Wednesday, April 30, 2014

Confessions of a Ski Bum

I. Arrival

The snowfall is harder now and the car thermometer reads negative one. The highway quickly deteriorates into two faint sets of tracks as the climb up the pass continues. The white pellets pepper the windshield, screaming like lasers out of the black night and into the headlight beams, fast and frequent enough to be dizzying. The little silver hatchback, stuffed to the brim, shudders as it crests the pass and changes lanes before the long descent.

Finally, the plentiful lights of the valley come into view, blinding and vertiginous after the dark travail over the snowy pass. Signs announce an abundance of restaurants, chain hotels, and supermarkets. There is a mountain back there too, but its form is obscured behind the brilliance of town. Soon, the prescribed exit arrives, the car curves slowly around a sharp bend and into a new canyon, and the lights cease briefly as the smaller road extends into the blackness. A few curves later, the lights of a smaller community begin to appear. Passing through a quiet little downtown, the icy car finally stops somewhere near the right address, and its driver exhales.

I have made it to Minturn.

In the morning, I will begin to acquaint myself with this place that I will call home for the next four months. After my first night on the sofabed in the living room of the little shack by the river, I will emerge to a world wholly changed by daylight, where the east wall of the canyon rises steep and mysterious, the snow, rock, and sparse vegetation forming distorted faces and other bizarre art. Where the western slopes rise more gradually into the sprawling national forest, Engelmann Spruce towering and dark against the plentiful snow.

But first comes the first trip to Kirby's. It's the one-room bar closest to our five-room house, full of strong beer, clean whiskey, and cabin woodwork. After the long drive, the light on the beams and the bartop is as warm and inviting as late afternoon sun. Despite the frigid night, there's a healthy crowd inside and the three men nearest us are huddled around an iPhone, talking hunting and looking at pictures of a mountain lion, two of them drinking Budweiser, one IPA. In one corner, a man and woman are playing guitars and harmonizing ably on a little pallet of a stage. At some point after the old friend who's given me the sofabed arrives from work and we've caught up on lost time, they start playing Neil Young's “Helpless” and I start feeling at home.

Soon I will really begin to understand Minturn. Each time I drive down Main Street – the only real street – the towering rock of the canyon will quickly impose itself upon my consciousness. I'll begin to see that the wild dwarfs the human in this little bubble of a mountain town, that I'm never more than a glance away from something massively older and truer than myself.

But for now, Kirby's is more than enough.

***


II. The First Powder Day

I'd been in Colorado for barely two weeks, but the moment had been almost two years in the making. It was my first day off after a busy run of job training, eight inches of fresh snow lay on the ground, and my buddy Chad and I were standing at the top of an untouched line.

I had skied out west for the first time two years prior during my spring break from an outdoor education job in Texas. After two magical days with the steeps and trees of Taos and a couple more exploring Crested Butte, the idea took hold somewhere along the desolate highway between Amarillo and Dallas. If I could swing it, I told myself, I'd head back to those mountains sooner rather than later. And this time it would be for a full winter.

A couple of years and a couple of jobs later there I was, about to start living, as they say, the dream. The slope in front of us wasn't the steepest at Beaver Creek, wasn't one of its much-heralded glades or chutes, and that was good. There would be plenty of time for those attractions. Right now, all they would do is distract from the real gift: snow.

I've only been surfing a handful of times, but I've had the comparison corroborated by those with far more experience: that there's something deeply similar to the thrill of riding waves and skiing powder. That harnessing of a gigantic, indifferent natural force and the fast and fluid travel with it across a forgiving surface: it stirs something both massively invigorating and soothingly harmonious within us, and for most every ski (or surf) bum, it's the feeling that breeds our insanity.

The winter had been unfairly lucky so far. The mountains of north central Colorado had been spared the drought crippling much of the West and instead received a wealth of early season snowfall. So far, I had certainly picked the right year to indulge my ski bum fantasy. As the powder piled up throughout December, every skier I knew was jealous, from friends in California cursing the dry Sierras to those like Chad, an old camp buddy now living in Denver, who'd followed the advised post-college route, gotten a steady job, and now spent his weeks dreaming of the mountains from a desk.

Of course, I had no idea whether this charmed life would continue all season, but in admirable hippie fashion, I told myself that none of that mattered as I stood atop the run. Today was a special one, and that was all I knew and all I needed to know.

Breathing deeply like some five-cent shaman, I pushed off into the rush of crisp morning air and saw my skis and boots disappear in the snow. I focused every ounce of energy and attention into the mountain-skier fusion of which I was half. Turn after turn flowed together like a rush of rapids and by the end of the run, I was more alive than I'd felt anytime since those fateful days at Taos.

The grand adventure had begun in earnest, and I knew that whatever came of this winter would be worthwhile. After that first perfect powder run, the rest would just be gravy. I had officially joined the dying and wonderful cult of the ski bum.


***


III. Notes from the Oregon Trail

“All that which lies beyond the end of the roads.”

Such was Edward Abbey's qualifier when he opened Desert Solitaire by calling the canyonlands near Moab, Utah “the most beautiful place on earth.”

Standing in Arches National Park for the first time, watching the white winter sun send huge, cartoonish shadows out from the bases of the red rocks, I am inclined to agree. This place is like nowhere on earth.

I have just gotten out of the automobile which carried me here from Colorado. It remains only a few hundred yards away, parked beside one of the several blacktop roads which snake through the park like restraining bonds. But as I walk down a little wash, with the big rock formations looming on all sides like gargoyles, the road is out of sight and feels, for a moment, miles distant. As I take my first good deep breath of cold canyon air, a raven floats overhead, sharp black on the still-blue sky. It gives a few noisy croaks of welcome and I chuckle inwardly, imagining it to be far more than itself. If Ed had been one for reincarnation, after all, it's hard to imagine a more fitting destination for his soul than inside the body of a sentinel raven at Arches.

