to attempt to maintain something
in a static or unchanged state by excluding human presence and activities as
much as possible. Maintaining living, ever-changing natural systems in an
unchanged state is a tall order even if we weren’t in the throes of climate
change.
Preservation of lands prohibits use of the resources found
on those lands for all but the most minor activities. The activities allowed on
preserved lands could be classified as a use but it isn’t a use that meets the
majority of society’s needs for basic needs. And it adversely and
disproportionately impacts the local populations nearest to preserved lands,
who depend on those resources in order to generate enough revenue to have a
functional economy.
These local populations are typically small and lack the
resources to mount large campaigns to protect their interests. Because they are
small, they are also politically vulnerable. In the list cited above, even
recreation and tourism are cited as threats that theoretically need to be
curtailed. The business of tourism has notoriously thin margins and low wages
and, if this activity (tourism) was curtailed along with everything else that
is stated as a threat, that doesn’t leave much by which a person who lives in
the North Cascades can make a living (commuting long distances to work falls
under the pollution and climate change threat categories).
I think a certain amount of preservation is warranted but
preservation by itself isn’t a silver bullet that will save the world.
Preservation strategies have a number of problems and shortcomings, chief of
which, is that, when overdone, they oppress local, resource dependant
populations. A close second to this is that it is not a question of if human
society will use natural resources. Every society on the planet uses natural
resources. The question is: In what manner these natural resources will be used?
The problem with preservation is that, by setting aside a
given part of the land base and prohibiting any resource production, more
pressure is put on the remainder of the land base to meet society’s needs for natural
resources. Or this demand shifts elsewhere out of the public eye of the
nimbyists in wealthy areas and impacts another part of the planet.
There are already 2.7 million contiguous acres of land
preserved in the North Cascades. That is enough. There is also plenty of
science that could be used to figure out how to use the resources on the
remainder of the unpreserved land base in the most sustainable manner possible.
I think timber and forestry is particularly promising.
There are entire colleges in this country and around the
world devoted to forestry, environmental science, ecology and, social science
and economics. The science is there. We need to get past our misconceptions and
hangups and use it.
It would appear that the main focus of this book, according
to the introduction, is preservation. Though the introduction claims to want to
take an even-handed view, the perspective of someone from one of the small
communities in the North Cascades who has made a living locally here,
independent of environmental groups or the National Park Service or other
federal agencies is completely missing.
This is not to say that the perspectives of people featured
in this book who are associated with the aforementioned groups isn’t valid. I
know a lot of these people. They are good people and their perspectives are
absolutely valid. However, their perspectives are not the whole story. I also
know a lot of people who have made a living here locally independent of the
federal government and their perspectives are usually quite different. These
perspectives are every bit as valid as any other and they deserve to be heard.
But they are so completely missing from this book that it is almost a theme. It
is like these people and their perspectives are invisible.
I have lived here my whole life and I have moved in several
different worlds, working for the National Park Service, in private industry
and now for a public utility. I will try to present the North Cascades from the
perspective of someone who lives here and has made a living here locally.
From my reading of it, this book is not even close to being
even-handed. It has a strong and definite slant towards preservation. The
invisible local people I previously mentioned are most likely invisible in
order to tightly control the message of this book because their ideas would tend to disagree with that message. It seemed to me that even
the messages of the local people featured in this book who would tend to be
more sympathetic to preservation ideas were tightly controlled, or edited, as
well.
There is a strong theme in this book of using words and
phrases calculated to manipulate people by pushing buttons and to deceive by
not quite telling the whole truth (or accurately representing reality might be
a better word). There are parts of this book that practically celebrate such
deceptions. This is a dangerous game to play because two can play it. Examples
of some buzzwords I have personally cooked up to describe many of the philosophies I saw
expressed in this book: Environmental Apartheid, Enviro-dogma and
Enviro-babble. These words are calculated to push buttons and may be inflammatory
or inspirational to certain people, depending on one’s world view. But they
don’t tell the whole truth (or represent reality) either. I think that such
things as truth and reality are hard to even determine in many cases because
the world isn’t black and white. Reality and truth can’t be summed up in simple
buzzwords. In statements on any given subject they omit the overwhelming
majority of information, depending on pushing people’s buttons to get them to react
in a manner that the buzzword creator desires.
The bias of this book is usually quite subtle and can be all
the more deceptive for that, especially for someone who doesn’t know much about
the North Cascades. I will attempt to point out subterfuge where I can. I
prefer to give the creators of this book the benefit of the doubt and say that
they don’t understand that preservation actions lead to the disempowerment and
disenfranchisement of local, resource dependent communities. After all, none of
them live in the North Cascades and none are dependent on the local economy
here in order to make a living.
The foreword of the book is by Richard Louv, author of “Last
Child in the Woods”. If I understand the situation correctly, this is a guy who,
at the time of the writing, lived in San Diego and who lived in Seattle for a
year or two and maybe visited the North Cascades a few times. In the first
place: If he only lived in Seattle for a year or two and only visited the North
Cascades a few times, what does this guy know about the North Cascades? Secondly
I would point out that having a book published and any of the notoriety accompanies
this doesn’t make one omniscient and I don’t know how you build enough
knowledge about any place to speak with authority after only a few visits.
In the foreword Louv states that the beauty of landscape has
the “power to transform and renew human beings.”
Probably for certain people this is true. It is for me.
However, there are others for whom aesthetics are an afterthought or for whom
these types of experience are not that transformative. If we stick to those for
whom aesthetics are important, how can they be transformed if they can’t access
their public lands? The book, “Last Child in the Woods”, this guy’s claim to
fame, is all about getting children out to experience nature. Access to natural
areas on federal public lands has shrunk dramatically since I was a kid and it
continues to shrink today. The “protection” measures, mostly preservation
measures, championed later in this book are responsible for much of this
decline and will only serve to limit access even more, leaving the relatively
few remaining areas accessible to the general public crowded and hectic. On top of that, access to private land and state owned Department of Natural Resources (DNR) land has decreased dramatically as well. Currently,
some of the remaining places on federal public land that are very popular are already crowded and hectic. If more access
to public land is cut off these places will become even more so, probably initiating
restrictive permit policies as is the case in the Alpine Lakes Wilderness where, as I understand it, you need to make a reservation to get a permit to visit during certain times of the year. So
even fewer people are able to use the public land that they own and pay taxes
on.
Louv states, “We hunger for authenticity”
What can be more authentic than people who have lived and made
a living in the North Cascades for generations? People who have literally been
shaped by their lives here? There are still a lot of people in and around the North
Cascades who fit that description. My family has been here for about 128 years as
of this writing and I know of others of European descent who have been here
longer, not to mention those of Native American descent. That being said, there
are also a lot of people here who, while they may not have been around as long
as some of the old-timers, are no less authentic because they have made the
investment of living here and trying to make a living here. Nowhere in the book
is this perspective presented outside of a few people who made their living
working for North Cascades National Park or other government agencies.
Louv also states, “Natural history will, or could be, as
important to our personal and regional identities as human history,
particularly in those places where human history has been interrupted or
forgotten.”
I don’t know exactly what he is talking about and I don’t
know if he knows what he is talking about. I know that for myself and many other
local people, the human history of eastern Skagit and Whatcom Counties, of my
ancestors and their neighbors and people who came before them, surrounds and
permeates just about everything. There are a lot of stories and history out
there that is either personal or a common about nearly every mountain and
stream in this area. I have pointed this out in my series of Lesser Known
History of the North Cascades which covered a tiny fraction of this human
history.
Eastern Skagit County is not unique in this respect I know a
lot of people in similar areas along the Cascades where the same is true. If
this history has not been perfectly preserved, I would point out that neither
has the human history of our cities. It seems like any time there is a major
digging project of some kind in our cities, something is unearthed that no one
knows or remembers exactly what it was for or why it was configured in a
certain way. I would also point out that a many of the people who live in the
North Cascades interact with the natural world on a daily basis, sometimes
whether they want to or not. Natural history is an almost inescapable part of
their lives. Therefore the natural history of this area is already a part of
their personal and regional identities. Of course, Mr. Louv never talked to me
or anyone like me. I would venture to guess he has never attended any of the
frequent old-timers picnics or reunions where there are still people living who
knew some of the first white settlers in the North Cascades and a lot of the
Native people from that era. Neither did the other authors of the book. They
all got their information from other books, most of which were authored by
others who also never bothered to talk to anyone with a long history in the
North Cascades.
Louv goes on to cite the benefits of interacting with
nature, better mental and physical health, sharper cognition, more creativity
and productivity and the “nourishment of the spirit.” He also cites studies
that more species in parks appear to benefit human psychology and “interacting
with nature appears to lead people to nurture close relationships with fellow
human beings, to value community and be more generous with money.”
I would agree with at least part of the above statements. I
enjoy being out in nature and I certainly feel better mentally and physically
after most of my outings. This is all well and good but, again, if you restrict
access to the majority of the general public, those few areas where access can
be had will be just as overcrowded and hectic as any urban center, only the
scenery will be different. For the majority of the general public who, for
whatever reason can’t escape those crowds, I think this is going to impair a
lot of the benefits just cited. I know I personally find crowded trails and
trailheads nearly as hectic as urban areas I have been to.
As far as the presence of more species being good for human
psychology, there is a lot of really cool stuff in the North Cascades but most
of it doesn’t jump out at you. These species are not the so-called charismatic
megafauna that are recognized by a wide section of the general public. Many of
the species one finds in the North Cascades are small and nondescript. In many
cases you have to be a naturalist, often with a pretty narrow field of interest
to even know what you are looking at, much less appreciate it.
And as far as the larger animals, deer, bear, cougars, etc.,
the so-called charismatic megafauna go, the North Cascades aren’t like the
African savannah. Dense forests and brush, at least on the west side, make it
difficult to spot even large animals. I have been on many outings deep into the
North Cascades. On the majority of the trips I’ve been on, I didn’t see any
large animals.
As for nourishment of the spirit, I think this is also
important for certain people, myself included, but I know other people who
don’t really care to go out into, or deal with, nature. One also has to enjoy a
certain level of economic security to be able to afford to look at the world and
think that your spirit needs nourishment.
Nourishment of the body and keeping a roof over your
family’s head and clothes on their backs is going to take priority over
nourishment of the spirit for most people. For many of the people who live in
or near the North Cascades this is the reality of their lives.
I do believe that many people on the lower end of the
economic spectrum do use the outdoors but, from what I have observed, these
folks tend to use more of the front country and car camping areas. They aren’t
buying a bunch of expensive gear to do extended trips into the backcountry. I
would guess that many of these folks prefer the few areas that still don’t
require a permit or fee to stay. Which brings up a question: What happened to
all of the areas where one could access public land for free?
Most campgrounds and trailheads that were free when I was
younger now require you to buy a permit to use. I can easily afford these fees
but they are still enough to make me wince a bit after buying a year’s worth of
permits for the various jurisdictions.
More importantly, these fees exclude a lot of people on the
lower end of the economic scale. How are their spirits going to get nourished? We
no longer have a very democratic system. Some of the few places where one can
still get out on public lands for free are U.S. Forest Service roads where you
can drive and park for free as long as you are more than a quarter mile from a
trailhead. Many of these roads are slated for closure because there is not a
budget to maintain them. Again, I would point out that if people can’t access their
lands, all of the benefits that Louv cites are for naught.
Finally, Louv states “The three major environmental
challenges of our time-climate change, the biodiversity collapse and the
disconnect between children and nature-are linked.”
In the name of protecting biodiversity, certain groups, many
of whom are behind this book or are authors in it, seem to be pushing to make
access to our public lands more difficult. This is justified in order to “protect”
public lands and the species of plants and animals that live on them.
Discouraging people from using these lands will prevent people from damaging
them so the argument goes. As I have pointed out in a previous post, while the
biodiversity in the North Cascades might be high, it is not on the same level
as many tropical areas or even other areas in the temperate world.
To quote material in one of my previous blog posts, Why We Shouldn't Expand North Cascades National Park:
“I have never
heard it stated that there are many, or even a few, species of plants and
animals that are endemic to the North Cascades. To my knowledge there aren’t
any but, of course, my knowledge of the North Cascades isn’t encyclopedic so I
could very well be wrong on this point. However, I have lived and worked here
almost my whole life and a number of those working years involved environmental
monitoring, including many of the species of organisms that occur here. So, I
think I would be safe in saying that there aren’t high levels of endemism in
the North Cascades. In other words, there are very few species endemic to the
North Cascades, if there are any at all.
What are endemic species? Endemic species are very important
for biodiversity because they are found only in a specific locality or area and
nowhere else in the world. Since endemic species are, by definition, limited to
small geographic areas, they are often more vulnerable to extinction, causing
rapid loss of biodiversity. So, while there are a lot of different species
found in the North Cascades, most, if not all of these species are also present
in areas outside of the North Cascades, in the Pacific Northwest Region, or
even across the northern hemisphere. In other words, most, if not all, species
found in the North Cascades have a large geographical distribution outside the
North Cascades and are at less risk of extinction than endemic species in other
parts of the region or world. Hence there is less risk of worldwide
biodiversity loss from human activity in the North Cascades.
The North Cascades are not as important to regional or
global biodiversity as other areas in the Pacific Northwest that do harbor
endemic species such as the Olympic Peninsula which harbors at least 20 species
of endemic plants and animals or other parts of the state and region that
harbor endemic species. From a global standpoint, the North Cascades are not
even in the same ball park as many tropical areas. The record holder of endemic
species worldwide is Madagascar with over 600 endemic species. The North
Cascades don’t qualify as a biodiversity hotspot according to Conservation
International’s criteria, which are used to help determine priority areas for
species conservation.
So there is biodiversity and then there is biodiversity.
Preserving more lands in the North Cascades would probably increase pressure on
natural resources around the world. This would probably serve to overall lower
global biodiversity or at least apply pressure in that direction natural
resources are sought in parts of the world where there are high rates of
endemism and biodiversity. Over the last few years, I have seen articles in
magazines like National Geographic that chronicle the loss of important tree
species in tropical forests around the world, sometimes even the loss of entire
forests.”
As far as connecting children to nature goes, if your goal is
preservation which is basically keeping as many people as possible out of
natural areas in order to “protect” biodiversity, how are you going to connect
children with nature in any meaningful way? Most of the private land where I
was exposed to nature as a kid is now off limits, developed, gated, posted. All
that remains are our public lands. The really sad thing about this is, as I
have pointed out, the biodiversity here is not on the same level as other areas
in the world and it is probably much more resilient than in those other areas
in the world. Yet biodiversity here is being “protected” at the expense of
those more fragile areas and at the expense of our public, children included.
Preservationists have been working very hard to put the idea in the
public’s mind that wilderness areas are diminishing. While this may be true in
many parts of the world, it is not the case in the North Cascades where 2.7
million acres, the bulk, or at least a major part, of the range, are preserved
in wilderness areas. Ironically, since much of the public can’t access these
areas, I think most people have difficulty grasping just how much area is
preserved, including the people behind “The North Cascades, Finding Beauty and
Renewal in the Wild Nearby”. If one sticks to the main trails, it might seem
that many areas are quite crowded. However, if one follows the old trails or
gets off trails completely, one rarely sees another human being. I have spent a
good bit of my life traveling to obscure places in the North Cascades. Many
places I go to are off trail and away from popular climbing routes and other
areas of heavy recreational use. In about thirty years of such travels, much
more than the authors of this book, I have barely scratched the surface of the
area in the North Cascades and only about twice have I run into someone else
Finally, barring what I have just said about keeping people
out of natural areas, if you do want to institute programs to connect children
with nature, how are you going to pay for it? The groups and authors behind
this book don’t generate much revenue by themselves. They depend on the larger
economy to generate enough excess revenue to fund their projects through grants
and other means. This larger economy is based on global trade, which, I should
point out, we are all a part of, myself included. This global trade in turn is
responsible for much of the greenhouse gas generation on the planet and the
degradation of sensitive natural areas around the world. Even federal grants
are based on money that, in theory, is generated from taxes which are also tied
to global trade in many ways.
Much of the rest of the book is authored by William
Dietrich, winner of a Pulitzer Prize for reporting on the Exxon Valdez oil
spill.
Dietrich paints the North Cascades as besieged on all sides
by development and the current booming population. He then goes on to state
that, “This region (the North Cascades) is the largest contiguous body of
protected lands along the four-thousand mile US-Canadian border, totaling 2.7
million acres.”
Two point seven million acres that will never be developed,
assuming the Wilderness Act stands as is. “the largest contiguous body of
protected lands” between Canada and the US. How is this under siege by
development? 2.7 million contiguous protected acres is not enough? It is also interesting that during the time
that civilization has laid so called siege to the North Cascades, I have seen
access to public lands in the North Cascades dwindle dramatically.
I have walked a lot of the ground in the North Cascades,
almost every summer week for at least 25 years, both on and off trail and I
feel quite confident in saying that the sheer ruggedness of these mountains,
whether they fall into a category that is considered “protected” or not,
guarantee that they are going to be safe from hordes of people for a long time
to come. This is especially true of the off trail areas. They are simply too
difficult for most people to access. It is also why 2.7 million acres in this
type of landscape where all development and motorized use is prohibited is
enough. We don’t need any more.
Dietrich states that the North Cascades are a “refuge of
calm in a frenzied world”, that “In a warming world, they are a remnant of the
Ice Age. In a homogeneous world, they remain exotic. They are best befriended
by foot.”
Befriending the North Cascades by foot is a quaint, naïve sentiment.
In the first place, I don’t see the North Cascades as a place one befriends. In
fact, these mountains share no human emotion and the unfeeling rock and
elements in them will cause the death of anyone or anything through the laws of
physics, falling rocks, limbs and trees, cold temperatures, swift stream
currents, electrical storms, etc. Nothing more. Nothing less. There is nothing
there to reason with or to be buddies with. The only human emotion or
sensibilities to be found in these mountains are in one’s fellow human beings
or within oneself.