My fantasy will only last a moment. Ed was right, of course, about the beauty of the roadless places, but for better or worse, this January vacation – a week-long barnstorm from Minturn to Portland with a college friend and her sister – will not be about all of that. Instead, I will find a different invigorating joy in the road itself, in changing faces and new landscapes appearing through the windshield.

Here at Arches, I long for more time. Time to fully explore the nooks and crannies, to find some of Ed's old haunts, to build a fire of juniper and cook up some pinto bean survival sludge while considering the painted desert and the snow-capped Sierra La Sal beyond. Instead, as daylight wanes, we zip from photo op to photo op. We reach Window Arch, along with several other parties, as sunset reaches the height of its drama and the low-angle light has the rock aflame in orange. It is beautiful and majestic and timeless, yes, but transcendence rarely follows the guidebook, and the real magic of this evening waits until after we've finished our scurryings and pulled off into an empty parking lot beneath the hulk of Balanced Rock. Without much convincing, Claire and Kelly join me in sitting atop the van and drinking a beer during the final minutes of daylight. Soon, the rocks are haunting silhouettes, sleeping giants still indifferent after another day on display. We sip from our bottles, sing a few songs, and watch Venus, Orion, and a perfect half moon take center stage. We have settled into the rhythm of one another and of the road, and the rest will be the stuff of legend.

After a detour south and west to the stunningly grand and Edenic canyons of Zion National Park, we work our way north from Utah through the Tetons and into Montana. The road is a slideshow of Western expanse, from red rock mazes to deep green forests to jagged snow-capped ranges. The company is top-notch, with good music and good conversation filling the old white minivan, the likes of Patty Griffin, Waylon Jennings, and Dave Van Ronk accompanying this undeniably Kerouacian montage.

On a cloud-covered morning we leave Driggs, Idaho and follow the western edge of the hiding Tetons north, emerging from the four-foot snowbanks of Targhee National Forest into the Madison River Valley of southern Montana. Sunlight and warmth greet our arrival, illuminating distant white peaks and black cattle punctuating a vast golden sea of ranchland. Our two-lane follows the bends of the swift-rushing river. Bald eagles perch above its frozen banks, scouring dark waters. Rich and contrasting color is everywhere in this bright land of extremes. I imagine the electrifying sensation of frigid water and warm sun, slipping into a Norman Maclean fantasy of summer afternoons, fly rods, and a current teeming with trout.

I'm awakened from reverie as we pull into the little cowtown of Ennis. It's just past noon, and following a friend from Helena's tip, we decide to take a quick hydration break at Willie's Distillery, a little family operation on Ennis' wide main drag. The smiling bartender, somewhere in her thirties, also the place's bookkeeper, is wearing a fleece vest from the Pro Rodeo Championships, and as she introduces us to Willie's damn good bourbon recipe, she launches into the story of their busy weekend working a big event up in Great Falls. Soon she is showing us photos of her own horses and as I tell her about my grandfather touring with a rodeo in his 20s and my mom barrel-racing in her younger days, I remember that here are my people too, that no matter how many cities I live in or degrees I earn, my roots are just as cowboy as cosmopolitan.

It's with this fittingly divided spirit that I will reach Missoula, where we spend the next couple of days with friends of Claire and Kelly. Missoula, the university town amidst the ranches. Missoula, the place Wallace Stegner has so exalted in my mind as the archetype for a true and sustainable western community. The place where I've already told myself I should attend graduate school. Inevitably, it falls short on first impression. After two days, I leave unable to pin down my feelings for the place. It is trying to hold onto the old western town of A River Runs Through It, proud of the glorious mountains, rivers, and valleys which surround it, but simultaneously trying to embrace the hip trends of Portland and Seattle. A few blocks from an old cowboy saloon is an establishment called the Peace Store, selling, among hundreds of other screaming bumper stickers, one that reads “Missoula: Just 30 Miles from Montana.” Above the icy Clark's Fork of the Missouri River, where I watch a kestrel range overhead, there are the familiar cafes and bars that can be found anywhere from Amherst to Ann Arbor to Berkeley. Perhaps Stegner is right and the tension is a good thing. Perhaps it will eventually lead to compromise and progress. As the droughts worsen it may happen out of necessity if not desire for harmony. But for now, I see only the extremes. As one of our hosts tells the story of a neighbor's beautiful and expensive Malamute dog being shot accidentally by deer hunters, I fear for the place and for all places where old and new attempt to coexist in such obdurate contrast.

A more genuine Montana presents itself just a night later, not in Missoula but an hour north on the southern tip of Flathead Lake, in the struggling Kootenai reservation town of Polson where my old college buddy and teammate Bryce has been toiling as editor of the tiny Lake County Leader, his office a cramped one-floor newsroom in a two-street downtown. Our entrance into Polson is impossibly dramatic, and not because Bryce has announced it to the entire town with a welcome note on the header of this week's paper. From Missoula we've driven north up the heart of the Mission Valley in late afternoon sunlight, dwarfed beneath the jagged forms of the range bearing the same name. Steep ridges, saw-toothed, snow-drenched summits, brilliant gold on the white faces, an alpenglow I'd only seen before in Alaska. Soon we're perched above town with a pink sunset stretching over the hazy expanse of the lake, beyond it another range, the Swans, looming in a coat of white, reminiscent of no less than the Alaska Range and Denali at this distance. The gifted author and activist Rick Bass settled in northwest Montana because as soon as he'd arrived he recognized a truth now apparent to me, that this is our most wild place left in the lower 48.

After this grand welcome, the evening in Polson plays out like some twisted and beautiful combination of On the Road and Glee. The setting: the Lake Bar, a dusty, low-lit and low-budget joint just through the wall from Bryce's office. In the red glow, locals return the sass of a young and aggressive female bartender named Leslie. We soon learn that it's open mic night, a new monthly experiment being organized by a gentle middle-aged townie named Mike. A pair of guys somewhere between high school and college age begin, playing guitar and singing everything from Dylan to Pearl Jam, one significantly more talented than the other, but no love lost because of it. Mike occasionally joins in for a tune on mandolin. Slowly the bar fills with a true smorgasbord of humanity, everything from overweight Kootenai women to sad-eyed and big-hearted white schoolteachers to the burned-out early retirees from the expensive lake houses outside town. Once Mike's two young regulars have decided to break, a tall, rail-thin Kootenai youth gets up to read a few slam poems. Pausing in front of the microphone to survey us from beneath his long, straight, jet-black hair, he belts out of nowhere the opening of “Ave Maria” in faux vibrato. It takes a few seconds after he's stopped with a quick “just kidding” for the bar to offer some nervous laughter. Then he launches into a set of rapid verses about the misunderstood youth of a kid on the rez. It's a wild change of pace from the last act and his aggression catches everyone off guard for a moment, but surprise turns to small-town support before long, and after his first performance a big round of applause rewards the youth's bravery.

And then, finally, the moment arrives as Mike heads to the mic and casts his gaze to our table in the back. Kelly has been writing songs for a while now, and one of our quickly-adopted goals of the trip has been to boost her performing chops wherever possible. So Mike calls her up, announcing that she's “on a sojourn to Portland,” and in seconds the night has become a special one for the good people of Polson, Montana. Kelly sings the opening lines to a song called “Reeling In,” and the bar falls reverentially silent. Folks who have only been paying half attention turn on their stools and stop their conversations as the sheepish hippie girl from Oregon finger-picks someone else's guitar and sings of fishing poles and laying an old body down in the river. Somewhere, I think, John Prine is smiling.

After Kelly does a couple solo numbers, she motions pleadingly to Claire and me and we join her for a three-part rendition of “I Shall Be Released” which we'd worked up in Moab. It's my first time on stage in a while and the entranced crowd is a sight to behold as we work through the old traditional. Middle-aged women mouth along silently, the local pot dealer nods his dreadlocked head slowly in time, Mike beams from the corner. A sojourn to Portland is a bit too high-stakes, I think. This is just having an adventure – a release – because we can.

By the end of the night, I'm a healthy number of Montana microbrews in and there's a jolly band of five or six of us on stage jamming to “Heart of Gold.” A few new performers have come out of the woodwork, like stocky, red-faced Paul, who claimed to only play in public once a year but was convinced by his friends' raucous chanting to make this the night. As we close our tabs and stumble out into a black night seared by stars, it feels like we've done something small but special. If nothing else, we've given them all a break in the monotony of a small-town winter, something to laugh about over coffee in the days to come. And for us, it's just further proof that this road – this so-called sojourn – won't be forgotten soon.



***


IV. Wild Mountain Children

It might sound trivial, as it would be most places, but at Beaver Creek, when your students choose skiing over cookies, it's the ultimate compliment. When it finally happened unanimously in late March, I knew I could declare my season a ringing success.

It was only a 10 minute drive, but when I left Minturn each morning for my job as a children's ski instructor at Beaver Creek Resort, I entered an entirely new and baffling world.

It's a world perhaps best described by the mountain's unapologetic slogan, “not exactly roughing it.” A world where one can park the car and travel to the chairlift via bus and escalator without taking a single uphill step in those cumbersome boots. That's if, of course, said patron is not, like most, staying at the Ritz Carlson or the Park Hyatt or the Westin Riverfront (direct slope access via private gondola!), or any of the other monstrous faux-rustic structures lining the lower reaches of the mountain.

It's a world where Tom Hanks and Gerald Ford have owned houses, where one can choose from three different reservation-only slopeside restaurants (entrees beginning at $25) accessible only by ski or private snowmobile. A world where a Swiss couple, as I once witnessed, will walk into my roommate's Patagonia store and walk out an hour later with brand new three-layer outerwear systems and a minor dent of three grand chipped from the AmEx (minor, of course, because the average family of four drops $20,000 of its non-average income over the course of its week-long stay at America's Premier Family Resort).

Closer to home, it's a world where my employer, without trace of sarcasm, markets itself as “The Ivy League of Ski Schools.” Where grim-faced instructors with decades of certified experience pinpoint their private client's flaws in ankle tipping, hip rotation, and knee flexion and administer the Professional Ski Instructors of America's (or, affectionately, the Pompous Self-Important Assholes) prescribed treatment for such heinous ailments.

Finally, its a world that is famous, above all, for chocolate chip cookies. Yes, chocolate chip effing cookies, handed out fresh, warm, and impossibly delicious at the base of the resort come three o'clock each afternoon. Indeed, for many years, it has not been the world-class instructors or the top-flight accommodations which have appeared most consistently on the resort's feedback surveys, but those damn cookies.

And it's telling that something so simple could be so transcendent, because beneath its embarrassment of riches and hilarity of pretension, Beaver Creek remains a world where families come to play in the snow, to slide down thousands of feet of Cretaceous uplift on pieces of plastic and metal and wood because long ago someone in the Alps did it and realized there was no greater thrill on earth.

With this spirit of freedom and abandon (the roots, after all, of the sport), I became an undercover rebel against the Ivy League of Ski Schools. I smiled broadly at the eight-year olds and cracked jokes with their parents when they showed up for class in the morning and again at 3:30, when I sent them off with their official report cards full of check marks. One day, I informed a Gucci-clad Dominican mother that I would not be working tomorrow and she replied in broken English, “but how can we find another teacher as happy as you?” I was at once flattered and concerned when I could only conjure a few names to recommend.