Secondly, I see people every day that I think should get out
and exercise more and I can, admittedly, be kind of critical of such people. However,
I am not such a snob to think that, because someone doesn’t want to walk long
distances, they shouldn’t be able to enjoy at least part of the public land
that they own. And I don’t think the reluctance to leave a motor vehicle is
laziness alone. There are many people who lack the physical ability, time, and
knowledge required to walk long distances safely in the North Cascades, in
other words, the more casual users. Are these people to be denied the “refuge
of calm”? Are these people to be forbidden from seeing some of the last few
glaciers before they disappear? Providing a refuge of calm is possible even if
you provide easy access to some areas as long as there are enough areas to
spread the pressure of recreational users out. Many times I have driven up
logging roads to scenic areas (some where you could even see glaciers not too
far away without seeing anyone. This is becoming much more uncommon as the
number of accessible roads dwindles.
The figure is 2.7 million acres of wilderness where
mechanized equipment is prohibited. That is enough. We should be using the rest
of the land base for the benefit of everyone,
including those who lack the physical ability, time and knowledge to readily
access the mountains. I personally do a lot of walking as my past blog posts
have shown. However, I quite often find myself strapped for time so I will go
to some spot where access is easy and I can get away from it all. With small
children this is even more critical. The little kids of today don’t do well on
hours long death marches (I don’t know if kids of any era never did). And I
would think easily accessed areas would be even more important for those who
live fairly far away but still want to get out occasionally.
At some point, commenting on visitation in North Cascades
National Park Dietrich states, “only 26,000 venture far enough from cars to
enter the park proper.”
While in some (probably many) instances people are too lazy
to leave their cars, I don’t think this is true in every case. Try to imagine
you are someone coming from a background where hiking is not the norm. You’ve
only been hiking a few times in your life or not at all. Maybe you are on a vacation
tour to see the sights in the U.S. You show up here in the North Cascades. Even
if you have the time in your vacation itinerary and the physical ability to go
on a long hike you probably lack the knowledge and the gear to get very far. The
wilderness areas in the North Cascades, including North Cascades National Park
are geared for a certain type of user, the serious hiker, climber or horseman. Everyone
else has doesn’t get to see most of the really awesome things here like seas of
mountains and glaciers and waterfalls. 2.7 million acres of wilderness is
enough.
Dietrich takes the reader on a virtual hike where we
contemplate existence and switchbacks in a pseudo-zen fashion while sipping
water and unwinding from the hectic pace of modern day life.
I don’t know if this is really how it is for him or just a
fancy of his imagination. It is not how it really is for me. My reality? Pain. Burning
lungs, burning legs, nausea, a general overwhelming uncomfortable feeling, soaking,
itching, stinging sweat, excruciating leg cramps, psychological barriers that urge
me to just quit at every turn. I usually do eventually reach a point where I hit
a groove and am able to continue on despite the pain and discomfort. There is
some element to every long, hard hike that I have ever taken, and I have been
on quite a few, that is akin to going to the dentist. I know that to get the
rewards bestowed by such activities, there will be some discomfort, if not
outright pain, that will have to be endured.
That how it is for me on a trail. Off trail is much more
difficult; slick, steep slopes, nearly impenetrable brush that you spend sweat
soaked hours pushing your way through sometimes just to progress a mere quarter
mile, thorns scratching and festering in your hands and forearms for days,
falling rocks, limbs and even trees, dangerous wildlife, streams with slick
rock bottoms that threaten to sweep you away and drown you if you make a
misstep. And then you step into a bee’s nest and get stung and bitten numerous
times.
You need something to help you get through experiences like
this, at least I do. My personal method usually involves some
song or another, usually a rock song constantly looping through my head, along
with all the people and situations that I am pissed off about in the world. When
all else fails one word sticks in my mind during tough, monotonous stretches,
“endure”. Crude, not pretty, but it gets the job done for me.
Maybe these cruder methods have some relationship to the
pioneer spirit that Dietrich knocks. The spirit that seeks to conquer
everything. I don’t know. Some of the mountain trips I do require me to cover a
certain amount of ground in a given period of time but I am always interested
in the things I see along the way and quite often I get a break as I check out
something that I’ve seen. So, for me, it is as much about the journey as the
destination and it isn’t all about conquering something.
But being descended from some of the earlier European
Americans in the North Cascades, and being familiar with many pioneering
stories, it seems to me that if those folks had spent a lot of time in
contemplation about esoteric questions instead of getting down to business and working
very, very hard, they would have starved to death. Then we wouldn’t have so many
of the things that we take for granted that make our life today much easier in
comparison.
Dietrich makes the claim that North Cascades National Park is
“Wild by Design” “It is deliberately roadless. You have to seek it”.
North Cascades National Park might be deliberately roadless
and it might have been designed that way but this was done by certain
individuals who hijacked the original vision of this park and substituted their
own agenda and through fortuitous circumstances (for them), mainly the lack of
funding by Congress, were able to pull it all off.
It was not supposed to have been this way. As I have pointed
out in a previous post, (Why We Shouldn’t Expand North Cascades National Park) the
national park in the North Cascades was sold to the public largely with the
idea that a national park would provide access to more people than wilderness designated land under the
control of the U.S. Forest Service. This is spelled out numerous times in The
North Cascades Study Report which was commissioned to determine whether a park
should be created or not.
To quote page 15 of The North Cascades Study Report of 1965
under the section for North Cascades National Park:
“A major reason for recommending a National Park is that by
means of access and development, the area
can be made available to large numbers of people rather than retaining half
the area in Wilderness area status, as would be done by the Forest Service”. (Italics mine).
My apologies for not using the proper indents right on the
above quote.
The result of ignoring the recommendations of this report by
deliberately limiting access to North Cascades National Park, which Dietrich
seems to celebrate, is that the majority of the public can’t experience the
“refuge of calm in a frenzied world” or the glaciers that are a “remnant of the
Ice Age” on land that they pay taxes for and, in theory, that they own. North
Cascades National Park is largely the domain of an elite group who has the
physical strength, specialized gear, specialized knowledge and a big enough time
budget to access.
There are real scientists featured in this book and they
talk about real science in the North Cascades. In their fields of study and
other closely related fields, I defer to their knowledge as it is superior to
mine. As to the rest of the book, my reading of it found a deceptive mish-mash
of anthropomorphisms and subjective statements with some oblique references to
science mixed in.
Anthropomorphisms assign human qualities and values to
things that are not human, a big no-no in science, as are subjective statements,
which are opposed to the objective statements that are the hallmark of hard
science. One example of this is when Dietrich talks about “befriending” the
North Cascades. Another is found on page 39 where Dietrich refers to the old
idea that old-growth forests were decadent and needed to be replaced. He
states, “Further research revealed that nature knew best…”
Nature doesn’t know anything. What we would collectively
refer to as nature or the natural world is the result of universal physical
laws that create a given set of conditions. Evolution acts upon organisms that
live under those conditions to produce the best adapted species for that set of
conditions. The same evolutionary mechanisms that create species adapted to
live in oceans or deserts create species that live in old-growth forests. These
mechanisms of evolution have been observed in numerous scientific
experiments. There is no hard
scientific evidence of some unseen anthropomorphic entity, no matter what name
it is given, guiding it all. Of course, one can go that route, that it is being
guided by some entity, but then one is talking about religion, not science. I
am not opposed to religion I believe it is very important to a lot of people
and has a valid place in our society, but it is subjective, based not on real,
observable phenomena, but on a given person’s feelings or emotions. It is not
science based on hard, observable phenomena.
I may defer to scientists on certain subjects but when it comes
to what the North Cascades are all about and what it takes to make a living
here, I defer to no-one, not scientists or Pulitzer Prize winners. Except for
the six years I spent in the U.S. Navy, living in the North Cascades and making
a living here is the sum total of my life experience. Nobody featured in this
book, that I can tell, lives in the North Cascades and also makes a living here
independent of North Cascades National Park or some other federal agency. I
have.
While we are on the subject, my arguments and those of
locals undoubtedly have aspects of the religious and emotional that I just
lambasted. I would point out that these have been in large part created and
informed by this place, the North Cascades. Science should be separate from the
emotional realm. But if one wants to venture in the emotional realm. I would ask that if one were to compare
emotional reactions, which would be more valid? That of one who lives in a
place and depends upon that place for a living or one who doesn’t live in that
place and only recreates there occasionally? We all have our filters and
agendas, even scientists. My views of the North Cascades which I write about
are filtered from a lifetime of experience and a long family history in the
North Cascades, a point of view that is largely absent from the book.
On page 40 Dietrich states that the American sensibility is
to conquer things with a progress oriented can-do attitude left over from the
pioneer days. He then goes on to state that you have to sit and watch for
months and observe in order to gain entry into the North Cascades.
Here are my thoughts on these statements:
First, most people nowadays are not in positions that allow
them months of free time to just go and observe. Believe me, I would love it if
this were the case for me. Dietrich mentions several people who were actually
paid to do this while in the seasonal employ of the U.S. Forest Service or Park
Service. This is not the case for the overwhelming majority of people.
Second, the people who are in the best position for having
watched these mountains on a daily basis for months on end and have this
apparently sacred knowledge needed to gain entry into the North Cascades are
the people who actually live here year round and have family histories here
that stretch back for decades, centuries or millenia. While my family is just
over the century mark, both my grandparents and my parents have spent many,
many years in these mountains and, as a matter of fact, my dad was a fire
lookout for the U.S. Forest Service to boot. There are others who still live
here who have similar stories. Again, these people are not even represented in
this book.
My grandparents undoubtedly had a pioneer mindset because
they were literally scratching a living from the ground and if they didn’t have
such a mindset, they would have failed and possibly even paid for that failure
with their lives. They didn’t have much excess wealth and had to look at the
world in a much more practical way than people do today. Maybe this idea is
foreign to folks like Mr. Dietrich who are able live off the excess wealth our
society generates by specializing in writing instead of exhausting themselves
by spending the majority of their waking hours in any given year in tedious, back-breaking
labor just to put food on the table.
Dietrich calls the North Cascades “today’s spiritual
refuge.”
This with several other comments alludes to pseudo religion
or, maybe even a full fledged religion. I like going out into the mountains and
I do get a sense of well-being from my trips there. I would even go so far as
to say that I can feel spirits in the mountains, people who have been there
before me as well as non-human entities. And each given part of the North
Cascades where I have spent time has its own unique “feel” to it.
All that being said, I also think that everything that I
feel while I am in the mountains I bring with me. These feelings and sensations
are all manufactured in my mind and are unique to me. As I have stated
previously, these mountains share no human emotion. I also wouldn’t expect
every other human being to see these mountains the way I do. I am sure that
there are plenty of people out there who don’t really want to have anything to
do with these mountains.
Unfortunately for many of those who are interested in
visiting these mountains, access for the general public in the North Cascades
is steadily declining due in no small part to land preservation measures. Are
the majority of people to be denied “spiritual refuge” because they lack the
physical ability, knowledge and time to access them?
On page 68 Dietrich outlines the events that lead to the
Northwest Forest Plan. “Causes sometimes coalesce around a name. The invention
of “ancient forest” gave a catchier description for “old-growth”, “virgin” or
“late successional” and succeeded in capturing the public imagination, leading
to a Northwest Forest Plan that sharply curtailed logging on federal land.” “Environmentalists
were raising an outcry and enlisting science to protect the endangered spotted
owl.” He states that one of the results of this is that timber harvest
statewide in Washington went down from seven billion feet in 1987 to four
billion feet in 2000 after the Northwest Forest Plan was implemented.
My thoughts on these statements:
Not a single word in this, or any other part of the book
about the devastating socioeconomic impacts that the Northwest Forest Plan had
on timber communities, our fellow human beings. Disgraceful. I have heard a lot of lip service (some from Mr.
Dietrich himself) over the years since the implementation of the Northwest
Forest Plan about how automation has eliminated many jobs in the timber industry.
This, I feel, is partially true. But even with automation you would still need
a lot of people being paid good wages to harvest and process 3 billion feet of
timber. It’s not like someone pushes a button and lumber magically appears from
the ether.
And here is what I think about the term “ancient forest” in
an excerpt from my post Know Your Forest Cow Heaven. This isn’t a simple,
catchy sound byte or buzz word so there is a lot of information (and opinion)
here if one is truly interested in being informed about the subject.
“In the last several years, some people have been using
terms like “ancient forest” as synonyms for old growth forests. I think such
terms are designed to play on people’s emotions and are confusing while not
providing any real description of the forest. I like to call these terms
“enviro-babble”.
When someone describes another living person as “ancient” it
is understood that this is a metaphor and that person is not actually ancient.
The way the term “ancient” has been used in the context of forests and trees
seems to be an attempt to be literal rather than metaphorical.
West of the Cascade Mountains, before the fire suppression
of the 20th century, every 300-600 years, on average, most forest
stands experienced a stand replacing forest fire. This means that some part,
often a large part, of the forest was almost completely burned and replaced
with a new stand of trees that grew back from the ashes.
In human terms, ancient history ended 1500 years ago in
about A.D. 500. So, by human measurement, the life span of a 600 year old tree
reaches only to the end of the Middle Ages. While a 600 year old tree is very
old compared to a human, by the time it reaches this age, its days are
numbered. Six hundred is also very young compared to trees like bristlecone
pines, many of which are truly ancient in human terms. While certain individual
trees in Northwest forests may actually exceed 600 years old they don’t even
come close to the 6000 years of the bristlecones. If a tree can’t be considered
ancient in human terms, how can it be considered ancient by the standards of
trees?
And, while certain individual trees in these forests may
exceed 600 years old, most don’t even come close due to mortality from natural
disturbances such as fire, disease, animal damage, floods and landslides. So it
would be wrong to describe individual old trees as “ancient” let alone an
entire forest around them that is made up of many trees that are much younger.”
My apologies for not using the proper indents on the above quote.
“Ancient Forest” may have captured the public imagination
but the term has more to do with semantics and spin than reality. Terms like
“Ancient Forest” create subtle deceptions that mislead. If we want to fix
problems in this real world we will have to operate in the real world with
information as close to reality as possible not by misleading people. This
might be a little more boring (or even confusing depending on your disposition)
but it is also more solid. Again, this type of tactic has more to do with
influencing people by tugging at their emotions rather than looking at hard,
measureable evidence.
As to the dramatic decrease in timber harvest from 7 billion
feet to 4 billion feet between 1987 and 2000, I worked as a logger during that
time period and didn’t have a problem finding work until the implementation of
the Northwest Forest Plan in the early 1990’s. After that there was still work
to be had as a logger, there still is, but not like there was before. The
demand for timber didn’t go away with the implementation of the Northwest
Forest Plan. So, to meet the demands of a global market, that extra 3 billion
feet a year has been coming from other places.
One of these places is British Columbia where, presumably
the spotted owl also needs habitat since B.C is within its range of
distribution. Probably another source for timber has been increased production
on private timberland in the state (much of which is owned by “big timber”
interests which are generally maligned by environmentalists, who, ironically,
are actually helping these very same companies by creating an artificial
shortage of timber). These private timberlands are also potential spotted owl
habitat if the trees on it were ever to get big enough. Of course this won’t
happen because the shift in pressure and increased production necessitates
shorter harvest intervals.
Finally, a certain amount of production has shifted to
tropical forests in countries where environmental laws aren’t as strong as ours
and where political corruption which leads to over-exploitation of resources is
common in many countries. It seems like there has been a steady stream of
National Geographic articles in the last several years that cover the problems
of rampant illegal logging in tropical areas.
These tropical areas more often than not have high rates of
endemic species that need those forests for habitat and, unlike the Pacific
Northwest, these species are usually not adapted to forest disturbances.
All this for what? Despite the near cessation in logging in
federal forests for over 20 years, the spotted owl has recently been proposed
for listing as and endangered species (evidently Dietrich got that one wrong,
at the time of the implementation of the Northwest Forest Plan, the spotted owl
was listed as a threatened species). At the same time poverty driven issues are
a plague in many timber dependent communities.
As to environmentalists enlisting scientists to their cause,
I know there was a lot of science that indicated that the spotted owl needed a
certain amount of old-growth forest but at the time of the whole controversy
there was also a lot of evidence, which has, by this time, been confirmed, that
the barred owl, which moved west on its own probably with some help from human
activities unrelated to timber harvest in the Pacific Northwest, was going to
have significant detrimental impacts on the spotted owl. One of the current
strategies to deal with barred owls is for federal and other agents to actively
hunt them and shoot them.
I think science is a very valuable tool to help us
understand the world. However, just because a certain study is done and
published, it doesn’t mean the matter is settled. Studies of the same subject
often yield contradictory results. Quite often how you ask a question in a
study and how you do your statistics influences the answer you get.
Contradictory results are sometimes debated and argued for decades or more. And,
as I mentioned earlier, scientists are humans too with their own filters and
agendas.
So, it is quite often possible to cherry pick the studies
you want to support your point of view and ignore the rest. On the issue of the
spotted owl that Dietrich refers to (and probably other subjects he refers to as
well) the environmentalists cherry picked their science and used this distorted view as a weapon agains vulnerable rural populations.
These rural populations were vulnerable because of their lack of media
savvy. The distortion of the cherry picked science was transmitted through an
organized media machine that got it wide distribution in media markets. For a
rural person who has spent their entire life in a place, it is next to
impossible to sum up decades of experiences in a place and knowledge about that
place into a tidy catchphrase or buzzword for media consumers. This would be
the work of a master wordsmith if it were possible at all. Then, even if you
had your word or catchphrase or contrary bit of scientific evidence, you need
some organized means to get that wide distribution to the general public. The
rural people affected by spotted owl decisions made their livings doing things
other than media marketing. A similar tactic is
employed in this book by excluding the points of view of people who have lived and
made their living in the North Cascades for decades and generations because
those views would probably be contrary to the author’s. It would be hard or even impossible for
Dietrich also points out that the term “wilderness Alps” or
“American Alps” were coined to describe the North Cascades during environmental
campaigns in the 1960’s. When one ignores the semantics and looks at the
reality of the subject the irony is thick. The Alps of Europe, a beautiful area
where access is very easy and thus a place that is known worldwide because
people all over the world visit in significant numbers is used to describe an
area, the North Cascades, where access is very difficult, thus making it an
area relatively few people know about, even regionally and very few people
visit. Here is another example of a subtle deception, using the term Alps to
describe the North Cascades implies that these mountains are like the Alps of
Europe where almost anyone can travel deep into them and see the sights.