The thing about kids, even Beaver Creek kids: they're pretty damn hilarious when allowed to be kids. After an evening of artisan Mac and Cheese, ice skating, or Cartoon Network on the hotel flat screen, they'd show up for ski school and one of the first tasks I'd give them is to come up with a team name more original than “Matt's Class” (memorable consensuses included the Fluffy Doughnut Skiers, the Crazy Unicorn Shredders, and the Supersonic Snow Cheetahs). By the end of the first gondola ride, I'd be going all-out camp counselor and pounding them with icebreaker questions like “if you could have anything come out of your belly-button on command, what would it be?” (worst answer: my X-Box. Best: whiskey).

And so, on a good day, by 10:30 or so a group of once-sheltered junior millionaires would become one of the world's most kinetic and fearsome things: a pack of wild mountain children.

The next five hours generally warranted the description “organized chaos.” Between parallel turning drills, there were snowball fights (as long as all parties consent, which, shockingly, they almost always do). After a crash course on tree skiing safety, an intermediate class might get to play “Follow the Leader” through a glade, their smiling instructor sweeping the rear to clean up the just-short-of-disastrous results.

The characters and the stories which emerged from this relative freedom were nothing short of heroic. There was little Emery, the shy seven-year old with the missing front teeth who looked shaky enough on the first run of her first day that I tried to move her down a level, only to have her adamantly refuse and spend the next week doggedly improving into a confident intermediate who moved up two levels rather than down one. There was Jake, the portly and affable 11-year old who quickly became ringleader of my Presidents' Week class, who led the group in a rousing ceremony of Class Superlative Awards during afternoon hot chocolate breaks, all the while fighting desperately – and finally succeeding, with great joy – to overcome a debilitating fear of steeps and moguls. And of course there was Pierce, the hell-bent eight-year old terror who presumed that skiing parallel permitted him to ski any terrain at any speed, but who, by the end of a week spent making new friends and learning the art of control, was eager to hang at the back of the group and help up every classmate who fell.

Of course, against our best judgment, we become attached to the kids we teach, even when we teach them for just a day or a week. Before becoming a children's instructor at one of America's ritziest resorts, my experience with kids of this age was as an environmental educator for Houston's inner-city elementary schools. It's hard to imagine two more discrete populations from which to draw students, yet it was the same goal which precluded success in both settings, that of creating a space in which kids felt safe and free to be themselves. It was, too, the same kind of goofy and triumphant moments which made each job so worthwhile. And at the end of a day in Colorado, as at the end of a week in Texas, it was the same sinking I'd feel as I watched my students return to a stratified life which might never reveal to them just how similar they really were to those at the other end of the spectrum.

I wasn't changing the world at Beaver Creek, at least not much. I was working within a sphere of immense privilege, and by getting kids excited about skiing, of all things, perhaps I was just helping perpetuate that sphere. But I'll choose to believe in the other side of the coin, to believe that even if their parents are paying hundreds a day for it, simply being outside and active in the mountains – exposed, at least briefly, to something far older than their material existence – is the most positive experience a child can have.

Which is why I couldn't have asked for a better coda to the season than what transpired on one of my last days teaching. We finished a run just before that magical three o'clock hour, and expecting the answer any sane child would give, I asked the kids, “Do you want to wait a minute and eat cookies, or keep skiing?”

The response came roaring from every wild throat:

KEEP SKIING!




***


V. The Last Powder Day

It's perfect, I tell myself. It's so perfect I almost don't want to ski it.

Like a painter pausing in front of a naked canvas, or a musician relishing the silence between movements, I realize that the anticipation itself is perfect and I don't want it to end just yet.

On my last day freeskiing at Beaver Creek, somewhere in the sidecountry past Royal Elk Glade, my bladder has stopped my traverse at a most fortunate moment. Half a foot of snow has fallen overnight, but by early afternoon even my favorite out-of-the-way spots on the resort are tracked out. So I've gone exploring, and been rewarded. I've found the dream line: an untouched pitch of moderate steepness cascading down through the dense Engelmann spruce and Douglas fir, just wide enough for turning, too narrow to feel completely safe.

The sun is out now after last night's snow, the still-wet trees sparkling in the warmth of early spring. Around me, however, hangs yet the deep silence of winter. The welcoming pungency of the evergreen boughs, the sharp contrast of dark, rich green over the cream-white carpet. It's all so damn poetic – how could I interrupt this perfection?

But if I don't, someone else, I know, will. We're all greedy in this business.

Greed, after all, has been one of the driving forces of this whole adventure. Not just the benign greed that permits a family to spend twenty grand on a week of vacation, but my own. What besides self-indulgence could inspire a young man to suspend his admittedly-murky career goals in favor of a teenager's ski bum fantasy? In favor of a sport reserved for an immensely privileged, overwhelmingly white sliver of the world? Yes, somewhere along the line I've decided that this would all be okay, that as long as I remained aware and grateful and tried to pass on a bit of that humility to the kids I taught, I could get away with this grotesquely greedy life decision.

And make no mistake, I have reveled in that self-servitude. As a first-year instructor at a resort aimed far more at out-of-state vacationers than locals, I have had more than ample time to exercise my greed. A feast-or-famine work schedule has provided not only greater plummeting of my checking account balance than hoped for, but also a great many days of sublime skiing far from the Smurf-blue uniform or the raucous eight-year olds.