Nothing could be further from the truth.
On page 71 Dietrich lauds the wilderness campaigns of the
1960’s: “Environmentalists generated a steady campaign of sympathetic national
press stories, organized hikes for power brokers and circulated spectacular
pictures.”
I would point out here that those powerbrokers were driven
to trailheads on roads built for timber harvest and paid for and maintained by
timber harvest money and that those roads made it feasible to get those
powerbrokers out to the mountains in a timely manner. Much of this access no
longer exists and average Americans have been denied access to lands that they
own due, in large part to those campaigns.
What were the materials for all of those wilderness
campaigns printed on? Paper made from the pulp of trees in someone’s back yard.
How were those environmentalists funded? Their monies were generated from an
excess in wealth created in urban areas by practices that were every bit as
harmful, if not more so, than timber harvest.
On page 72 Dietrich reviews the debate to establish a park
in the North Cascades: “The Seattle audience was overwhelmingly in favor of a
park, while local communities were almost unanimously opposed. The result was a
conservation triumph but a compromise on several fronts.” P. 72.
In the first place, this was a preservation triumph since preservation (“to preserve unchanged”)
is the stated mission of the National Park Service.
No explanation is given as to why there was such disparity
in support for the park. No acknowledgement is given to the concerns of local communities. It is left to the reader to fill in the blanks, maybe
the local communities were just backwards and not well educated enough to
appreciate the beauty all around them? Here is the reason local communities were
against the park: They understood that they needed those resources to generate
revenues to have the services and infrastructure to maintain a healthy economy
and a decent living for a significant number of people. Active resource use not
only created and maintained living wage jobs that circulated more money
locally, creating even more jobs, the taxes on the resources produced and the
businesses that produced them went to fund, among other things, local schools
and counties, which meant more county services.
Establishing a national park effectively removed a large chunk
of land from the tax rolls that generated monies to pay for a lot of public
services. You need to have a certain amount of wealth or distance to be able to
look at any resource and value it for something as superficial as beauty alone and
not to think that you don’t need to make use of it to generate significant
revenue.
The people in Seattle didn’t need those resources. Their
economy, the jobs and tax revenues needed to fund their basic needs and
standard of living was based on other things. And the heavy industry and
international trade that made up the bulk of this economy, and still does to a
large extent, was hardly benign environmentally.
Dietrich focuses on what the environmentalists had to give
up in the deal and, again, not a single word on the impacts that the creation
of this park had on resource dependent communities suddenly deprived of the use
of a large part of those resources. And, no, the park didn’t employ large numbers
of people to make up for any lost jobs. They operated on the cheap as a
skeleton crew for years. I know because my mom was on that skeleton crew.
I would ask, “What is the state of those local communities
now?” Since I live in one of them I can tell you that it is very hard to get
steady, living wage work locally. I have been one of the ones lucky enough to
do so. I can also tell you that public services in eastern Skagit County where
I live, on the doorstep of the park, aren’t the greatest and the whole area is plagued
with poverty driven issues that have preceded, for over a decade, the general
malaise felt by the rest of the country recently.
On page 72 Dietrich states, “To stand at Artist Point and
realize that Mount Shuksan in one direction is inside the park and Mount Baker
in the other is not, is a testament to the oddities of compromise.”
Lets look at another compromise that happened with the
establishment of this park. How is it that the headquarters for North Cascades
National Park is in Sedro-Woolley nearly 50 miles (or more than 50 miles,
depending on how one calculates the distance) from the physical location of
most of the park? You can’t even see
any part of the park from headquarters.
I don’t know if the events which I am about to relate are
written down anywhere and I don’t know if they can be proven. I don’t present them as the unvarnished
truth, because I don’t know for sure that they are, but they present a
compelling explanation for why the headquarters for this park, unlike almost
all of the other national parks is so far from the physical location of the
park itself.
Here goes: As was stated earlier, local resistance to the
establishment of the park was stiff and, if it were established over the wishes
of local residents it would look bad, people who lived in the wealthier, more
populated parts of the state taking resources away from people who lived in one
of the poorer, less populated parts of the state. To legitimize this process, it
was put to a vote in the local communities of the area whether or not a
national park should be created.
But the vote was rigged. Supposedly national parks create an
economic prosperity zone that extends for many miles around them. I think that,
at the time North Cascades National Park was created, this zone was estimated
to be 50 miles. I think this estimation has now been extended to 60 miles, or
maybe I remembered wrong and it has always been 60 miles, but that is another
subject.
A key consideration of this is that the city of Sedro-Woolley
was within that 50 mile economic prosperity zone and thus was included in the
communities who could vote on whether there was to be a park or not. Another
key consideration of this is that Northern State Hospital in Sedro-Woolley was
closing at the cost of a large number of jobs which a lot of people in the
Sedro-Woolley area were understandably concerned about.
A deal was made that, if a national park was established,
the headquarters, and all of the jobs that went with it, would be in
Sedro-Woolley. While I am sure many people in Sedro-Woolley opposed the park
because they also used the resources the park would put off-limits, the
majority of the people there really had nothing to lose and everything to gain
by the establishment of the park because they were guaranteed to get solid jobs
as well as the prestige of park headquarters, an important public symbol of a
national park. The population of Sedro-Woolley was a good bit bigger than the
populations of the smaller, upriver communities and there were enough people
from this larger population in favor of the park to swing the vote.
So the whole process moved forward with a cover of
legitimacy. The outsiders who wanted the park could now say, “See, the local
people want it” and, in fact, you often hear it said that this is a “park by
the people.” I have heard that Senator Henry M. “Scoop” Jackson spearheaded
this effort, a slick bit of politicking but probably not a difficult feat for a
politician of his caliber and connections against a small, relatively powerless
group of people.
Whether or not the events did unfold as I have just related,
a compromise of some sort was obviously made for the headquarters of this park
to be so far from the actual physical location of the majority of the land
being administered.
Sedro-Woolley is well positioned to have a much stronger
strong economy than communities farther upriver. Though it is a little out of
the way compared to some of the other communities in the valley, it is still close
to I-5. State Highway 9 runs through the middle of it as well as rail lines and
it is in fairly close proximity the larger population centers and industries of
greater Puget Sound. The communities upriver are on a dead end road for almost half
of the year, there is very little industry and the populations are small.
The permanent jobs that went with park headquarters would
have probably had a greater positive economic impact if headquarters had been
located upriver. There would be more people with permanent jobs (since the
inception of the park, there have only been a few permanent park jobs upriver,
the rest are seasonal) and thus more money in these communities, assuming most
people would choose to live closer to their work. Not only that, but the local
school would have likely benefited greatly as well. School funding in this
state is in part determined by the number of students enrolled. Again assuming
that many people would choose to live closer to their work, those people with
school age children would have likely boosted the student body in the local
school and thus increasing the funding for that school.
On a personal note, when I lost my logging job due to the
Northwest Forest Plan and started working for North Cascades National Park
after my two years of retraining, my original duty station was at headquarters.
This meant that, even though I lived within a few miles or less of the physical
borders of the park, I had to drive 44 miles to work and back every day, a
round trip journey of 88 miles. The commute down and back took almost two hours
of my time out of every working day. And I had to pay for my own fuel as well
as the wear and tear on my vehicle.
My former job which was year round and paid between $15 and
$18 an hour was 28 miles away. My new job with the park was seasonal, paid $7
to $8 an hour and was 16 miles farther away. That was one result of the
headquarters compromise that hurt me economically.
My mom, after she had worked for the park out of Marblemount
for over 20 years was reassigned to Sedro-Woolley. At this point in her career
she had maxed out in her job class and pay grade so she couldn’t get a raise
without moving into a different job. The reassignment however was not into a
different job. It was the same job with a different duty station. This resulted
in a net pay cut for her since, because her new duty station was Sedro-Woolley,
she had to pay her own fuel and mileage not to mention two hours a day in
commute time.
There are many stories similar to ours. Sour grapes on my
part? Maybe. I am not trying to
pick a fight with the people of Sedro-Woolley. The point I am trying to make is
that a lot of compromises and concessions were made in many areas when this
park was established. Having the park headquarters in Sedro-Woolley wasn’t the
end of the world for communities upriver and it didn’t have the impact that
later federal land use decisions had, but it likely meant that those upriver communities
and the individuals who lived in them got a smaller share of resources. Life is
a competition for resources and it isn’t always fair. Compromises are made all
the time. There are numerous examples of this whether it is between family
members, communities or countries. More often than not, the smaller person or entity loses out.
Back to the original subject, some preservationists see the
fact that Mount Baker was not included in North Cascades National Park as some
kind of great tragedy. Dietrich seems to portray this as some kind of
shortcoming or deficiency—oddity he calls it. So what? The only people Mount
Baker being in the park matters to are the ones who are seeking status for the
National Park Service and evidently think that, if something isn’t in a
National Park, it isn’t worth seeing.
These people need to expand their vision and get a life. Being in a
national park doesn’t make something magically special over everything else
that isn’t in a park. In fact, I am aware of a lot of pretty cool and
spectacular things that aren’t in a national park or even in a wilderness
designated area for that matter.
And as far as preserving Mount Baker goes, a large part of
the area around Mount Baker was later designated wilderness so all mechanized development
is prohibited there. This means that there aren’t going to be any roads built
and neither is some gaudy, tasteless resort for the mega-wealthy. The level of
resource use restriction for U.S. Forest Service wilderness is only slightly
less than if it were in a National Park (actually it is even more so for some
things).
So the compromise of not having Mount Baker in the national
park even though it is on land federally designated as wilderness is mainly a
question of semantics. For all intents and purposes, Mount Baker isn’t going to
be harmed in any significant way by direct human use or development whereas, on
the headquarters compromise, a lot of people lost out on resources that could
have made their lives significantly better.
Compromises or concessions were also made when it was
decided to not build developments that had been promised that would allow
greater access to North Cascades National Park to the majority of the general
public. A lot more people, most of the general public in fact, lost out on
those compromises because the lack of those developments means most of the
general public can’t access most of the park. So I wish those who think it is some
kind of outrage that Mount Baker isn’t in North Cascades National Park would
quit whining.
Dietrich does acknowledge on page 75 that in North Cascades
National Park there were development plans for Shuksan, Colonial, Arctic Creek
and a tram on Ruby Mountain (the developments mentioned above) and that all
were opposed by environmentalists and none happened.
When this park was created the local communities were
worried about how they would make a living if they weren’t allow to actively
utilize the surrounding natural resources. This is how many of them made a
living and it was very important to the local economy. They were told that the status and
prestige of a national park would bring in tourism money. The aforementioned
development plans were for key infrastructure that would allow access to the
park for the majority of average people, that is, the general public, thus
creating a draw for large numbers of people.
Because these developments were quashed, access to the bulk
of the park, including the most impressive parts of it is so difficult as to be
impossible for most people. The result is that this park is perennially the
second least visited park in the entire park service system.
The business of tourism operates on very thin margins
because it depends on people’s disposable income. Therefore, tourism businesses
need large volumes of people to come to whatever the attraction or attractions
may be. How are people in the North Cascades supposed to make a living from
tourism when very few people actually visit the national park that is supposed
to be the big attraction because access to that park is so difficult?
On page 77, Dietrich knocks The North Cascades Highway,
Highway 20, stating the “highway was built for speed, not contemplation,
justified to move commodities” and states that a park highway would have taken
longer to drive and have been more scenic.
Actually I think one of the agreements on approval of
construction of this highway was that it was expressly not supposed to be a
commercial highway. I think this kind of fell by the wayside as people realized
that it was a very efficient way to move goods (and themselves) through this
corner of the state.
State Route 20, The North Cascades Highway is, in fact, a
designated scenic highway. This means that there are strict rules on signs and
billboards along it, at least in rural areas, so the views won’t be spoiled and
passers by can contemplate unhindered except by roaring motorcycles.
I know of several businesses who are regularly hassled about
billboards advertising their businesses and some have had to be removed. I am
not a big fan of billboards but this is asking people operating businesses in a
lesser known part of the state along a highway that is only open for part of
the year to operate with a minimum of advertising.
I am sure one assumption would be that they should be
advertising online. I am sure that they do this but internet connectivity can
be spotty here, mobile phones work intermittently and, at the end of the day,
the impediment to billboard advertising probably costs these people a lot of
spontaneous sales. For instance, someone sees a sign, has a little time to
think about it before they get to town and decides it is a good idea to get a
burger (or whatever) that they wouldn’t have otherwise. Internet ads aren’t
going to catch these people if they don’t have cell reception and what mom and
pop restaurant business has the money to stay at the top of the search engine?
As it is, the highway is one of the few bright spots in the
local economy, bringing in probably ten times the people that the National Park
Proper does (about five times as many people if you count visitation in the
recreation area). Though a lot of
the jobs the highway creates are seasonal, low wage service sector jobs I don’t
begrudge one bit the local businesses who make a living from the highway and
create those jobs here. These businesses are valuable contributors to local
communities and the jobs they create help. The alternative is no jobs.
I say this even though every year I kind of dread the pass
opening. This means lots more traffic and lots of crazy drivers making things
much more dangerous for myself and my family to be on the road. This is all the
result of traffic volume. The businesses here need high traffic volume in order
to be able to remain solvent. And it doesn’t matter if the people in those cars
are just trying to get from point A to point B or if they are out on a contemplation
tour.
The jury is out with me as far as whether a slower, more
scenic highway would have been better than an efficient highway. A slower
highway would probably have discouraged a lot of people from coming here though
many that did come might have been more likely to stay a while longer. On the
other hand, a more efficient highway is probably much easier to maintain and is
safer. All that being said, given the history of broken promises concerning
infrastructure when North Cascades National Park was created, if it had been
left to the people who ushered in the park, no highway (or even dirt road) of
any sort would ever have happened, especially not at the estimated $1 million
per mile it took to build the highway in the mid-to late 1960’s.
On page 81 Dietrich states, “The mountains are not just a
series of ecosystems of course. They mirror human needs and values. They have
evolved from a commodity storehouse of minerals and timber to psychological
sanctuary and recreational playground. In an increasingly frenetic world, they
are the place our grandchildren will go for challenge, contemplation and fun.”
Do they also mirror the poverty and social dysfunction in
the communities here? Whose needs and values is he talking about?
Abraham Maslow was a psychologist who studied the needs that
motivated people. He proposed that people have a hierarchy of needs, the most
basic being physiological needs, then safety needs, then needs to love and
belong to a group, then esteem needs and finally self-actualization.
Some psychologists and sociologists hold the view that lines
between hierarchies might be blurry and, beyond the basic needs, the other
needs are arranged differently and hold differing levels of importance
depending on cultural and societal values.
However, there seems to be some agreement between everyone
about most of the ideas about the basic needs of humans, the two most basic being
physiological and safety. If one’s basic physiological needs, meaning water,
food and shelter are not met, then one doesn’t really care about much else.
Those basic needs are all consuming and they have to be met before anything
else is considered. If you think about it, this makes sense. If you don’t have
those basic things, you will probably die. The next level of need is safety,
meaning both physical and economic which again, have to be met before anything
else is considered. Recreational or spiritual use, as Dietrich puts it, “challenge,
contemplation and fun”, falls under the higher categories of human needs, group
belonging, esteem and self-actualization. As I understand it, according to what
most psychologists and sociologists would consider a hierarchy of human needs, if
people’s basic needs, physiological and safety, aren’t being met, most aren’t
going to choose some recreational use over having those basic needs met because
recreational uses are a luxury they can’t afford. Many people who live in the
North Cascades, myself included enjoy a comfortable level of existence. But there
are also a lot of people living in the North Cascades whose basic needs aren’t
being met or they aren’t being met very well.
I reiterate: Whose needs is Dietrich talking about? What
about the needs of these people that aren’t being met, or the people in the
rest of society whose needs aren’t being met? In the North Cascades, I think,
for the most part, the physiological needs of struggling people are met through
social safety net programs. It is when one considers the aspect of economic
safety that one sees a huge deficit.
I think use of the North Cascades solely for recreational,
psychological or spiritual purposes by people who are experiencing severe
economic insecurity is probably quite limited. If one thinks about it, someone
who is economically stressed probably isn’t going to be doing a lot of hiking
or climbing or general outdoor recreating, especially if fees are required or
access is so difficult it takes a lot of time and special gear. This is because
they have limited resources and little or no disposable income and they need to
concentrate on marshalling all of the resources they do have just to live day
to day. They can’t afford to engage in a lot of superfluous activities and, in such
a situation, “challenge, contemplation and fun” are superfluous.
That being said, I have known many people over the years who
have had marginal or unstable incomes who have used these mountains for
recreation and, I am sure, some sort of spiritual purposes. I mentioned earlier
that there was disagreement on the structure of the hierarchy of human needs
and this would appear to be a place where the boundaries are blurred.
In my observation, when people with marginal or unstable
incomes use the mountains for recreation, it is quite often in combination with
some sort of activity involving hunting and gathering. So, while they might be
recreating, they are not recreating for the sake of recreating in order to meet
their higher needs, they are also working at meeting their basic physiological
and safety (economic) needs. In other words, they are recreating in a holistic
manner.
I would guess that such people see these mountains holistically
(I know that I do), as a place to get resources to meet their physiological,
safety, esteem and self-actualization (spiritual) needs. The restriction of
access to public lands through the preservation measures that I have seen over
the years, i.e. tearing out roads or letting them deteriorate to impassability
in order to “protect” the mountains I think has harmed economically stressed
people on many levels, physiological, economic, psychological and spiritual.
I think that occasionally people who are under economic
stress do recreate for the sake of recreating. Everyone on the economic scale
has different priorities and everyone splurges sometimes. When they do, it
seems that the kind of area that most of people in this situation use are the
ones that have easy access and are cheap or free. You often see vehicles and
camp setups in the cheap or free areas that appear to be outings on a tight
budget.
Most of the people I see in the backcountry, far from roads
and campgrounds are wearing expensive gear, the type of stuff you have to have
disposable income to afford. I would also note that I know some people for whom
the spiritual and psychological apparently outweigh economic security but I
think these folks are the exception rather than rule. I wouldn’t want to live
like they do and I don’t think many others would either.
In fairness, a number of frontcountry campgrounds where
access is easy are featured in the book but most, if not all, are official and
now require fees. Again, one has to have certain amount of disposable income to
use these types of campgrounds. And most of these campgrounds are in the
lowlands. So, while they are certainly in impressive forests, they lack the
sweeping mountain views that are the crown jewels of the North Cascades.
It isn’t like the people who have lived here for generations
don’t use these mountains to provide for their physical, psychological and
spiritual needs. I have personally experienced a good bit of economic
insecurity though not to the degree as others around me. I have been secure
enough with enough disposable income most of the time to use the North Cascades
for recreation a good bit. But, to a large degree, my mindset has always been
that of the hunter gatherer.
Though I might be taking in a lot of the beautiful and
interesting things to be found, my eye is always looking for resources that can
be used to provide for the physiological needs of myself and my family. I think
seeing these mountains in this way actually leads to a deeper appreciation of
them.
Dietrich’s statement about using the North Cascades to meet
human needs and values, and as a psychological sanctuary and recreational
playground is one dimensional and definitely told from the point of view of
someone who has had all of his basic needs met, who enjoys a high level of
physiological and economic security, who doesn’t have to look at these
mountains in any other way than as a playground and who is apparently either
completely oblivious to the situation of others who don’t enjoy that level of
security or doesn’t care. It is a little disturbing to me when one group’s
recreational wants and higher, non-essential needs outweigh another group’s
basic needs.
On page 82 Dietrich states, “Now that logging and mining
have been globalized and regional markets have shrunk, do the North Cascades
provide sufficient economic opportunity for mountain communities?”
The short answer to this question is yes. At least logging still
provides very good economic opportunities.
I know very little about mining and almost all of that is
about mines on the Skagit. On the Skagit the only paying mining interests that
I am aware of were a few talc mines and the gold mines on Canyon Creek of which
the gold mines are still active off and on even today. Most of the rest of the
mining prospects in the Skagit area were too remote and the ore too poor to
make them economically feasible. My grandpa packed in goods and supplies to a
number of mines in the late 1800’s and early 1900’s and most, if not all of
these had been abandoned by the mid 1900’s.
Logging is another matter entirely. Global markets aren’t
anything new. Timber was exported from Northwest forests, mostly to Japan,
before the Second World War and it continues to be exported today, where one of
the major markets is China.
To help make ends meet when I was laid off from North
Cascades National Park in the winter of 2010/2011, I did a small select logging
job on some land my family owned. The following excerpt is from my post “Making a Living in the North Cascades”
and it outlines my experience:
“For a total investment of 74 hours of work on the logging
job, I grossed $8,245, of which $1400 went for rental and operation of logging
equipment, $2250 went to pay to haul the logs to the mill, $1100 went to the
State of Washington in the form of taxes and insurance, $1400 went to wages
(me), leaving a net profit to us (mom, my sister and me), the land owners, of
about 2,000 dollars. The rental and hauling money went directly to local
business owners who lived 11 to 25 miles from where the trees were harvested.
And at least part of the forest excise tax benefited the local school. In
addition, once the logs had been hauled to the mill in the lower Skagit Valley,
more people there were paid living wages to saw them into lumber. The majority
of this lumber was sold on the international market, creating more jobs and
wealth through international trade.
That same year I lost
$6,400 on my photography business, much of which came directly from my own pocket.
And that year should have been a good year. I got a small contract worth $2300
dollars early in the year to create a presentation. This was actually the only
instance in the history of my business where I was paid a competitive wage for
my time. So, for that year, I had a $2300 advantage that I did not have any
other year.
My photography business suffered the losses in 2010 despite
what I would conservatively estimate to be about 1220 hours invested into the
endeavor, about 800 hours of which were spent by my mom, at no charge to me or
my business, operating a gallery and going to art shows to sell my photographic
prints and products featuring my photos. The gallery where my mom worked would
have closed long before 2010 but for the fact that the people who staffed it,
like my mom were retired and didn’t charge wages. So it could get by as long as
they made enough revenue for rent.
Significantly, most of the money I lost, or spent if you
will, since we are talking about what could only be characterized as a hobby,
went to businesses 70 to 100 miles away and even as far away as Texas, well
outside of the local community. Most of the tax dollars generated by my
“business” went with the money I spent outside the community.
In the almost 16 years to that point, since I had been
trying to sell my art, I had never made money. My yearly losses ranged from
several thousand dollars to $10,000. Early on, I was only able to sustain these
losses by working during my seasonal lay offs from the Park in one of the only
other well paid jobs available to me locally: logging.”
There are several things to consider with the 2010 logging
job.
It was just a fill in job for me. My experience with logging
has mostly been as a worker for hire, not on the business end so I wasn’t as
shrewd as I could have been about knowing the best way to sell the logs and
other business practices that probably could have gotten a better return for my
efforts. So, despite a little bumbling on my part, my wages, about $20 an hour,
were pretty good for 2010.
There was a lot of associated revenue generated not only in
taxes but in buying supplies from local stores and paying wages to other people
both in the logging end and the mill end of the process. The other businesses I
dealt with all paid business taxes. These businesses were the small local type
that don’t move around the country or overseas to avoid taxes. As the raw
material, logs, were processed into products every step of process added value
and created economic activity and jobs were either created or sustained and
wealth was created and taxes were collected.
I left up to 80 or 90 percent of the trees in some places.
There were markets for the timber that I left and I could have kept at it all
winter long and made a lot more money but we didn’t want to harvest the entire
forest all at once. Wildlife habitat was retained and resources are available
for human use in the future as well. This experience wasn’t restricted just to
2010. I did several logging jobs before this in 2005, 2007, 2008 and all made
good profit and were well worth my time to do.
If one wants an example of someone who is familiar with good
business practices in the timber industry, just last year my mom and cousins had
some property that they inherited from my uncle and dad. The cut on this job
was heavier than anything I have personally done but there were a lot of trees
left standing and less than half the property was logged-about 40 to 50 acres.
In about two months time, over 280,000 dollars was generated
on this project. My mom and cousin’s share was about $140,000 out of which they
are liable for a number of taxes to the county and state. The rest went to pay
the loggers and trucking who will also pay taxes on part of their earnings.
The raw logs that went to local mills were processed into
more finished products and the workers who did that processing were paid a
living wage and, in turn, taxed on those wages. Further processing of the
lumber and pulp from those logs will create more jobs and taxes. The logs that
were exported involved crews to handle them and ship them. Again more taxes and
revenue were generated from international trade.
Every step of this process created more jobs and wealth,
both for the people involved locally and regionally and for the local and
regional governments that levied taxes on that wealth and economic activity. I
am sure that there are figures out there that tell how much money additive
economic activities like this, which multiply revenue at every step, add to the
economy but I don’t have the time to research the subject. I feel safe in
saying though that this amount is significant and it offers significant
economic opportunity for many of those who live in mountain communities, much
more significant opportunity than tourism.
If one looks at my photography “business”, almost none of
the wealth created wound up in communities in the North Cascades. All of the
tools, camera equipment, film, film processing, digitizing equipment etc. were created
almost exclusively overseas, well outside the North Cascades. This is where the
wealth associated with my “business” was created.
All of the services I purchased and most of the taxes
associated with the “business” were also outside the local community, again
creating wealth somewhere else. The activities associated with my “business”
weren’t additive to local economies, they actually sent a lot of money out of
the local economy that could have created jobs here if it had been spent
locally. Though I try very hard to shop locally, I have, and will continue to,
purchase a number of things that don’t create much wealth locally.
I don’t begrudge people elsewhere in the world a living. I
am trying to make the point that my experience with a business that depended
pretty heavily on tourism and drawing in money from the outside, rather than
creating a product from a raw material to sell or trade to the outside world to
meet a demand, was a huge net negative for my personal bottom line and it added
virtually nothing to the local economy.
So I would say that if one knows what one is talking about, timber
obviously holds significant value in local and global markets. I would note
that timber based businesses aren’t a sure thing. Producing a commodity makes
one subject to market ups and downs though nowadays these don’t seem to be as
extreme as in the past. And, as with any economic activity, there are all kinds
of deals and angles by which people can turn a profit or self-destruct. I have
known many mills and logging outfits that, even in good times, have gone out of
business, usually because bad business decisions were made.
It is important to note that all businesses suffer ups and
downs. The difference with a business like tourism, the major alternative to
resource extraction in this area, being that tourism has very thin margins,
making much harder for many people involved in this type of business to weather
downturns.
The whole world (or most of it) lives on trade. To have a
viable economy we need to be making things that have value in outside markets,
regional, national and global. Timber and natural resources are one of the few commodities
that are available to mountain communities to produce that can be traded with
to the outside world where they have value in broad markets.
Wilderness tourism
generates little revenue outside small, highly
specialized markets. A business in wilderness tourism isn’t a viable option to
most people out here and the market is small and quickly saturated, further
limiting the number of viable businesses. From my experience, living in the
North Cascades quite often involves generalization, making a viable living by
mixing tourism and timber, livestock and a regular job etc. Without a doubt
this is true of other rural areas. This speaks to diversity and the need for as
much diversity in job opportunities as possible in an area where such
possibilities are naturally limited. While tourism can certainly be part of
that diversity picture, tourism by itself as the sole major player in the
economy isn’t going to hack it.
One final thing to think about on timber production in the
North Cascades and the Pacific Northwest in general: Timber and forest products
have been traded on global markets for at least the last 70 to 100 years. Japan
was a huge importer of logs from the Pacific Northwest both before and after
the Second World War.
Thanks to trade deals over the years, commodities, forest
products included, can be more easily traded than ever on global markets of
today. Because of these global markets, slack in timber production in the
Pacific Northwest is picked up in other parts of the world, often in tropical
areas where rates of endemic species are high, species tolerance to forest
disturbance is low, environmental laws are weak and corruption is rampant,
resulting in little incentive to use sustainable forest practices.
In the North Cascades species endemism is very low, species
tolerance to forest disturbance is high and we have strong environmental laws,
as well as the means and collective will to harvest timber sustainably and we
have low rates of corruption.
Dietrich makes the statement on page 84 that “Pioneers had
little interest in recording the ecological knowledge of tribes, and many oral
memories were lost.”
I believe this to be, at least in part, true. We are talking
about two very different cultures, which saw the world in very different ways.
So there were probably a lot of cases where knowledge was lost because the
potential learner, the pioneer, didn’t understand the manner in which the knowledge
was being communicated. At the same time, along with all of the myriad problems
like disease caused by contact with European Americans, federal policies were
causing chaos and human misery in Native American communities, the fallout of
which can still be seen today.
While I don’t think my folks were active participants in
carrying out misguided federal policies or outright oppression, they probably
didn’t actively oppose them either. From the talk I always heard, my folks knew
many Indian people whom they considered to be friends and I don’t think my
folks would knowingly do harm to these people. Things like assimilation were
commonly thought to be the best way forward for Native peoples. They (the
European Americans) didn’t know any better.
In hindsight, many of these ideas are clearly horrific when
viewed through the lens of today. Those were the beliefs held by many at the
time, they are not the beliefs I hold today or think that anyone should hold.
Destroying or attempting to destroy a culture results in a lot of human misery
for the people of that culture. This is one reason that it is wrong. And every
culture is a unique way of looking at the world and I think all cultures have
the potential to make all of our lives richer.
So I wouldn’t try to paint my folks as being completely
blameless in some of the awful things that happened to the Native people here. They
probably did the best they could to do right by other people in their time and
situation and in their imperfect lives, like we all do.
All that being said, I also know that there was a good bit
of cooperation between early settlers, my family included, and natives here and
a certain amount of knowledge was passed between the groups. My dad and his
siblings had lots of friends who happened to be Indians and so did my grandparents.
I grew up eating berries that grow here naturally. Before I
could read I was made to know which ones were good to eat and which ones were
poisonous. Later I learned which ones were okay if they were cooked. This
knowledge was passed on to me by my dad who learned quite a bit of it, along
with knowledge about fishing and hunting, from the Indian kids he ran around
with when he was young. And much of what he learned about foraging in the local
vicinity that he learned from his parents most likely had its source in Native
knowledge as well.
My grandparents came here from somewhere else and, while
there were botanical references available, I don’t think there were very many field
guides available at that time. They didn’t automatically know where resources
were and what plants and berries were or weren’t poisonous. How could they? I’m
sure they figured some of it out on their own but the rest they learned from
the people who were already here, other pioneers who probably learned a lot
from the Indians and the Indians themselves
Here is a question: Do you write down the intimate details
and beliefs of your friends and the people you know? That would be kind of
weird unless you were an anthropologist and even then recording such
information about your friends might be pushing the envelope of weirdness. This
is why most people, myself included, don’t know much about their ancestry back
more than a few generations.
From the way that my dad talked, their Indian neighbors and
friends were just that. They were all trying to make a living in a hard place
and just like any people in such a situation, they sometimes helped each other
out and worked together. Sometimes they squabbled and fought. They knew certain
details about each other’s lives and family history but they weren’t studying
each other, they were trying to keep a roof over their heads and food on the
table.
So I suspect that, while the process was far from perfect
and a lot of ecological knowledge and human history was lost, a certain amount of
this knowledge remains. Probably more than the “experts” suspect.
Finally, advancing technology regularly makes older
knowledge obsolete. If the need for the older knowledge has been replaced by
some technological advance, then quite often that older knowledge is no longer
exercised and it is not passed on to future generations and is subsequently
lost. This has happened throughout history as new materials, foods and
processes appear they are quite often rapidly adopted by the population and the
knowledge that attended the old ways falls by the wayside.
My grandpa and his contemporaries and some of their children
regularly used the traditional Indian shovel-nosed dugout canoes on the river
because that was what was available and everyone used them. These canoes have
been replaced by any number of boat designs that are mass produced and
relatively cheap. Factoring in materials and labor, one could get a pretty
fancy power boat for what it would cost for a traditionally made dugout canoe. Though
I have heard of people, out of curiosity, experimenting with shovel-nosed
canoes on the river, I don’t know of anyone from my generation who can use one
proficiently and I have never seen one on the river. I don’t know if there is
anyone left who knows how to make one. And, at any rate, I can now drive in an
hour distances it took my grandpa a day or more to travel on the river. So this
knowledge was lost. I suspect a lot of the lost ecological knowledge went in
the same manner.
Ironically much of what remains of the knowledge particular
to the North Cascades is being rapidly lost today. Most of it is specific to a
particular site or place and is out of context outside of the North Cascades
where it becomes meaningless. To keep this kind of knowledge you need to
actually live on the ground and use it. It is not the type of thing that one
sits down and downloads from the brain to a piece of paper or computer file.
More often than not I am not consciously aware of the knowledge I hold until a
need for it arises. I think most everyone is this way and I think it is an
example of the error people like Dietrich et al. make in thinking that books,
scholarly or otherwise, about the North Cascades are the be all and end all of
knowledge about this place without actually going out and talking to people who
have lived here for generations.
Most of the people who have a long history here have never
written a book but that hardly means that they know nothing about the place
where they have lived most of their lives. Conversely, just because someone
comes out here for a short time, sometimes just weeks or months, and then
writes a book about it doesn’t make them experts on the place or that they got their
information right or that their informants had their information right.
There are a lot of stories and information out there that
vary dramatically depending on who you are talking to and I think it has been
this way since humans have been talking. This is why, if you want to write an
authoritative book or article about a place of culture, you need to talk to a
lot of different people who live in that place and culture. In fact, I have
read several books about the North Cascades where a lot of the information and
views presented were way off base. “The North Cascades: Finding Beauty and
Renewal in the Wild Nearby” is no exception.
Recent generations in the North Cascades, the future bearers
of the knowledge specific to this place, are leaving it in droves because of
lack of economic opportunity. I think similar processes are happening all
across this country and around the world and it is why we are losing cultures
and languages at such a rapid rate.
On page 82 Dietrich poses the question: “Are teaching
institutions and organizations such as the Environmental Learning Center on
Diablo Lake and the Mountaineers examples of the future utility of these peaks?
Will the North Cascades become temple monastery, or church where we come to
understand our own civilization and its problems?”
I really don’t know where to start here. Dietrich seems to
be talking about some sort of place nestled amongst some of the poorest rural
communities on the west side of the state, where those in our society who can
afford to, can pursue higher goals while ignoring the plight of those around
them.
Now I won’t knock religion and contemplation. Religion, at
least for some, falls amongst the order of human needs but not at the basic
level. The pursuits Dietrich is talking about are frivolous compared to having
one’s basic needs met, which many people in North Cascades communities struggle
to do every day.
If you are contemplating our civilization and its problems,
I think one of the biggest problems identified lately is increasing wealth
disparity. Dietrich’s utopian vision of the North Cascades would be a model of
just such disparity, a distopia. In this neo-feudalist world, the people who
come here to pursue higher goals to contemplate existence and our civilization
etc. will, almost by definition, have had their basic needs, and more, met. They
will be from the higher classes of society in contrast the many of the people
who actually live here who will occupy the lowest rungs of society in grinding
poverty with very little opportunity to improve their lot.
The Environmental Learning Center Dietrich plugs is not some
free campground. Most people have to pay to partake of it. I don’t know about
the Mountaineers but I suspect it is the same with their programs. What
happened to outdoor experiences being unstructured and free? Democratic and
open to all? This brings up the question: Are they businesses? The parent of
the Environmental Learning Center, North Cascades Institute is sponsored (partnered
is the preferred term nowadays) by several federal agencies, The National Park
Service and the U.S. Forest Service.
It is my understanding that this is in part because they are
a non-profit educational organization. But they are also renting out their
facilities in direct competition with tourism businesses in the area. These other
businesses are on their own, they get no government sponsorship and they aren’t
non-profits so they don’t get a tax break either. Is that fair?
Dietrich also makes some religious references. I can’t tell
from the reading how to interpret this. The two named organizations and the religious
references are mentioned in separate sentences but they are right next to each
other in the paragraph. So this could be two separate thoughts. If, however,
this is referring to the two named organizations as some kind of religious entities,
or that they are carrying out some sort of religious activities, this is a
mixing of church and state.