I think back on it all with far more pleasure than guilt. On the days of tearing through the trees at Vail with the buddies up from Denver, or the lung-splitting bootpack up the Upper East Wall of A-Basin and the primal rush of the descent. And also, just as fondly, of the lazy mornings of drinking coffee at home then driving to the back of the employee lot, hiking up to one of the smaller lifts, and skiing the bumps and trees as hard as I could for three or four hours, all without speaking to anyone besides the occasional liftie. Even at a glitzy ski resort, after all, the mountains love introversion and extroversion equally.

Yup, I'm a greedy sonofabitch, I tell myself as I return to present. But it's been a damn fun ride with some great stories to tell. And suddenly hearing the traffic of others behind me, I cast a last lustful gaze upon the line below, already pulsing with the perfect smoothness and rhythm of the turns to come, and push off into the sea of snow.



***


VI. Valedictory

It's dusktime during my final week in town. For the last time this winter, I'm walking the half mile down to Kirby's, where I'll meet some roommates and neighbors for a few last beers and laughs. It's been warming up and a mild breeze hints with joyful anticipation of the coming months, of many a pleasant night under the great western sky. But I will not be in Minturn for them, and the thought quickly transforms my walk into an emotional valedictory.

The place, I realize, is singing to me. As I stride along the sidewalk, reclaimed from several feet of snowbank in recent warm weeks, the Eagle River follows me, chortling irrepressibly just a few yards down from the road. I can picture it in another month or two: what's left of the snow receded, families or lovers or friends sitting along the needle-strewn banks beside a picnic or a crackling campfire. I can practically hear their laughter now, and am once again flooded with the desire for more time and great wonder at its passing.

On the western side of the canyon, the Engelmann spruce cast their grand silhouettes against the blue-black mirror of sky. It is that final moment when one can still see things in detail from a good distance away. Soon the darkness will be at hand, the world turned to flat shadow, and I'll plunge on, trusting that the unknown will prove benevolent upon arrival.

The river sings with the unquenchable freshness of Eden. Rock looms steadfast above. How can I, so transient, possibly feel such deep love for them, so timeless, as I do in these waning moments? I will return – I must – I promise myself, knowing already that I may just as likely not, that the only certainty is uncertainty. Stealing one more savoring glance at it all, I walk forward into the night.

***


VII. Epilogue: The Future

My first homeward stop lies south, not east. It's the last weekend of March, but there's just enough snow left in the mountains above Santa Fe. It's only fitting: it was Sam who first introduced me to western skiing two years ago; he should also be the one to accompany me on my first true backcountry tour.

Three hundred miles south of Minturn it has been an entirely different winter. While the snow came in heaps to north central Colorado, it left the Sangre de Cristos of New Mexico high and dry. Sam has kept me apprised of the damage via text message, so I'm not surprised to hear the phrases “only a couple good weekends” and “historic drought” tossed around by his buddies as we catch up over beers in 65-degree Santa Fe (of course, in this state, each year's drought now seems to carry that label). The warmth is fitting too, I suppose, for this visit is at once a coda to the season now passed and a preview of the one to come, when I'll return to the Land of Enchantment for another summer in the mountains at Philmont Scout Ranch.

Despite the balmy weather in town, I'm determined to ski, even with high winds in the forecast and assurances from Sam that what snow remains between 10- and 13,000 feet in the Pecos Wilderness will be far more like the stuff we grew up skiing in New England than the powdery diet I've been spoiled by this winter. What's more, I've flouted ski bum tradition and tried to actually leave the mountains without declaring myself completely broke, meaning I've resisted purchasing the full backcountry ski arsenal of new boots, bindings, climbing skins, and avalanche safety equipment. But if New Mexicans are anything it's generous, and with only a couple of phone calls Sam has outfitted me from friends' gear and declared me fit to join him and our buddy Steve in the backcountry. Borrowed equipment, poor conditions, and a dicey forecast? Just the makings of a grand adventure.

The tour does not actually begin in the backcountry, but at the base of Ski Santa Fe, the little resort 20 minutes from town where it is still 50 degrees and the locals are loving it, riding in tank tops, baseball caps, and of course, jeans. We strap on skins and hike up the sides of a few groomers in our baselayers before cutting off into the woods of Santa Fe National Forest. With a few good Minnesota winters of nordic skiing under my belt, I take to the skinning quickly and as we climb up through the last of the spruce and fir, the scents and shapes of this particular forest quickly remind me of a favorite stretch of trail at Philmont. Breathing deeply, I push doggedly after Sam, at once in love with the landscape, the exertion, and my freedom to experience them both. It never takes long for these New Mexico hills to welcome me home.

And now comes the moment of which one never tires: the emerging from treeline into the open highlands. Soon we're atop Nambé Ridge, the earth sprawling below, a fierce but tolerable wind whipping across our shells. Predictably, I insist on stopping to enjoy it for a few moments before we drop into the chute we've picked out to ski. To the north and east rise big Truchas Peak, Santa Fe Baldy, and the rest of the Pecos Wilderness, to the south and west the rooftops of Santa Fe and the sun-baked flats of the Rio Grande Valley. While just as impressive, it's a softer, more rounded landscape than the jagged ranges of Colorado. It's a reflection, I believe, of the elusive harmony which its inhabitants still seek, the balance prized above all else by its native residents, the Diné.

I could meditate with these hills all day, but now it is time to chase my own modern version of balance. It is time to counter austerity with adrenaline. The Nambé Chutes are steep, there are rocks aplenty to avoid, and the unpredictable snow conditions will require undivided focus. This is no buttery powder line at Beaver Creek, and the thought exhilarates me. I've always been one to seek out the ugly in nature along with the glamorous, to cherish the raw force of a July hailstorm as much as the dazzling sunset that might follow. So I launch myself into the chute full of piss and vinegar and the reward is a good one: the borrowed skis respond well to the alternating corn snow and ice, my legs feel powerful as I jump through each turn, and before long we're exchanging fist-bumps at the bottom of the wall.