On page 82 Dietrich asks: “While Suncadia, Leavenworth,
Winthrop and Chelan are examples of what is possible, could there be strategic
placement of interpretive centers, campgounds, outdoor schools and easily
negotiable paths that bring more diversity among visitors?”
This sounds great. I am not at all opposed to interpretive
centers, campgrounds and outdoor schools and easy access to at least certain parts
of the North Cascades. My question is: How are you going to pay for it? None of
this stuff is free. If by easy access trails he means ADA (Americans with
Disabilities Act) compliant, you are looking at around 100,000 dollars per
mile. The other facilities he talks about come with a big price tag too.
We’re currently having problems funding state parks, many of
which have closed. Federal facilities of this sort, campgrounds and trails,
aren’t much better off. To help pay for operation and maintenance you currently
have to pay entrance fees for most national parks and state parks, you have to
pay to use campgrounds in state and national parks and national forests and you
have to pay to park at national forest trailheads.
This is not very democratic. It excludes people on the margins,
the poor and the working poor who can’t spare the 30 to 40 dollars for a permit
to use public lands (that, at least in theory, they own too). Funding such
projects with grant money seems to be a popular approach today but I am a
little skeptical of that. With that approach, money can be pretty fickle, maybe
it gets funded, maybe it doesn’t or maybe only part of it gets funded,
hopefully a part that can function on its own or in concert with the other
parts of another project that got funded as well.
What kind of jobs will these interpretive centers and
schools and campgrounds provide for local communities? Under a patchwork model
of a grant here and a grant there and then maybe no grant, not very good jobs I
would guess. And they would be highly seasonal. After construction, the bulk of
the jobs these facilities would create would be at the low end of the wage
scale. There would probably also be a few jobs on the high end of the wage
scale but employment in them would be unpredictable and as ephemeral as the
grant money or whatever seasonal funding source is available.
Given the current sad state of our general infrastructure,
roads and bridges etc. that are crucial for the functioning of our society,
most governments have huge problems to deal with and probably aren’t going to
be coming up with a lot of money to fund recreational infrastructure as is
outlined above. Any government that funds an interpretive center or campground
or very expensive trails built to ADA standards at the expense of the major
thoroughfares and bridges that are the life blood of our present economy is
probably going to be seen as negligent by a majority of the electorate. Private
grant money is another avenue but, again, fickle, in that game, you are
depending on the generosity of others and your own ability to convince them
that they should give you money.
In the past, multiple use, which Dietrich mentions almost in
passing in the book, was one answer to this problem. Timber harvest revenues
which were (still are) dedicated to the operation of our national forests. A
certain percentage of the funds were dedicated to the different divisions to
carry on the business of that forest. This included, among other things,
silviculture (to make sure there were trees for the future), biology and other
sciences, roads and recreation.
This is why for years you could park at U.S. Forest Service
trailheads for free. The trail maintenance (as well as maintenance on the road
to get you to the trailheads) was paid for in large part by timber revenues. Timber
harvest, being an additive economic activity, generated a lot of sustainable
living wage jobs in local communities, both in the timber industry and on the
federal side of the equation. It also created jobs in the local tourism
industry because increased access brought more clientele.
It would seem that I am painting a very rosy picture of
perfection here. I am not. Timber, like all commodities, can be fickle. That
being said, it appears to have stabilized quite a bit over the boom and bust
cycles of the late 19th to mid 20th centuries. When I
worked solely in the timber industry, we were very rarely out of work because of
a lack of markets for logs. This has been the experience of people I know who
still work in the timber industry today. At any rate, it would be inherently
more stable and produce more family wage jobs than Dietrich’s scheme of
interpretive centers and outdoor schools.
It needs to be said though, that the multiple use type of
system, using timber revenues to pay for forest operations and maintenance can
create a lot of pressure to overuse resources both to pay for upkeep of
recreational facilities like roads, trails and campgrounds and to support local
economies. Sometimes this has been the case in the past but it doesn’t
necessarily mean it will happen in the future, especially if proper limits and
procedures, many of which already exist, are put in place to ensure
environmentally sound timber harvest practices. If timber resources were used
more conservatively in an environmentally sound manner, and this can be done,
they probably won’t generate as much revenue as in the past.
However, the revenues generated, while maybe not paying for everything
that they did in the past would go a long way towards funding a lot of
infrastructure and programs that would benefit everyone and everything,
including forests and wildlife. These revenues would be significant and
relatively predictable and they would continue to be generated potentially for
centuries or even longer. I think with proper planning, these revenues could be
harnessed over the long term to pay for things like environmental education
facilities. Of course this all assumes that the climate doesn’t change to the
point where our forests no longer exist, in which case, all bets are off
anyway.
Dietrich also states on page 82: “What kinds of mountain
experience make sense for racial minorities, the elderly, the disabled,
urbanites and the rural?”
Why would racial minorities be any different than any other
people?
Maybe Dietrich assumes that many racial minorities are new
to this country and it isn’t cultural norm where they are from to do a lot of
things outdoors away from human created landscapes. Maybe he assumes many
racial minorities in this country also fall into a category of people to whom
non-human created landscapes are a new experience. I don’t think this is true
of all people who are racial minorities. It almost seems as if he is trying to
touch all of the politically correct bases.
As to his question, to my mind it all goes back to the issue
of ease of access. You can’t get much easier access than roads. Roads provide
access to disabled people, people on lower end of economic spectrum and people
who don’t have a lot of spare time. They also provide access to people to whom
non-human created landscapes are a new experience. Roads are that one bit of
human created infrastructure that allow access to people who otherwise would
not be able to have the experience of the non-human created. This applies to
both urban and rural people but I would think that urban people who have to
travel long distances on top of their busy lives would benefit the most along
with anyone for whom the non-human created landscape is a new experience. .
I personally spend a lot of time going to remote locations
in the North Cascades and I depend on roads heavily when I want to get out and
don’t have a lot of time or when I want to take my small children with me. Roads
also provide easy access to people who are unfamiliar with a given area and
maybe outdoor activities in general because it isn’t part of the culture of the
place where they came from.
Maybe he is also speaking of increasing the general
diversity of the people who use the outdoors or live in the North Cascades. If
you want more diversity, create good, living wage jobs. If you create economic
opportunities, people from all sorts of backgrounds will come to take advantage
of them. If you work for wages, there are not a lot of economic opportunities for
the majority of jobs in the tourism industry. If you want people from different
backgrounds who might not necessarily be inclined to experience the outdoors to
do so, make access easy and cheap, or even better, free.
As far as rural communities go, I think communities with a
high degree of self-sufficiency, generating most or all of the revenues they
need by themselves with help and guidance from governments are definitely stronger
than those dependant upon governments for hand outs. There is something
psychologically invigorating about providing for yourself. Waiting for
government handouts is dysfunctional and psychologically depressing.
Sometimes, no matter what you do, you have to depend on the
generosity and good will of others and being able to spin a good enough story
to convince someone else to give you money. But I think it is better to make
your own way as much as possible. There is a proverb that speaks to this:
Better to beg than to steal but better to work than to beg.
Timber jobs are additive to the economy and create jobs that
are on the living wage end of the spectrum. In concert with sound multiple use
strategies they also create better access for the general public, including
disabled people and people who don’t have the knowledge (i.e. those whose
background doesn’t include outdoor activities), skills, physical ability, money
and free time to access remote areas.
Easier access is not only more democratic, it also boosts
opportunities for tourism businesses. Tourism businesses are important in local
mountain communities but they are not additive and they are a poor economic
engine if that is all you have. I’m sure most of the business owners in the places
Dietrich names, Suncadia, Leavenworth, Winthrop and Chelan do okay for
themselves but I am just as sure that a lot of the people who work for them
aren’t making a stand alone living wage. This is no knock on those business
owners or the tourism industry. I just don’t think the margins are big enough
in the tourism industry to pay high wages across the board and that is the
nature of the business and no fault of the business owners.
On page 79 Dietrich states: “The
bald eagle, wolf, grizzly bear, wolverine and fisher are examples of species
either recolonizing on their own from Canada, or that appear likely to flourish
if reintroduced.”
Bald eagle recovery had more to
do with the ban on DDT than on any land use practices. DDT weakened the shells
of bird eggs and decreased reproductive success. This was especially
problematic in birds like eagles that were near the top of the food chain
because DDT tended to concentrate in their tissues through bioaccumulation. The
increase in bald eagle, and many other bird populations was quite dramatic in
the decades after the ban on DDT. There have always been a few resident bald
eagles in the North Cascades but these few and far between. They typically
inhabit rocky, mountainous headwater areas that were historically of little
value for resource extraction activities anyway.
The great quantities of eagles
one sees in the winter along the rivers are following chum and coho salmon runs.
These salmon runs, to a degree, are adversely impacted by land use practices in
the North Cascades but many of these same adverse practices have been made much
more salmon friendly in the last few decades. However, these salmon are also vulnerable
to ocean conditions which may change dramatically due to climate change and
increased carbon dioxide, international fishing and development in Puget Sound
lowlands, all of which are more impactful than land use practices in the North
Cascades. The fate of bald eagles in the North Cascades has less to do with
land use practices in the North Cascades than in the land use practices and conditions
created in Puget Sound and the North Pacific and in the world in general.
Many of animals Dietrich lists
have possibly been here all along. The North Cascades are so remote and
difficult to access that comprehensive studies to find these animals are
hindered. I have been involved in a few wildlife studies and have followed many
others. Quite often the difficulty of access combined with a lack of, or spotty
funding makes it logistically impossible to cover more than one small area at a
time.
I have also, unlike Dietrich and
the other authors, walked to the majority of the mapped high lakes and ponds in
the Skagit River watershed in the North Cascades and I can tell you that there
are a lot of very remote hard to access nooks, crannies and valleys in the
North Cascades that probably few humans ever visit. In my travels I have seen
and bypassed so much remote ground that it would require a lifetime to explore
and I haven’t made a dent in the entirety of the North Cascades.
I have been aware of reports of
wolves at places like Hozomeen near the Canadian border for decades, years
before anyone with a science background took an interest in verifying that they
were really there. The same is true of wolverines. I am aware of at least 6
separate reports of wolverines in the North Cascades over the last 40 to 50
years. The thing is, none of the people who made the sightings were wildlife
biologists so their reports, if they were even passed on to wildlife officials,
were probably not seen as valid, at least I never heard of any action taken by
officials.
When I received several of the wolverine
reports I was specifically not told to tell anyone where it was because the
person who made the observation was worried about even more draconian land use
policies being implemented if environmentalists discovered that there were
wolverines around. Recently some wildlife biologists went out for the first
time and caught a few wolverines and suddenly this species has made a
comeback!!! I think wolverines were here all along but nobody was looking for
them until recently.
While we are on the subject of
wolverines, it is my understanding that this species needs deep winter snows.
If many of the climate change predictions I see out there come true, the
snowpack in the North Cascades might soon be quite unreliable and quite
ephemeral. This has to do with the larger climate and human impacts on the
entire planet. No amount of land you set aside in the North Cascades will
change that. In fact, depending on how things turn out, more active management
might be required in order to maintain some semblance of historical snowpack.
As far as grizzly bears go, based
on scattered, verified reports, I think they have also been here all along,
though in very small numbers. Overhunting, much of which occurred before the
main waves of European American settlement was probably largely responsible for
that decline so I have been told by a bear biologist. This has been changed. Killing
a grizzly bear in this state is now illegal.
When one considers that there was
a bounty, which actively seeks to depress populations, on wolves until well
into the 20th century, I think that might be why wolves experienced
a decline in their historic range as well. A species can have all of the
habitat that it needs to maintain a healthy population but will decline anyway
if overhunted. Prevention of such a decline due to overhunting has more to do
with utilizing accurate information on the health of a given species’ population
to create hunting regulations that will meet management goals for that species
than it does with land use practices. I think it is also important to have
accurate information on a given species’ historic range so species aren’t
introduced into an area where they didn’t occur historically in an effort to
“recover” the population.
Dietrich states that these
species are poised to “recolonize” the North Cascades on their own from Canada.
Well, if one looks just across the border at British Columbia, much of it is
hardly an untouched wilderness. There are certainly parks and set aside lands
but there is also a lot of historic as well as active logging and mining going
on. So apparently those species poised to “recolonize” the North Cascades south
of the border seem to be able to maintain healthy populations under less
restricted land use practices north of the border in British Columbia, at least
the way the Canadians are conducting them.
If these species aren’t doing so
well north of the border because of all of the resource extraction activities,
this is an example of the lack of a holistic approach to how our modern society
gets its resources. Meeting society’s demands for resources is a game of
whack-a-mole being played on a global scale. Resources are being extracted
north of the border and in other areas around the world in part in order to
fill demand that is not being met by lands south of the border.
On page 132, other authors in the
book detail the preservation campaign to “save” the Loomis State Forest and
state, “money raised in the preservation campaign has been used to benefit
schools and compensate the trust (school trust funds supported by timber
revenues) for loss of logging revenues.”
The main driver for this was to
prevent roads from being built in this forest. Again, this is an issue of
limiting or denying access to the majority of the public who own these lands. The
argument for denying access is that there is less disruption to wildlife.
If you want to follow that line
of reasoning and you agree with the tenet of keeping the majority of the
general public out, after timber harvest is complete the roads can be gated and
put to bed, basically stabilized and made unusable for motorized use while
being in a condition to be easily recommissioned.
The tactics employed at the
Loomis State Forest follow a typical myopic view of those outside the timber
industry who apparently think that anything is better than logging. I am not
familiar with the effects of this land set-aside in the communities surrounding
the Loomis State Forest but such set-asides have affected the communities where
I live in many negative ways.
Are the funds that were raised to
pay the trust going to be available in perpetuity? Somehow I doubt it. Timber
could be harvested off that land in perpetuity and revenue generated in
perpetuity (again assuming climate change doesn’t alter conditions to the point
where this is no longer feasible and, if this happens, the forest would be lost
anyway). I have a hunch that the revenue for “saving” this forest is a one time
deal but it will be expected to be preserved in perpetuity, thus foregoing all
of the funds that could have been generated in the future.
This is something that I have
noticed about environmental crusaders who try to shut down logging jobs every
chance they get. They think that once a forest is harvested, it is gone
forever. In a sense this is true, that particular forest is gone forever. But forests
here don’t disappear forever. If the land isn’t developed, forests don’t
disappear even for very long. New forests usually grow back at astounding
rates, even faster if trees are planted. Of course if you want old-growth or
late successional forest, you would have to wait longer intervals between
harvests but this isn’t out of the realm of possibility.
Another thing that isn’t
addressed is the number of living wage jobs to harvest the timber and build and
maintain (or retire) roads that were lost in this deal and the additive effect
of creating even more jobs that those jobs would have on local economies. It makes
a big difference in small communities to have a solid core of people with
steady jobs that pay decent wages. This creates stable homes for kids to grow
up in. School funds go further in this situation than one in which a large
number of the kids come from poverty stricken homes. School funds are often
spent on pressing issues related to students living in poverty rather than
basic education in such situations.
They did allow grazing in this
forest. I am glad that those public lands have been allowed to generate at
least a small fraction of potential revenues to counties and the state and that
some individuals have been given the opportunity to use public lands to meet
their needs. I am sure that raising livestock has its own additive effects on
local economies though I doubt that they are at the level of timber harvest.
However, grazing cattle on that
land is far from benign. Don’t get me wrong. I own cows myself and through this
activity I admittedly practice land use that is less than benign. And my grazing
practices could stand to be improved. In a perfect world, I could get right on
that problem and fix it posthaste. However, I, like a lot of other people I
know, have a number of other more pressing issues on my agenda. So someday
hopefully some of the problems caused by my practices will be remedied. That’s
life. I would hope the grazing in the Loomis State Forest is being well monitored
so it isn’t overdone.
Cattle can have a heavy impact on
the vegetation growing under the tree canopy. While the large trees remain, the
vegetation underneath can be severely depleted. I have seen several instances
of this, including a forested area where my cows are allowed to graze.
One of the more current
definitions of old-growth forest is a forest having multiple canopy layers. A
lot of different species depend on those multiple canopy layers for food and
for cover. The diversity of plant species and sizes leads to a diversity of
organisms that use those different habitats and resources. This multiple canopy
layer forest is one of the distinguishing characteristics of an old-growth
forest.
Cattle can be very hard on
old-growth conditions, effectively removing the lower several vegetation layers
of a forest if overgrazed. Many other species depend on those understory plants
for food and habitat. So, while cattle might not be in direct competition with
an animal like a lynx, they are probably in direct competition with snowshoe
hares, an important prey species for lynx. If you run too many cows and they
eat the vegetation down to the point where the snowshoe hare population
declines, the lynx population will decline as well.
The same can be true for any
species that utilizes the trees but also depends on heavy undergrowth, either
directly as a food source or indirectly as a food source for other species that
it preys upon. Even thought the trees remain, if too much undergrowth is
removed, these species might not have enough food resources to maintain a very
large population.
It is hard and expensive to
measure such effects. I won’t even go into cowbirds. Again, if I’m pointing
fingers, the first person I have to point at is myself. I am pointing out that
there are no silver bullets and no land use is without its impacts and one has
to think about these impacts if you want to use resources wisely. You can’t get
by with some simplistic mantra that as long as it isn’t being logged, its okay.
Depending on how the grazing
program is administered, selective logging that mimicked a natural disturbance
like a forest fire or created gaps in the canopy similar to gap dynamics in the
Loomis State Forest would potentially have less impact on the native species.
Those species are adapted to such disturbances as fire and canopy gaps, in that
forest.
Which brings up the question: If
the Loomis State Forest catches on fire, and it will some day, will this fire
be fought or left to burn out naturally? Either way, large parts of it will be
gone that could have been harvested in a way similar to natural disturbances.
This harvest would have generated the aforementioned jobs with additive effects
on local economies.
If it is decided to fight the
fire, that will create jobs, but when the fire is done, any of the local jobs
and economic activity it created will go away. More importantly, the additive
effect of taking raw materials and producing something from them would be lost.
The money to pay to fight such a fire would come directly from county, state
and federal coffers rather than being generated from the land itself.
Here is another excerpt by the authors
on page 132: “In the late twentieth century the northern spotted owl became the
centerpiece of a bitter battle between environmentalists and the logging
industry. It received legal protection via the Endangered Species Act and
became a national symbol for a key environmental issue: whether to log or
preserve old-growth forests in the Pacific Northwest. In a perverse twist of
fate, the spotted owl faces a new battle with extinction. The new threat comes
from an invasion of its last territories from one of its own cousins-the highly
adaptable and aggressive barred owl.”
Well…for starters, they didn’t stop logging in old-growth
forests alone. Within a few years of the Northwest Forest Plan being
implemented, logging of all types of timber, both second growth and old-growth
virtually stopped on the Mount Baker-Snoqualmie National Forest in Skagit
County where I live and I haven’t seen much in the surrounding counties either.
There is a lot of second growth timber that is merchantable and could be
harvested to generate much needed additive jobs and tax revenue here but I
haven’t seen a tree cut in over 20 years in many of the areas that I am
familiar with.
At the same time I have seen the quality of life for people
living in the North Cascades erode. This has been on top of the erosion of the
middle class that is happening everywhere in this country.
For what? The spotted owl is now a candidate for listing as
an endangered species. This is despite that fact that there has been a steady
increase in de-facto wilderness creation through road closures because the U.S.
Forest Service no long has funds to maintain roads. And despite the fact that,
at the time the Northwest Forest Plan was implemented, there was already over 2
million acres of designated wilderness where any type of logging or development
was prohibited.
I would characterize this as a failure in policy on the part
of the federal government who I would hope is somewhat responsible for the well
being of all of the citizens of this country. Local people are poorer and the
spotted owl appears to be headed inexorably toward extinction.
It is also a potential failure of strategy by environmental
groups. Choosing the northern spotted owl as the poster species to stop logging
was a move calculated to sway public opinion but it had some serious problems. I
recall that at the time that the spotted owl controversy was brewing up there
was a big debate among environmental activists on whether to make the argument
to stop logging based on broad arguments based on science or on a gimmick like
using the spotted owl as a poster species to tug at people’s emotions. Some
people didn’t want to pin the anti-logging campaign on a single poster species,
creating a powerful image without a lot of substance and good science because
if things didn’t work out, it would weaken their case and cause. They lost.
To be clear, there was scientific evidence that showed that
the spotted owl was probably adversely impacted by logging but just because
some studies were done that showed a certain result hardly means that the issue
is settled. There is, or should be, vigorous debate over all scientific studies
and whether they properly represent reality. On top of that, things constantly
change and different factors constantly come into play.
With the spotted owl, a major factor was the barred owl.
Barred owls outcompete spotted owls for resources as well as interbreeding with
them or killing them outright.
The authors in the book describe this as a “perverse twist
of fate”, an anthropomorphism. As Webster’s Dictionary defines it,
anthropomorphism is: “an interpretation of what is not human or personal in
terms of human or personal characteristics”. In other words, assigning human
traits to things that are not human.
The phenomenon of barred owls outcompeting and causing or
hastening the extinction of the spotted owl is not perverse. Perversity is an
abstract, subjective human concept. The process of extinction is part of a
process that has been going on since life began on this planet, long before
humans were around to apply abstract labels like “perverse” to things.
In direct competition between species or individuals, the
fittest survives. This process has caused the extinction of countless species.
This is also known as evolution, a solid scientific theory and it appears that
the spotted owl is losing out in the evolutionary competition.
One of the biggest causes of extinctions today is
undoubtedly the sheer mass of humans on the planet and their collective
activities. The barred owl’s westward migration was probably helped by human
activity but it was not purposely introduced into the Pacific Northwest and
timber harvest wasn’t the sole factor in this migration. The barred owl had to
travel a long distance before reaching the west coast and all of the human
activity that aided this migration had nothing to do with the timber
communities on the west coast. These communities were not responsible for the
barred owl’s appearance yet they paid a steep price for it.
The barred owl was a known or suspected threat to spotted
owls well before timber harvest on National Forests was effectively halted by
the Northwest Forest Plan. For all we know, if the barred owl hadn’t shown up
on the scene, the spotted owl may have been able to maintain healthy
populations in the face of human activities such as timber harvest, as do other
species in the region.
Choosing the spotted owl as an anti-logging poster species
was a cynical ploy to sway public opinion by manipulating people’s emotions.
The small owl is cute and fluffy and, more importantly, because their eyes are
situated on the front of the head like humans, they can be readily
anthropomorphized.
In fact owls have been anthropomorphized for millennia,
being the symbol of wisdom in some cultures, despite the fact that, from what I
understand, as far as the animal kingdom and the bird world goes, owls in
general are pretty low on the intelligence scale.
Intelligence notwithstanding, the fact that owls appear to be
so human-like helped to generate a lot of empathy for them from the general
public. This empathy generated momentum to stop timber harvest on federal
lands.
However, the sad, shameful thing about this is that spotted
owls don’t care about any of this. They don’t have the capacity to. They aren’t
human and have no awareness of their own significance as a species. If the
spotted owl were to go extinct, the last one wouldn’t suffer like a human
would. It isn’t going to suffer because it is sad and lonely and worried sick
about what tomorrow will bring. It isn’t human and has no concept of past or
future. It would do what instinct dictates a spotted owl do until the day it
died without a single abstract thought or worry. A lot of human suffering was
caused for the sake of a creature that doesn’t even appreciate and can’t
understand what has been done on its behalf. In truth, this wasn’t really to
save a species. It was done to impose one group of human being’s sensibilities
on another group at that other group’s expense.
From the perspective of a human being, it is a terrible thing
to be told that you and your efforts to contribute to society are not needed. In
essence, that you are worthless. I have been told this several times in my
life. First when the Northwest Forest Plan severely curtailed logging where I
live. I was told in effect that my efforts to contribute to society through the
revenue I generated through my job, the taxes I paid and the raw materials that
were turned into products that everyone in society used every day were not
needed, they would be gotten somewhere else. Then, when I worked hard, got
retrained and got a job in natural resources, monitoring and restoring natural
areas, I was often told that I wasn’t needed because there was no budget to pay
for me to work. This was often in spite of the fact that there was plenty work
that could have been done. Obviously this work wasn’t important enough to enjoy
a steady source of funding. These situations made me feel pretty worthless and
words fail me to describe how depressing and worrisome that is.
The environmental activists that Dietrich et al. seem to
think so much of supported the Northwest Forest Plan and many filed lawsuit after
lawsuit that halted timber harvest on federal lands. This effectively placed most
of the economic burden of the effort to try to save the spotted owl on people
who depended on that timber as an economic base to provide for their
livelihoods and maintain stable communities. These people lived with an economy
where it was already hard to make a living and the Northwest Forest Plan and
attending lawsuits abruptly gutted it and destabilized many rural, mountain
communities. This caused human suffering and declines in the quality of life and
threatened the ability of people to meet their basic needs.
The activists from wealthy urban areas had access to resources that
rural timber communities didn’t. A lot of rural people
in the North Cascades suffered and continue to suffer today because of the deliberate
decisions and actions of other, more powerful people in their efforts to save
the spotted owl an animal, unlike a human, without a psyche and thus
invulnerable to psychological suffering. This is perverse.
Dietrich and others have characterized various successful
efforts to preserve lands such as the Northwest Forest Plan and the attending
lawsuits as triumphs. How does one consider destroying other human being’s
lives and livelihoods, sowing human misery and destabilizing communities a
triumph? How does one justify doing this to people who, for the most part, are
just trying to do their part to make an honest living for the sake of an animal
that probably isn’t even aware of its own existence?
The people who brought about this suffering seem to have a
callous disregard for their fellow human beings, considering them, apparently, to
be less important than animals. Almost all of the people behind the closure of
federal forests lived in the urban areas around Puget Sound or feathered their
nests there. These "
environmental” activists appropriated resources that were shared
in common with everyone else to be used in service of certain ideals while
ignoring the negative impacts this had on the people who were excluded from
their fair share of the resources.
And, when I talk about people being excluded from their fair
share of the resources, I am not talking about the “Big Timber” bogey-man the
environmental activists are always trotting out to scare people. Big timber
companies typically have their own land and timber holdings independent of
federal forests. The Weyerhaeusers of the world seem to be doing quite well. If
anything, less available federal timber makes their timber even more valuable due
to decrease in overall supply. The people I am talking about are the small
business owners that operated in the timber industry who had little or no land
holdings and were heavily dependant on federal timber. These small businesses
are exactly the type of businesses that one hears about constantly as being so
important as economic engines in this country.
This is also not to mention all of the federal land
that, through their efforts, environmental activists have basically removed
from the tax rolls. The federal government doesn’t pay taxes so the only way to
generate revenue from federal lands is economic activity on those lands. These
revenues go to fund infrastructure and public facilities in rural areas. While
it is true that there is a system to provide federal monies to timber dependent
counties hurt by federal timber harvest restrictions, this has been, not
surprisingly, inconsistent. And these federal monies don’t make up for the
multiplicative effect of people with living wage jobs not only paying taxes on
their wages but spending those wages in local communities and generating more
jobs and taxes.
I would argue that there is
something inherently hypocritical, morally bankrupt and even perverse about people who have had
their needs met by an economic system that has created and operates in a
veritable biological wasteland (that, ironically used to be, but is no longer,
spotted owl habitat) telling someone who is already struggling to make ends
meet, that they can’t use the resources around them because owls need those
resources and the owls are more important.
From what I gather by listening to NPR and other radio stations based
in Seattle, the majority of the population of the greater Puget Sound region
seems to be quite environmentally conscious and socially conscious in their
particular cities or neighborhoods. But this population also seems to be
socially comatose when it comes to the rural areas on their doorstep
Those who would save the spotted owl or any other species are
not saving them as a favor to the species, these people are making the attempt based
on their own subjective sensibilities to serve an abstract ideal. These sensibilities, if offended, don’t
mean that these people will lose their means to meet their basic needs or that
their community of choice will lose the solid jobs that create wealth and
stability within that community. It is a luxury, not a basic need, to be able
to hold such sensibilities and be so idealistic, to be able to look at natural resources like timber
without an eye to using them for more than just trivial things like recreation
or simple not-in-my-backyard aesthetics. The luxury to hold such sensibilities and ideals is
based on wealth created by economies that cause widespread environmental
degradation both here in the Pacific Northwest, particularly in the Puget Sound
area, and around the world.
Trying to prevent the extinction of species is a laudable
cause and I get it that extinction is a serious thing that is, for the most part permanent, barring new technologies, and can be harmful to
human beings. But one group should not impose their sensibilities on another
group without first taking into account the needs of that other group who are
going to be most heavily impacted by the imposition of those sensibilities.
The argument is always framed as jobs vs. environment. What
is missing in this argument is the human element. “Jobs” makes it sound like
there are a lot of options for employment so people need to quit being so
greedy and just take another, more environmentally friendly job. Unfortunately
there aren’t a lot of job options in rural areas. Believe me, unlike Dietrich
et al., I’ve tried it.
People need jobs in order to build secure lives with
economic safety, which, in turn, helps create more stable communities. Everyone
should have the right to have their basic needs met and, if the resources are
available, the economic means to create a prosperous and stable community. This
should be the first consideration every time. If this never happens, then don’t
expect to solve the problem of rural poverty.
I have no argument with anyone, urbanites included, who is minding
his or her own business and just trying to make an honest living. I know that
people living in urban areas have their own sets of struggles. My argument is with
those who apparently make no apologies for the impacts that their presence has on
this planet has while seeking to impose strict limitations on the activities of
people whose experience they don’t share. This is hypocrisy. Most of the
activist environmental groups that I am familiar with that seem so concerned
about other parts of Washington State and the world are based in the Puget
Sound area. They haven’t been doing a very good job taking care of Puget Sound
and the Puget Sound orca, so what business do they have meddling in other
places?
The authors of The North Cascades: Finding Beauty and
Renewal in the Wild Nearby, in effect, state that they are concerned about humans
getting disconnected from the natural world. This book itself is a striking
example of this disconnect, not only from the natural world but from their
fellow human beings who are trying to make a living in rural areas. The book presents
the mostly urban centric view of a group of elite people who recreates in the
North Cascades and apparently doesn’t want to share its playground with anyone
else.
I would also argue that there are other ways to connect with
the natural world than recreation alone. I think that getting some of the
resources that go to meet ones basic needs, food and shelter connect one to the
natural world in a deeper, more meaningful way than something as superficial as
recreation alone as the book seems to put forth.
A misleading tenet presented by this book is that recreation
is a basic human need. Several interviews with high school youth are presented.
These kids, fresh from recent hiking and camping trips, gush about how
inspiring and life changing their experiences were.
A more realistic perspective would be to interview these
individuals ten years from now when they will probably be out on their own or
at the very least trying to make their way in the world mostly independent of
parents and school. Maybe they will still owe a lot of money on college debt or
the new baby is sick or their car or some appliance has broken down and the
rent has just been increased or any of the other endless challenges that life
throws at us all. This is where the societal decisions about natural resources
will be made.
I am sure that some of these folks in situations like I have
laid out would still be willing to pay extra taxes or at least forgo tax
revenues that could make their lives easier for the sake of setting aside
lands. I’m guessing though, that most won’t. This isn’t to diminish their
outdoor experiences or insult their intelligence, it is pointing out that, for
most of us, our perspective changes with time and our current situation and
many of us tend to change our priorities.
And don’t forget, there are a lot of people who don’t get to
go on those hiking and camping trips as kids. Recreation is not a basic human
need. Recreation is important for a lot of people and it does fulfill certain
needs for certain segments of society but these are the higher needs of those
who, for the most part, have had their basic needs met. I say this as one who
recreates outdoors frequently and for whom this activity is very important. But
I will be the first to tell you that I won’t be out on some frivolous hike if I
don’t have food on the table or a roof over my family’s head or a job that
generates enough income to allow me to take some days off. I don’t know very
many other people who would act differently. So this aspect of my needs, my
playground or religious beliefs or spiritual needs, or anyone else’s for that
matter, should never trump other people’s abilities to meet their basic needs.
Not if we want to live in a socially just society.
There are 2.7 million contiguous acres set aside in North Cascades.
That is enough for me for a playground and to meet my spiritual needs and
whatever higher needs I might have. And there are enough nooks and crannies in
that 2.7 million acres to harbor a lot of plants and animals, almost certainly
more than we know about. I have spent over 30 years of my life exploring the
North Cascades and I have barely scratched the surface. The rest of the land
base should be used to help meet the basic needs of rural mountain communities
in an environmentally responsible manner. Tourism alone isn’t going to do it.
The so-called conservation strategies and triumphs celebrated
in the book would be more accurately labeled preservation strategies which
allow only minimal human use in the vast majority of the set aside lands and,
in effect, exclude most of the public from public land. Excluding people,
whether it is with barriers or through lack of good general access only serves
disconnect more people from the natural world. In the view of the authors of
the book, the way people in the future should get connected with the natural
world is through certain organizations presenting highly managed and structured
experiences (presented from the point of view of the organization providing the
experience) for a fee (of course) rather than do-it-yourself unstructured
exploration. There is nothing wrong with organizations presenting structured information
and helping people get out into nature but there should also be plenty of
opportunities for people who would rather have these experiences on their own
terms.
How can you connect people with nature when you support
policies and practices that limit the ability of the majority of people to
access public land?
I think the drive to limit access to public lands stems from
the idea that human activity and nature are separate from each other.
Ironically, I think the idea that human activity isn’t a natural part of the
processes on this planet stems from the idea that humans are separate from
nature. There are at least two manifestations of this idea. One is that
anything we do in the environment like acquiring and using natural resources is
bad because it isn’t a natural part of the planet’s processes. The other is
that we are separate from the environment so therefore we are free to exploit it
in any way we see fit because it won’t affect us or at least if we make enough
money from it we can buy protection from the detrimental effects of our
activity.
To my mind, while movements to preserve lands are a natural
reaction to the economic systems which advocate turning natural resources into
cash as quickly and efficiently as possible, damn the consequences. Preservation
and all out exploitation are closely linked. They occupy opposite ends of the
same spectrum of ideology that states that humans are separate from Earth and
its systems and processes. The one justifies the other and can’t exist without
the other. I also think, ironically, that many preservation efforts are funded
by exploitative activities in other areas, whether this results from mitigation
attempts or someone seeking absolution or maybe just a tax break. Under this
type of ideology, in order to save more, we need to exploit more in other
areas.
Preservation or mitigation strategies are doomed to failure
if they are dependant on a larger, unsustainable economy to fund them. And I
believe that most of them are. To pay for projects to mitigate damage to
natural systems you have to generate more revenue. Generation of this revenue
results in the destruction of other natural systems. In the case of land
set-asides, you are usually not generating money from outside to pay for the
set-asides, you are foregoing natural resource generation and revenue from
those lands. The pressure for natural resources and revenues then shifts to
other lands. The more you want to save the more you have to destroy. This is a
losing strategy. A better strategy would be holistic and utilize resources in a
sustainable way to produce the raw materials human society needs while
generating revenue that could be used to benefit human society and to reinvest
in the resource to ensure it remains healthy and viable for the long term.
The authors seem to be completely blind to, or ignore, the
high rates of poverty and social dysfunction in those communities closest to large
park and wilderness set-asides on public lands. The solution they present for
such communities is an economy based mostly on tourism. Such an economy will
produce very few living wage jobs. The tourism economy they promote is supposed
to be based on beautiful lands to attract tourists. But, with limited access,
most people won’t be able to get to the majority of those lands. For the
majority of the public that isn’t much of an attraction.
And one doesn’t have to wonder whether or not a tourism based
economy will support mountain communities. Over the last twenty years or so we
have been testing this idea. Since the Northwest Forest Plan was implemented in
the early 1990’s, the economy in the North Cascades has become much more
dependant on tourism and the local economy has drifted ever farther into a
backwater.
Timber harvest, hands down, is one of the most
environmentally friendly land use practices in the Pacific Northwest. I have
tried to explain this in
Farming and the Fragile Forest post of 12/8/14. It is also one of more
economically viable alternatives for local, rural communities. It is mentioned
only in passing in the book and even then it is presented as a thing of the
past. There are entire colleges in this country and around the world dedicated
to forestry and there are a lot of ideas and scientific research out there
about how it can be done sustainably and in an environmentally responsible
manner. And there are a number of examples of such forestry already in
existence. Yet none of this was presented as an option for the North Cascades.