Our joy won't last. The mountain has other ideas. We begin to climb back up for a second lap, but are halted before long, the pitch too steep for skins, the snow too slushy to bootpack. Our plan of another descent or two in the chutes then a glorious victory ski through the resort to cap the day will have to go. The bulk of Nambé Ridge separates us from our destination, and there's no way to get back over it here. We'll have to pick through the woods on this side and cut back further down.

Fending off frustration, I hike up as far as I can just to grab a few more turns. You're preposterously lucky to be doing this in the first place, I tell myself. Don't get greedy. But as I start carving through the slush at the bottom of the chutes, I do get greedy. I'm feeling great about my skiing and decide to play around, exaggerating my turn shape and letting my speed pick up. No sooner has my focus shifted from the mountain to myself than my left ski stalls in some heavy snow and I'm tumbling headfirst down the still-steep pitch, sunglasses askew, hat flying, one ski ejected. Thankfully I'm far from any rocks and the damage is only to my pride. But the lessons are clear: no matter how much sweating the climb might induce, I'll never leave my helmet behind again, and then, for the second time today, the hard truth that the mountain cares not. There's no room for selfishness in the backcountry. The moment harmonious thought gives way to egotism, a price is paid.

Humbled, I resolve to embrace the rest of our adventure in whatever form it takes. And once we've handled a few hairy pitches through the trees and navigated around a pair of small but still-frozen lakes, we're rewarded. There are few sights more relieving than that of a trail sign when lost in the woods. Of course, my trusted companions will be the first to tell you that we were never really lost, and indeed, I was never too worried, but with the afternoon turning to evening and our stomachs growling, we breathe a bit easier once we've intersected the well-traveled Windsor Trail and begun a gentle two-mile skin out. As we cruise through massive colonies of aspen, Sam feels the need to apologize for the fact that my first tour has featured far more uphill travel than down. Damn selfless New Mexicans, I think, laughing. “You're forgetting,” I tell him, “that I spend my summers hiking these mountains for fun.”

As we finish off the tour carrying our skis down the muddy trail to the resort parking lot, I'm feeling decidedly harmonious. Suspect conditions and unforeseen detours have done nothing to diminish my love for these mountains, and the limited amount of downhill has made those turns all the sweeter in memory (the ones, at least, that didn't result in me upside down). But after we've feasted on pizza and beer in town, after we've spent a last night playing old songs and plotting new adventures, after I've re-packed the car and begun the journey from one home to the other, there's another feeling that rises with surprising force. And it's fear. As the images of that day in the backcountry replay themselves, I'm no longer able to filter out the details I chose to ignore then: the dry trees, the quickly-melting and slushy snow, the omnipresent brown and dust of the warm flats below. It will be a hard summer – a hard future – for this land I love. Whatever harmony I might feel with it in my moments of inspired recreation is little to the discord begun long ago. Silently, I recommit myself both to the place and to the work I will soon begin. I must hold onto hope that my meager efforts will help spark greater motions, that it is not too late to step back toward balance.

And of course, I must hope that these efforts do not come at the cost of hopefulness itself, that no matter how bleak the outlook, I will remember the words of this wildly enchanting region's fiercest advocate and enjoy it all, while I still can.


Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Homecoming

A tangerine sun rose over the smog of Dallas to welcome the last week of 2013, and I wasn't sure I'd ever been more discouraged by society.

Engulfed in the fourteenth hour of a comically disastrous airline travel saga, my return to Denver waylaid by corporate rigidity, I tried to tune out the latest half-naked pop star on the ever-present televisions. I watched the masses file by, eyes on screens, ears plugged with headphones, lost in hollow realities.

Every step of the way, from a delayed flight out of Hartford to an unwanted overnight in Texas, airline employees had said whatever necessary to pass me on to the next person, to make me someone else's problem. Everywhere I looked, people were treating human interactions with the aversion of car crash aftermath. Admitting defeat, I put in my own earbuds and opened my laptop.

This was all before I got back to the mountains and a landscape, as they so often do, recharged me. On the plains by the airport, the sun reigned and it was sixty degrees. Driving into the city, the homeless patrolled intersections in short sleeves and tanktops and for a moment I thought I was in California. With the skyline smog thin enough to overlook, my gaze, as always, rested on the peaks of the Front Range, snow-covered and popping in crystalline clarity against the rich blue sky.

Travel frustrations quickly disappeared into the rearview as I stopped for a few hours to visit a college friend who was home for the holidays in Denver. Catching up on his front porch, drinking coffee in our t-shirts, the pleasure of firm friendship eclipsed my last dregs of bitterness. And so despite a lack of sleep, when David suggested a quick drive out to the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge, I couldn't decline.

The refuge lies out on the plains east of the city, just beyond the last commercial buildings and suburban neighborhoods but still squeezed between downtown and the airport. It's existence alone is a stirring story of healing: the land, now home to a restored short-grass prairie ecosystem, was a site of chemical weapon development during World War II and the Cold War, then hosted Shell Chemical's scarring DDT productions.

Entering the park, we drove past several expansive prairie dog towns, the squat rodents quivering to attention and chirping shrill warnings upon our arrival. From a distance, we admired the refuge's herd of bison. The population is thriving, expanding too quickly, in fact, for its limited space, as High Country News reports, but there is a nearly zoo-like artificiality to its presence just a stone's throw from suburban neighborhoods. Along with a handful of other parties, we gazed from inside a car at animals as large as motor vehicles themselves, at animals who once flooded the region as pervasively as the automobile now does.