I do not make the claim that timber harvest has no impact on
the environment. It does. What I am stating is that, compared to other land use
practices that generate significant revenue and resources, timber harvest in
the Pacific Northwest has the least impact.
However, aided by semantics and spin to play on people’s
emotions, many so called environmental groups and activists have very
effectively sold logging as being extremely harmful to the environment.
According to the information as it is presented by these groups, logging is one
of the most environmentally harmful practices that can be undertaken. This
effort has been so successful that nowadays it is dogma that logging is bad.
Time and time again I see it blamed for any sort of environmental malaise.
Timber harvest, or logging, can have a very dramatic effect
on large scales and can look awful and untidy and have a big emotional impact.
So it is, not surprisingly, easy to sell to the general public as a very bad
practice, especially to people who no longer understand where their resources
come from. Certainly there were harmful timber harvest practices in the past
and some harmful practices continue even today. However, there have been many
changes in the timber industry in the last several decades that serve to lessen
its environmental impact. It is important to remember though, that, unlike almost every other land use practice by which our society gets its raw materials, even heavy handed timber practices leave much of the native biota in the soils and woody debris intact to recolonize a new forest.
Extracting raw materials of any sort will always have some
environmental cost, for example, I have heard farming characterized as a war on
the land. Think about farming, mining and petroleum development. Each has its
down side but now there are also a lot more environmental rules in place than
there were historically. In this way logging is no different than any other
means by which society acquires the raw materials necessary for its continued
existence.
I think for many people concerned about environmental
problems and looking through an emotional lens it is easy to see timber
harvest only as a threat and not part of the solution. I think it is obligatory
for anyone seriously claiming to be a conservationist in the Pacific Northwest
to take a good hard, non-emotional look at the science of forestry and the many
alternative methods of timber harvest that can be employed.
You can’t make the argument that science has come down
wholly against logging and forestry. As I stated earlier, there are entire
colleges devoted to forestry in this country and around the world. It is hard
to believe that there aren’t any science based answers to how we can harvest
timber while avoiding many of the environmental problems that can potentially
be created. Anyone vaguely familiar with the science of forestry and forest
ecology should be aware of a multitude of timber harvest methods and
treatments.
Viewed from another perspective, timber harvest, or logging,
creates recyclable, biodegradable products that are renewable and can be gotten
in ways that don’t dramatically alter natural areas. This isn’t what
anti-logging environmentalists use to sell their agenda. They present unsustainable
practices or practices that are less desirable from an environmental standpoint
as the only way logging can be done. I think that this is misinformation
propagated by people who either don’t know any better or don’t want to know.
Generating revenues in rural communities is important. In
today’s world, over half our population lives in urban areas where people have
their basic needs met through concentrations of human capital and raw resources
gotten through trade from a worldwide base. In rural areas the ability for such
concentration is much more limited and rural people are much more dependant on
local resources for viable economies. Usually the most lucrative means to use
these resources is extractive.
I should point out that I use the word lucrative to describe
activities that pay better in contrast to other possible activities and not to
imply that a lot of people are getting incredibly wealthy. People are generally
better paid for extractive types of use in comparison to non-extractive types
of use but not many gain incredible wealth.
This means people who make their living in this manner
generally have enough to live in relative comfort, pay taxes and raise families
whereas people involved in non-extractive types of work generally don’t.
Extractive is another term that has been given a negative
connotation. It is often equated with destruction. In essence, extraction is
drawing or pulling something out. Anyone who thinks they live a life that
doesn’t use natural resources extracted from this planet is fooling themselves.
Most of the things that make our lives possible from the food we eat to the
materials we build shelters and clothing with to things like plastics and
metals that make high tech possible and even organic foods are extracted from
somewhere on this planet. If these demands aren’t met, society will cease to
function.
Many extractive processes are very destructive but others
aren’t. A simple example would be extracting maple syrup or, along the lines I
have been following, sustainable forestry. We should be working on means to acquire
renewable resources that we all use in the most environmentally sound manner
possible. Sustainable or “organic” forestry, if you will, is a very good
candidate to meet these goals.
People who concern themselves with simply stopping the
resource extraction activities of others (often after vilifying and
dehumanizing them) without going deeper into the reason those activities are
occurring in the first place (i.e. what is the need, computer parts, energy,
building materials etc, that is driving the activity?) are part of the problem
if you ask me. Anyone who doesn’ t look at these deeper questions isn’t seeking
a solution. Even if you succeed in stopping a particular resource use activity
that you don’t agree with, if the demand for that resource still remains the
problem still remains.
I know for some cutting down a tree, especially in a nearby
forest, seems like a shocking act but if you recognize that this is done to
provide a biodegradable, recyclable product that is also renewable, to fill the
demand that you yourself help create then you recognize that this is part of
the price for your existence. This is much more honest than getting resources
from some anonymous place halfway around the globe. If your local tree isn’t
cut, then one somewhere else in someone else’s back yard will be cut to fill
the demand. That other tree might be in a more environmentally sensitive place
or it might mean the other tree might not get as big as it possibly could have
and created habitat for any number of organisms before it is gone.
It would also seem less shocking if your local tree was cut
as part of a carefully thought out plan that ensured enough trees were left in
the forest to provide structure and retain native habitat. If you want to save
the world you should be seeking solutions where everyone wins, the people who
make their living by making products from natural resources, the environment
itself and society which has its needs to continue functioning fulfilled by the
materials and other necessities created.
Probably the best way to come up with such solutions would
have a scientific approach that employs not only environmental sciences,
biology and ecology but also social and economic sciences. In the interest of
social justice, studies should center on how particular actions affect the well
being of local human populations. This should be the question that underlies
every land use policy, because even if science is being done, quite often the emphasis
and how questions are asked determines the result of any given study. If the
well being of local populations isn’t the main focus of a study, it will often
get short shrift.
In the Pacific Northwest and the North Cascades, timber is
one of the best options for sustainable resource use. It has the potential to
meet at least part of the global demand for raw materials while, if done
properly, leaving natural systems largely uncompromised or in some cases,
enhanced. At the same time it would provide much needed jobs and tax revenues
in our rural areas and, as an added bonus, on federal lands, it would increase
or maintain ease of public access for recreational use to many areas. This last
is important in order spread the pressure for resource and recreational use
over a wider area thus lessening the impact on any given area.
Not far from where I live there is a large lumber mill. I am
sure many anti-logging environmentalists decry this mill. It is owned by a
regional company that has mills up and down the west coast so it qualifies as
“big timber”. The log yard around
the mill is kind of ugly, a brown colored industrial area that smells funny (I
actually don’t mind the smell which isn’t the result of harmful emissions. I
would describe it as sour bark, or probably more accurately, sour cambium).
Despite this mill being owned by a large regional company,
many of the logs supplied to this mill are produced by local logging companies,
the type of small businesses I constantly hear touted as being so crucial to
local economies as well as the larger economy. Even if the absolute best forest
practices aren’t used to supply this mill, (logs are logs so, without a doubt,
probably at least some of them have been harvested using very good practices,
over and above standard environmental requirements), it still produces a
renewable, recyclable, biodegradable product that fulfills societal demand for
building materials and other forest products.
This mill has a co-generation plant. With the co-generation
plant it uses less energy than other mills and factories that produce all
manner of the other materials that we all use. At same, it time creates living
wage jobs in the area plus tax revenue from all of the economic activity that
it spurs and it hands out some pretty big scholarships at the local schools.
I am sure that there are a number of anti-logging
environmentalist groups who would decry this mill and celebrate if it shut
down. The thing is, those groups don’t make anything that anyone can use to
meet their basic needs. They are supported by donations from a larger economy,
much of which isn’t sustainable and probably does as much or more harm to the
environment than the mill in question does. Yet they would sit in judgment on
others who do make products that fulfill societal needs.
Most of these environmental groups aren’t big job creators
in rural areas and they generate little, if any, tax revenue. And they
certainly don’t hand out any scholarships at the local schools, at least not
from my observations.
The alternative to extractive activities, which, in the
North Cascades mostly means timber harvest, that I see put forth most often is
tourism. From the standpoint of an economic engine, tourism depends on a lot of
people having disposable time and disposable income. In other words, it is
optional for just about everyone. Timber production goes to meet basic human
needs, shelter being chief among them and along with that, a large number of
other products in wide use by modern civilization. The general population
pretty much has to buy timber products in one form or another to go on with
daily life. Timber products are not optional for most people. This creates a
much more stable demand and market for forest products than for tourism.
So tourism is a luxury indulged only if one has the
disposable resources. This is not to say that tourism isn’t important. But in
the North Cascades, the relationship between timber and tourism is complex. To
draw more people you need more access to some pretty formidable terrain. The
costs for providing this access on federal lands used to be, in part, funded by
timber harvest activities. The best solution for this problem is a multiple use
strategy. Timber supports tourism and both together create a stronger, more
stable economy and this, in turn, makes more resources available to people
living in marginal areas.
Trying to make tourism stand on its own without good access
for the general public to public lands and without huge marketing campaigns for
tourist activities on those lands is an over-simplistic idea held by people who
don’t live and work in the North Cascades and are clearly not familiar with the
situation of those who do.
This book is just what one would expect from a group of
people who, while they may visit occasionally, don’t actually live in the North
Cascades and apparently don’t want to deal with the day to day problems and
inconveniences that such a life entails. The authors are only familiar with the
area from a narrow perspective, safe within their respective bubbles and the
book’s narrow focus is on the people who are able to function or operate
outside of the realities of this place, the exceptions to the rules. The people
behind the book come to the North Cascades to escape. What about the people who
already live here dealing with the harsh realities of an economically depressed
area?
Apparently, the authors think the local people who have
spent much or all of their lives making a living in the North Cascades
independent of federal agencies don’t have anything worth saying because no on
like that is in this book. This absence is glaringly obvious to someone like
myself who has grown up here. I know quite a few such people who have a lot of
insights about the North Cascades but I think a lot of what they might say
wouldn’t fit with the message purveyed by the book.
The book makes several references to authenticity. Yet it
specifically omits anyone who has spent their lifetime living and making a
living in the North Cascades independent of the National Park Service and other
government agencies. These people’s authenticity is based on living and making
a living in this place. The National Park has only been here for forty years
and many of its employees are highly transitional, staying only a few years or
less.
I have lived in the North Cascades almost my whole life. The
creators of “The North Cascades, Finding Beauty and Renewal in the Wild Nearby”
haven’t.
I have made living here almost my whole life (except for six
years in the U.S. Navy), working in almost every job market available, logging,
federal, park service and forest service and hydropower, including operation of
several small businesses. I have lived here for real. The creators of this book
haven’t.
I have walked to the majority mapped highland bodies of
water in the Skagit Watershed, in the North Cascades, including a lot of
off-trail travel to remote areas. The creators of this book haven’t.
I have family history here that goes back over 120 years.
The creators of this book don’t.
I have studied environmental science and been involved in a
number of environmental studies and field work. I don’t know the qualifications
of the creators of this book in this field but I would guess that they aren’t
on a level with mine.
I will be first to tell you I don’t know everything there is
to know about this place. What does this say about the creators of “The North
Cascades, Finding Beauty and Renewal in the Wild Nearby”, people who don’t even
live here? What qualifies these people as authorities on the North Cascades?
What qualifies them as experts on authenticity?
I don’t question the authenticity of anyone featured in this
book. Many good people are featured in it and I would hope that everyone is
authentic to themselves and their life experiences. Their experiences show
certain ways to make a living here but many of these ways not available to
everyone. For my part, I don’t want to commute for several hours every day to
work or stay away from home for weeks at a time .I couldn’t support myself or
my family on the tourism jobs available here.
I probably could have limped along to retirement at the park
but I doubt that I ever would have gotten the economic security and safety of a
permanent job. Ironically, I have been to more out of the way places in North
Cascades National Park than the people charged with managing it, my family
history in the North Cascades goes back over 120 years (obviously this is an
accident of birth and not the result of any particular action on my part) and so
I am the bearer of unrecorded history, knowledge and culture. Yet in the
federal government’s eyes I am no more qualified than anyone else in applying
to work at this park. The same holds true for all federal or state agencies in
general for that matter, and depending on the hiring scheme, in some instances
I am less qualified than someone who has never even set foot here before.
Most of the people who have lived here for great lengths of
time are nearly invisible in the overarching culture of today. If anything
these folks might be a little recalcitrant and seem a little cool or distant. I
know for myself, I am a little tired of having people who have just shown up
here tell me all about the North Cascades, and how beautiful everything is. I
try to be polite but I usually don’t volunteer much because if they find out
that I live here I usually then get to hear how lucky I am.
I suppose I am lucky. I live a modern life in a
technologically advanced country where I have access to decent health care (which
due to my present situation I can afford) and I get to enjoy a lot of leisure
time. But I am not on vacation in the North Cascades. I live here. While the
North Cascades are certainly beautiful at times, they are a lot more than that
to me. They are a place where a lot of human experience happened. Along with
the happy, good times and fun recreational activities, there was also a lot of
human pain and suffering. The North Cascades provide a beautiful backdrop to
places where family and friends sweated and struggled and lived and died and
where many are buried or their ashes rest. Nothing like this point of view is
presented in “The North Cascades, Finding Beauty and renewal in the Wild
Nearby”. For the authors of this book the North Cascades are an idealized,
objectified place to project their fantasies and ideology and to pursue
recreational and esoteric activities that are trivial compared to the real
existence of many of the people who actually do live here.
Many of these local people of longevity have to be sought
out. You actually have to invest a lot of time to get to know these people and
live with them before you can see anything but what is on the surface. I
suspect any kind of meaningful interaction with many of these folks is as rare
as an endangered wildlife sighting. They are not often liable to burst into a
spontaneous litany about themselves and this place. Personally, I am wary of
folks who do burst into streams of canned messages. Sometimes they are genuine,
most often they are trying to sell you something.
I would ask these questions about diversity and
authenticity: If you were visiting someplace new, would you want at least an
opportunity to meet and interact with local people who have lived and made a
living in that place for decades? Who have been shaped and informed by that
place and the scars and hard-knocks that life in that place dishes out? Or
would you want some watered down, over-romanticized caricature of local people
presented by people who don’t actually live in that place but buzz in for the
summer to present canned presentations to provide light entertainment for the
tourist crowd? Who do you think you might present a more authentic experience?
Who do you think would have a deeper, multi-dimensional knowledge of that place?
Wouldn’t you consider people with that deeper knowledge part of our overall
cultural diversity?
Gimmicks are commonplace as people try to squeeze more and
more out of already thin tourism economies. Interactions with folks truly
authentic to a place might be hard to come by and they might not always be
pleasant because they don’t always fit with overarching cultural norms but
these interactions also stand chance to be more fulfilling than gimmicks and
canned presentations.
Someone once told me that nothing grows in the understory of
high elevation forests. This was not correct. A lot of things grow in the
understory of high elevation forests but you have to look for them and you have
to know what you are looking at.
In claiming that human history in the North Cascades has largely
been lost and forgotten, the authors of this book are as ignorant in their own
way as that person was. While that person was certainly familiar with high
elevation forests, they hadn’t taken the time to study out all of the intricate
details. The authors of this book have done the same thing with the human
aspect of the North Cascades as it pertains to people who have lived here and
made a living here for many years and even generations.
The only way to really become privy to this kind of
knowledge is to live here and throw your lot in with the people who live here. Invest
your time and resources. Live here for real. Dietrich talks about spending
months observing in order to gain access to the North Cascades. It is the same with
learning about what it is really like to live here and the human history that
exists. Dietrich and the other authors have not done this. Yet they present
themselves as some kind of experts on the North Cascades, at least experts
enough to feel that they can write a supposedly authoritative book on the North
Cascades. How can they say that human history here has been lost and forgotten
when they haven’t looked for it outside of a few books written by other people
who didn’t look very hard for it either?
Granted, my 128 year family history in this place isn’t very
long compared to other people around the world but it is 28 years, almost three
decades, longer than the National Park Service has existed and 8 decades longer
than North Cascades National Park has been in existence.
I interact with the outdoors in the North Cascades almost
daily and I learn something new about the North Cascades just about as often.
This doesn’t include the many things I have forgotten. I have lived and made
living here almost my entire life. This experience has shaped me. I don’t
remember every single experience verbatim but who does? Very few remember many
experiences from childhood verbatim or even experiences of just a few years ago
but most would probably say that these experiences have shaped them and their
points-of-view. So it is with me and probably many others who grew up here or
who have lived here for decades. It is ridiculous to think that people such as
this have nothing to add to any discussion about resource and land use policies
in the North Cascades.
And, as far as spending months observing the North Cascades,
I know of people who live here who have spent lifetimes doing this. Again, no
one who has made a living independently of the federal government, mostly the
National Park Service is featured in this book. What makes Dietrich’s observers
so special? Just because most of them have come here from the outside?
I am really tired of people who buzz in here from somewhere
else with agendas about public lands that effectively disenfranchise local
populations. I especially have a problem with those who have come here
specifically to support a cause like saving the environment. As surely as I
write this, the environment wherever these people came from needs help too. To
my mind this is nothing more than scapegoating vulnerable segments of our
population.
Preservation schemes that disenfranchise people only seem to
work when they are painless to the majority of people. Witness the plight of
the Puget Sound orca, a federally listed endangered species, and the health of
Puget Sound in general. The activities that support the lives and lifestyles of
not only the authors of this book, but the so called environmentalists that do
so much to disenfranchise local populations, are a major source of these
problems yet I don’t see the authors or any environmentalist groups for that
matter putting any ideas forth for Puget Sound to move to a tourism based
economy.
The parable of a speck of sawdust in the neighbor’s eye
compared to the plank in your own seems to apply quite well to the authors
here. This is a reference to Christian doctrine but I think most folks of any
stripe, religious or otherwise would recognize the wisdom and fairness in it.
I was minding my own business and doing my best to
contribute to society through a steady job that created materials needed by
society and created wealth and generated tax revenue when my community and I
were visited by the propaganda and lawsuits of so-called environmental groups and,
among other things, the Northwest Forest Plan.
I lost steady job but managed to make out okay, partly due
to blind luck. Unfortunately my community and neighboring communities were hard
hit. It is not enough for me to do okay by myself, I need critical mass of
people around me with steady work and stable lives. It has always been hard to
make a living in the North Cascades. Many resources are limited and some there
has always been some dysfunction. There is much more dysfunction now, mostly
due to a lot less wealth in local communities and, I feel, increased
psychological stress.
I have always been willing to work for what I get and
contribute to society and don’t think the world owes me, or anyone else, a
living. I do however, think that I, or anyone else, is owed fair chance at
making a decent living, assuming the regional economy is doing well, i.e. we
are not in a general economic downturn of some sort. I also think it is the
responsibility of our governments at all levels to ensure that my community is allowed
access to local natural resources in order to generate stable revenue sources
to build an economic base to support the most stable community possible,
assuming those resources exist. These resources do exist in the North Cascades
and they can be used for industrial purposes in a responsible manner.
Our governments, especially the federal government, have
been doing very poor job of taking care of rural communities over the last 20
years. There aren’t enough resources for a silver bullet solution here. As I
stated, it wasn’t perfect world before the lawsuits and the Northwest Forest
Plan. And, if more sustainable resource practices are used, this will reduce the
immediately available resources. But there are enough natural resources to generate
more revenues to local economies than is being done at present.
We live in a democracy where the government is supposed to
implement the will of the people and more people now live in cities where more
wealth is concentrated. More constituents live in urban areas today and the
interests of the urban population aren’t always the same as the rural
population. Politicians won’t get reelected if they aren’t representing the
interests of the majority of their constituents. So it would seem that the
responsibility for meeting the needs of the underserved in a democracy would
fall to society in general.
Most of the decline in the wealth and quality of life in my
community has been visited on it by people who don’t live here and don’t share
my quality of life and economic fate. This has largely come in the form of lawsuits
and organized publicity campaigns like the ones Dietrich describes in the book.
In many cases the people behind these actions didn’t even know North Cascades
or the communities here existed until they moved here themselves. Probably in
most cases, my family had lived here many decades or even a century before
these people knew the North Cascades existed.
If they can be bothered to live here, most of the people from
outside with public land agendas that hurt local populations usually have a
nest egg generated from somewhere else. Because they don’t live here or have to
make a living here, most, if not all, of the ideas they put forth and the causes
they support are theoretical and have no real world consequences to themselves
other than reduced government services. The people who do live here without the
benefit of outside resources and nest eggs will have to live with the realities
of such theories put into practice such as an economy based mainly on tourism.
The people who live here will have to deal with all of the downstream effects
that lack of wealth has on a community.
A cousin of mine has a saying, “Without honor, all is shit.”
The same is true with environmental causes and preservation schemes. If you ask
me, one is no hero and it is no triumph if, in the attempt to save something, one
disenfranchises and oppresses one’s fellow human being or leave them by the
wayside to fend for themselves after one has taken their best means for
economic viability away.
In promotional materials for preservation campaigns in the
North Cascades I have seen the terms “conservation giants” and “visionaries” to
describe preservationist leaders (the reader might remember that there is a
difference between preservation and conservation but preservationists appear to
use the term conservation loosely and, I believe, deceptively). Given the state
of economies in the small communities of the North Cascades, these
“visionaries” have a lot to answer for. How can any movement or land use
policy, no matter what the scale and purpose (for the greater good allegedly)
be valid if it involves dispossession of the disadvantaged?
One might not think that the independent types that often
live in rural timber communities are disadvantaged. As a general rule, these
folks are quite physically capable and as intelligent as anyone else. Where
they are disadvantaged is in lack of organization, lack of communication skills
and resources to communicate their message to the larger population and in not
having enough members to be a significant voting block on state and national
levels.
Semantics and shenanigans have been used to dispossess rural
communities from their resource bases and so called “preservation triumphs” by
“conservation giants” have left socioeconomic disasters in their wake in many
of these communities. Animals do not suffer like humans do and no species,
endangered or not, is an analogy for human suffering. If we want to live in a
socially just society then the needs of human beings living in a given area and
dependant upon the resources of that area have to be considered before any set
asides for non-human species or before policies to assuage the sensibilities
other human groups are pursued. The needs of local human populations need to be
considered first, before the needs of
non-human species.
Another aspect of the disenfranchisement of people, beyond
social injustice, is that it creates fault lines in our society. If people
don’t feel their government is making an honest effort to meet their needs,
that government begins to lose legitimacy. This is probably one of the reasons
for so much anti-government sentiment in rural areas. I’m not so naïve as to
believe that our politicians will always look after the needs of the
underserved because, again, they are, in large part, bound to the will of their
overall constituency which nowadays often has interests far removed from the
interest of our rural citizens but they should make better attempts than they
have been.
There is an argument that a healthy environment benefits
everyone on the planet. I don’t disagree with that but I would point out that
the benefits aren’t shared very evenly. Urban areas create wealth that isn’t
well shared with rural areas but the pollution caused by the activities that
generate that wealth is shared by all. Some of the pollution generated in the
creation of wealth in large urban areas near the Cascades falls out on the
Cascades.
By the same token, preservation benefits are theoretically
shared by all as well but the cost for these falls disproportionately on rural
areas that depend on the ability to actively use resources that preservation
puts of limits. Ironically, activities like timber harvest that benefit rural
communities more can be done in a manner more benign to the environment that
many of the activities that benefit urban areas.
Some believe we are living in a new epoch, the Anthropocene.
The thought is that human activity is modifying the planet on a large enough
scale to significantly change its biological processes. This may be true, I happen
to think that it probably is true but humans have modified their environments
and landscapes around them for millenia to the extent that it was within their
capacity to do so.
This benefitted some species and hurt others. As long as the
human population remains as large or larger as it currently is, we will
continue to modify the planet. It is unavoidable.
Positive human intervention will possibly be needed in the
future in order to maintain certain ecosystems and species. The trick is to not
be too heavy handed in the approach. Set-aside areas are good controls as a
benchmark to evaluate the results of management practices but they are not the be
all and end all. Going forward, it would be much better to figure out how to
create or maintain more habitat over wider area while still being able to
utilize those areas for the resources to meet basic human needs. Recreation
might be a need but it is not a basic need.
Local people, especially those who have been here for many
years or even generations, are on the front lines of how we are going to figure
out the wise use of the planet’s resources, if it is even possible to support
the current population sustainably. You can’t blame people for trying to meet
their needs within any given system, situation, rules, limitations, etc. Rather
than scapegoating and marginalizing them we should be working with them to
develop more sustainable methods of resource use and extraction. Their
knowledge, when paired with scientific knowledge and societal values, will
probably come the closest to creating the best solutions for everyone.
The rural resource producers are the first to feel the
impacts on the local economy, both positive and negative as well as positive
and negative impacts on local environmental conditions. Rural people who have
traditionally produced commodities from natural resources have, in many
instances, a practical knowledge of resources and a lot of knowledge and
insight on how to use these natural resources wisely. Over the years I have
regularly heard complaints from many of these very same people about how
resources were being abused. Since their livelihoods depend on these resources,
most of these people who hold a long view don’t want to see them damaged or
destroyed. They are the practical side of the equation of wise use and they
need to be included in any discussion on how these resources will be used, as
do rural people all around the world.
We are fortunate enough to live in a rich enough country
where resources are available to develop models of sustainability that could be
employed elsewhere in the world.
That’s pretty much all I have. I might continue post my journeys
into the mountains over the summers but at this time I need to turn my
attention to other things. If you have read this far, congratulations for
having the stamina to follow this rambling, repetitious diatribe. And Thank
You! I can only hope that at least some of it was presented in a manner that
makes some sort of sense.
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“If there is a culminating core to this geography it is the remote Picket Range east of Mount Baker and Shuksan. Largely hidden from view from paved roads……..are only accessible only by overnight backpack and then bushwacking scrambles and climbing.” William Dietrich, The North Cascade Finding Beauty and Renewal in the Wild Nearby. Above is a view of the Pickets, which are in North Cascades National Park from the Illabot Creek Road, USFS Road 16. Granted it isn't a close up view but it is nonetheless impressive. More importantly it is accessible to anyone who can ride in a two wheel drive motor vehicle. At least until the next road failure or slide closes it permanently. This would undoubtedly please many elitists who would then not have to share any part of their playground with someone who hasn't "earned it". Apparently paying your federal taxes doesn't count towards "earning it". The Illabot Creek road and others like it were built and maintained with timber harvest revenues. Those revenues are now mostly gone. These roads allow access to the mountains in a more democratic fashion to a wider variety of citizens who aren't physically capable, or have the knowledge or gear or time to access the mountains otherwise. They are rapidly disappearing.
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Picket Range from Illabot Creek Road, USFS Road 16. Even though it costs money for fuel to get to this spot, that expense is still much less than the gear or time it would cost to access such a spot otherwise, assuming one has the physical capability and knowledge to do so. |
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Picket Range and Diobsud Buttes (to left) from West Jordan Road. This road is now under the ownership of Sierra Pacific and is gated. It took me about 5 hours to get to this spot. When I was a kid this land was owned by Scott Paper and was not gated. I spent a lot of time up here when it took less than half an hour to get to this spot. This is an example of the rapidly shrinking access to private land that once existed. You can still go here if you have permission and the time and physical ability to do so. Prior to gating, there was a lot of garbage dumped on these roads after the county closed the free dump. And, every so often, some idiot would be playing with fireworks or be sloppy with a campfire and millions of dollars would go up in smoke. So I don't blame private timber companies for putting up gates. |
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Jordan Falls from West Jordan Road. I took about 6 hours to walk to this spot above the gate. Jordan Falls are visible from several spots around Marblemount but they don't really stand out from that far away. You have to know what to look for. They are quite impressive from a closer perspective. This view from West Jordan Road is one of the better ones. It is an easy hike to get right up next to them from the East Jordan Road but it is a long 4 hour hike above the gate to get to the point where you take off from the road. |
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Mount Chaval from Upper Illabot Creek Road. The section of road where this was taken from was blocked off when the road was reopened in 2010. There is a trail into Jordan Lakes that follows the road here and I understand that it is still in use. Mount Chaval is in the Glacier Peak Wilderness. |
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Bacon Peak with Green Lake just visible mid frame. This photo was taken en route to Berdeen Lake but you can see a corner of Bacon Peak and the glaciers on it from the Oakes Peak Road, USFS Road 1062, off the Bacon Creek Road, USFS Road 1060. At least you could about 20 years ago. It is likely that the spot at the end of the road that allowed the view is now grown up too much to see Bacon Peak. It is a fairly short hike from the end of the Oakes Peak Road to the top of Oakes Peak where you can see most of Bacon Peak and the glaciers and roughly where Green Lake sits. The Oakes Peak Road was closed a number of years ago. I understand the gate at the bottom is now open but the road is completely washed out. This photo is an approximation of what one would see from Oakes Peak. I substituted this photo because I don't have any photos of Bacon Peak from Oakes Peak. The last time I was up there I wasn't taking photographs and, ironically, since I don't have any trips I need to do in this area, I didn't have the time, a day or more, to hike to the top of Oakes Peak to get photos for this post. With the road in, such a project would take less than a day. Bacon Peak is in North Cascades National Park. |
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Waterfall below Green Lake. This might not look that impressive in a photo but this waterfall holds some record or is in some category for tallest waterfalls. Unfortunately the photo is a little dark but for a sense of scale, the trees near the waterfall are a hundred feet or more tall. And only the upper section, maybe the upper half or third, of the waterfall is shown. This waterfall, or parts of it, is also visible from Oakes Peak. This waterfall is in North Cascades National Park. |
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Mount Formidable from Irene Creek Road USFS Road 1550. As of this writing this road was still open. |
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Sibley Creek and the head of Marble Creek (Eldorado in the background) from Irene Creek Road. Eldorado is in North Cascades National Park. |
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Unnamed (to my knowledge) mountain from Irene Creek Road. I call this Haystack Mountain and there is a Haystack Creek at the foot of it. The mountain might officially be called Haystack as well but this isn't shown on any maps that I have and it wasn't passed down orally to me. This mountain is in North Cascades National Park. |
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Hidden Lake Peaks and Sibley Creek from Irene Creek Road. |
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Hidden Lake Peaks from Irene Creek Road. In sunny weather in summer at the right time of day, you can see the sun glint off the windows of the lookout on the main peak at the right. |
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My family on Irene Creek Road in 2014. I did a blog post on this trip. Vashti was about 2 1/2 and Phoebe was about 8 months old when this photo was taken. The white rocks between Sacha/Phoebe and Vashti are a memorial of some kind. I didn't record what was on the rocks because I didn't really want to pry into someone else's personal life, but they seemed to be memorializing some folks and their pet who loved this particular spot and found peace here. This spot was someone's spiritual refuge. The important thing to note is that the folks who found that refuge here probably couldn't have accessed it without the road. I could be wrong on this but, judging from the way those rocks were painted and the sentiments expressed on them, the folks who did it were not your hard core backcountry, leave-no-trace hiker types. I have serious doubts that they did much hiking at all. I kind of fit in the harder core category and this type of memorial isn't something that I, or most of the folks that I know in this category would do. For folks steeped in the leave-no-trace ethics where even cairns made of natural rock are frowned upon and often knocked apart, painted rocks would be anathema. All that being said, whether these folks were avid hikers or just causal users who never really left the road, I don't begrudge them their experience one bit. As citizens of this country, I think they are entitled to enjoy at least some of the public lands that they, in theory, own. They got to experience this place and it made them feel good and may have eased some of the pains that are inevitable in everyone's life. Without the road this probably wouldn't have been possible. We have 2.7 million acres set aside in the North Cascades for the hard core types. We need to keep places like this open for everyone else. |
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This photo is the same used in a previous blog post. As I recall it was semi-staged. I ran out ahead so I could get a shot of everyone coming towards me with the scenic background. Vashti decided to run ahead too so I barely caught everyone in the picture. The memorial rocks are back by Sacha and Phoebe. This photo illustrates several things: Unstructured use of the place. We got to get out and experience the mountains on our own terms for the price of a little time and gasoline rather than paying for a tour or lecture on top of the other expenses. Tours and lectures aren't bad. That is how knowledge is passed along and people are entertained. However, it is different to experience things on your own terms. The other thing this photo illustrates is that we were able to bring our young children out to a spot that we otherwise didn't have the time or physical ability (the children) to access. Much as I would like to paint a perfect picture of the situation it wasn't. There was a good bit of little around and on this trip in particular I remember a lot of toilet paper blooms because there were no sanitary facilities available. Even with those unpleasantries I still think it is worth having places like this available for the average public. The sanitation aspect might be dealt with to some degree by either providing sanitary facilities, which would be expensive or by educational signs that explained proper sanitation in this type of setting. Again, this wouldn't be perfect. I could almost guarantee any signs would have to be replaced because they would be shot full of holes in a few years time. But I would reiterate, I think places like this are still worthwhile and, if there were more of them to spread the use pressure and a solid educational program, I think the litter and sanitation issues would improve. |
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Prairie Mountain and Mount Baker from trail a short distance from the end of USFS Road 2435, Dan's/Decline Creek. Sauk Mountain is on the right edge of the frame. As far as I know this road is still open. |
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Whitechuck Mountain from USFS Road 2435. |
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Mount Pugh from USFS Road 2435. Half of Mount Pugh is in the Glacier Peak Wilderness. |
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Sloan Peak and Bedal Peak from USFS Road 2435. Sloan Peak is in the Henry M. Jackson Wilderness. |
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Mount Pugh, Sloan Peak and Big Four Mountain (L to R) at sunset from trail at end of USFS Road 2435. This trail isn't too difficult and this spot can be accessed with relative ease. Glacier Peak Wilderness and Henry M. Jackson Wilderness. |
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Mount Higgins from USFS Road 2435. |
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Whitechuck Mountain from USFS Road 2510. This road is not closed/washed out. |
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Mount Pugh from USFS Road 27 at Rat Trap Pass. This road is still open as far as I know. |
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Whitechuck Mountain and Mount Pugh from USFS Road 2642. This road might still be open. The last time I was on it, in the fall of 2015, it was being severely damaged by running water due to lack of maintenance. |
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Wilderness Area Map from National Geographic. Credit: National Geographic, September 2014. 50 Years of Wilderness.
Pp 66-81. Map page 72, America’s Wilderness Areas. Martin Gamache,
NGM Staff, Jamie Hawk,
Sources: USGS; Wilderness.net; Wilderness Society. Unfortunately, it is a little hard to pick out the details on this version of the map because it is to small but I think it is still legible enough to illustrate my point. The dark green areas are wilderness areas and, as one can see, there is a large patch of dark green in Washington State running from the Canadian border south. This is the bulk of the North Cascades, 2.7 million acres. This area is, in theory, preserved forever. There is also no way to generate revenue for the communities that surround this wilderness area beyond tourist activity which typically generates anemic revenues. The light green areas symbolize other federal lands. Whatever problems faced by any species in the North Cascades are probably not going to be solved by annexing the last few scraps of federal land into wilderness. These non wilderness lands should be multiple use which benefits a wider section of our population by providing relatively easy access to the fringes of the wilderness so they can experience some semblance of it too. This multiple use should also involve generation of significant revenues for the surrounding communities through some level of sustainable, environmentally responsible industrial use (no, these are not oxymorons). These wilderness areas aren't generating a lot of revenue in most of the surrounding communities at present, at least not mine from what I can see. As I see it, these lands surrounding the vast wilderness areas are the perfect place to figure out how we can acquire at least some of our natural resources in a sustainable manner.
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Credit: National Geographic, September 2014. 50 Years of Wilderness.
Pp66-81. Map page 73, America’s Wilderness Areas. Martin Gamache,
NGM Staff, Jamie Hawk,
Sources: USGS; Wilderness.net; Wilderness Society. This is the second half of the map above. The map was a two page spread that I scanned but could not figure out how to stitch back together in photoshop. This half of the map contains the legend which, unfortunately is too small to read.
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