We'd come to go for a trail run in the unseasonable warmth, but those plans were soon delayed by a moment chilling and timeless. As we approached a new pocket of sepia-toned prairie, David caught a glimpse of something unexpected from the passenger's seat. Nearly perfectly camouflaged in the undulating terrain, a large, healthy coyote stared back at us from fifty yards away.

Elusive scavengers, coyotes are the masters of sneaking in when no one's watching. In five summers of leading backpacking trips in New Mexico, I could count my coyote sightings on one hand. But here was a prime, undaunted specimen in daylight, just a dozen miles from a major city. We stared at one another blankly for several minutes and I found nothing but ancient indifference in its gaze. We were on its turf, and after a few more moments of stalemate, we decided to move on.

It wasn't hard to understand why this particular coyote seemed so robustly well-fed. With large prairie dog towns littering the refuge, a meal would never be far away. An ecosystem like this might, in fact, represent something like paradise to Canis latrans. Far enough from major human populations to avoid the wrath of farmers and pet-owners (federal protection doesn't hurt either), close enough to prohibit the presence of larger predators, most notably that feared and mythic cousin, Canis lupus.

And so we turn to the tangential meditation portion of this story. As the gray wolf disappeared from the American landscape, the coyote expanded. Ever the opportunist, it slid into the lupine niche as wolves were exterminated out of fear, greed, and lust, wiped out for their pelts and their predations. Less inclined to pack travel and more flexible in diet, the smaller coyote grew into coexistence with human society, adapting itself into a more nocturnal, more scavenging species and taking up residence across the country, everywhere from city parks to mountain meadows.

But here, in a National Wildlife Refuge for Gawd's sake, I let myself imagine something grander. So bold and sturdy was the dog staring back at me that for a moment I wandered into a fantasy I've hosted many times and imagined myself face-to-face with a wolf.

The species has been frequenting my mental avenues of late, thanks in large part to “Lone Wolf,” Joe Donnelly's marvelous account in Orion of OR-7, the first wild wolf to return to Northern California in nearly a century. With the species making a slow recovery across the northern Rockies, it's not too surprising that a ranging individual would cross the man-made border from southeastern Oregon into California. Still, the symbolic value of the development isn't insignificant. A wild wolf has been hunting in the same state that's home to Rodeo Drive, Arnold Schwarzenegger and Disneyland. And boy is it causing a big old fuss.

Ever since the gray wolf began its successful American reintroduction in the mid-90s, the human battles have raged wherever Canis lupus has roamed. While ecologists have repeatedly concluded that wolves greatly aid the biodiversity and general health of their native ecosystems, ranchers curse and bullseye them as a menace to their profits. Of course, livestock die at much higher rates by a whole host of other causes (including domestic dog attacks), but to be honest, who am I to tell a hard-working rancher not to protect his stock, especially when I still enjoy a hamburger every now and then? (Killing wolves for sport, though? That's another story).

And so, of course, now that wolves have begun to stabilize themselves in northern states, the hunt is on. With the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service delisting the species from federally endangered status, states have begun to permit a limited amount of hunting in the name of population management. But conservation hardly seems the mindset in Salmon, Idaho, where the ironically-named Sportsmen's Group Idaho for Wildlife held the First Annual Coyote and Wolf Derby last month, with cash prizes for the biggest wolf and most female coyotes killed (the “sportsmen” did not achieve their goal of taking any wolves, but 21 coyotes were gunned down). As Donnelly wrote in a recent update on OR-7, “it’s like the turn of the century all over again when wolves, bears, and anything else that competed with man for domain over the land got crushed by the wheels of Manifest Destiny.”

As I recall the penetrating stare of that coyote near Denver, I know that the wolf wars, like so many other conservation issues of our time, return us to the age-old question of how we view our relationship to the nonhuman world. Are the species and the landscapes with whom we share the Earth tools to be used in our quest for greater power and ease of life? Having risen to evolutionary dominance, is it our right to do as we please with everything else? Or does the nonhuman world possess its own intrinsic value, one that can't be quantified by its utility to us?

Nearly a century ago, a young federal forester named Aldo Leopold was sent to the Gila Wilderness in New Mexico to kill wolves and protect ranching and deer-hunting interests. On one trip, watching an old female in her dying moments, the Yale graduate found the reflection in her eyes pointing deep into his own being.

We reached the old wolf in time to watch a fierce green fire dying in her eyes,” he later wrote. “I realized then and have known ever since that there was something new to me in those eyes, something known only to her and to the mountain.”

Decades later, Leopold's Land Ethic stands as the backbone of our conservation movement and there remain masses who would kill wolves with the same trigger-itch he once possessed. We must ask ourselves if we are humble enough to think like a mountain, or rather, to accept the existence of the mountains' perspective without ever truly knowing it.

We can love completely without complete understanding,” wrote Norman Maclean.

The big coyote at the wildlife refuge was too far away for me to see any green in its eyes, but the truth of its being filled me nonetheless.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

Setting Out

The thinly-veiled sun hangs white out the driver's side window, the steadiest of companions. Lake Erie stretches blue-gray to the right, vast and indifferent. Winter has arrived early in the northern states. Dark bare trees striped with snow, narrow strips of forest outlasting the billboards. I travel west as so many before me, seeking answers I will never find.

I am going to a place where people grow their beards out, relish the smell of woodsmoke, and own large, healthy dogs. Where people exercise not to look good but to feel good, where fresh air and physical challenge are daily requirements.

I am going to be amongst the still-raw remnants of the Precambrian and the Cretaceous, to harness for a moment the wild and mighty children of a shallow subduction. Despite the years of erosion, I am still young like they are. I will bask in their untouchable power and fill my tank with life-lust.

I am going to spend a winter with the ski industry, filled with the promise of a new approach to stewardship, a new pathway into the ever-changing mystery.

I am as yet a person of many homes. I am setting out for one where the ratio of human to nonhuman remains a bit healthier, where wildness still captures the imaginations of many.

“What are you doing with your life, Will?” asks Art in Ed Abbey's Black Sun. “Staring at the sun,” responds the fire lookout. “Stand on this tower and stare at the sun until the sun goes … black.”

Perspective is everything. The world can always be viewed from varying heights, from towers and trenches. I sip my coffee, check the road ahead, consider the expanse of the lake and the ambivalent woods.

The white sun hovers bluntly. I afford myself a brief stare.

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Baseball and Ultimate: Two Sports Passing in the Night

I can't tell you the year in which The Switch became a torturous catchphrase, but I remember the moment as if it happened yesterday.

I had just pulled my scrawny high school legs through the usual gray practice pants, knee socks exposed from the calf down, as always. Belt cinched, maroon cap pulled low, I strode out of the Amherst Regional High School (ARHS) locker room, headed toward the baseball diamond, hoping – as always – that today I might just hit the ball well enough to crack the starting nine for our next game.

But ritual was interrupted before I left the building. Crossing my path was a friend who starred for the school's nationally-renowned ultimate frisbee team. We caught up briefly, as athletes often do, on the progress of our respective squads. Then came the question.

“So when are you gonna finally make the switch to ultimate, man? It's your sport!”

Ahh, The Switch.

I've been lucky enough to have baseball and ultimate competing for my affections since seventh grade. I left frisbee-crazed ARHS for frisbee-crazed Carleton College, a thriving pipeline for ultimate players which my older brother had followed three years earlier. The difference? I still hadn't made The Switch. I had played and loved ultimate at the intramural level through middle and high school (yes, you heard me, Amherst has organized intramural ultimate frisbee – at its middle school), but come spring, frisbee had always taken a back seat to baseball.

It took two years of riding the bench as a light-hitting Division III infielder for Carleton, but I did finally make The Switch, playing club ultimate as a junior and senior with the Gods of Plastic (GOP), the second of Carleton's two competitive men's teams. The aforementioned friend from high school was even there to witness it, having followed the pipeline himself before helping lead that other men's squad – the creatively-named Carleton Ultimate Team (CUT) – to Division I national titles as a sophomore and senior (GOP, by comparison, took home D-III crowns in 2010 and 2012. I told you Carleton was crazy about frisbee).

But don't think for a minute that my love of baseball ended with The Switch. Which brings me to today's real topic. Recently, my two favorite sports have been making headlines for opposite reasons. In this past Sunday's New York Times, Jonathan Mahler writes the dark epitaph of baseball as a mainstream fixture in American pop culture. Meanwhile, ultimate and its new professional leagues have earned a story – albeit an overly snarky and simplistic one – in the latest Time magazine, with the words “Pro Frisbee” dotting newsstands worldwide in the top right-hand corner of the issue's cover.

As the national pastime I have adored since boyhood watches its popularity succumb to the age of instant entertainment, ultimate is vaulting its way onto SportsCenter and into the national consciousness thanks to its two fledgling professional leagues and a broadcast deal with ESPN.

But the truth is, both sports are fighting through identity crises. And both risking losing some of their greatest attributes in the process.

America no longer has the attention span for baseball, and it breaks my heart. Like our lives, we need sports to wow our senses every minute. We need the constant gladiatorial brutality of the NFL or the NBA's hip-hop swagger and superlative feats of athleticism. Baseball is a game of intricacy and no one wants to take the time to learn those intricacies.

As I wrote in an op-ed during my senior year at Carleton, baseball, like life, is a progression of everyday occurrences – outside sliders and grounders to short – punctuated by moments of crucial importance: the diving play by the second baseman to save a run, the full-count pitch that just misses for a walk to prolong the inning, the decisive homer hit by the next batter who never would have gotten the chance had the umpire seen things differently. And like life, you often don’t realize you’ve reached a turning point until after it’s past you. Who knows what would have happened in Monday night's American League tiebreaker if a yet-to-find-his-groove David Price hadn't picked off Elvis Andrus on a debatable call in the first inning?

That's the beauty of baseball. Every game can be dissected to seemingly infinite levels of detail (no one does it better than the good folks at FanGraphs). If details aren't your thing, there are always plenty of intriguing human-interest storylines, too, like Price beating back his Texas demons or whether the Rangers should have even allowed Biogenesis truant Nelson Cruz to play in the contest. There's a topic for everyone in a ballgame, and the stately pace of the sport allows time for conversation and dissection in between the drama.

Now, I get it if dissection isn't why you watch sports. After a day of work, a lot of us just want to be entertained. But what's sadder is that even the art of conversation seems to be fading. Rather than acknowledge and engage with our fellow human beings, we prefer to stare zombie-like at our screens and tune out our surroundings. Football and basketball broadcasts provide this hypnosis far easier than baseball, where a slightly more active level of mental participation is required to avoid drowsiness.

Great, now we have pink hats AND fake beards at Fenway
But don't worry, zombies, the owners and the networks are trying their darnedest to win you over outside of moving the fences in and changing it to two strikes and you're out. Every game seems to carry with it a new promotional gimmick designed to lure people to the ballpark for reasons other than baseball, none more embarrassing than the recent Dollar (Fake) Beard Night at Fenway. Broadcasts, too, are littered with more Twitter polls, fan cams, and silly interviews than ever. None of these distractions are truly offensive, per se, but wouldn't it be nice if we could just trust the action between the lines to sell itself? Believe it or not, it's actually a pretty amazing game when you slow down and watch closely.

Of course, no ploys will bring the masses back to baseball. For that to happen, there must be a renewed interest in the games themselves. Who knows exactly what combination of forces it would take to achieve this (outside of another steroid-infused home run race), but making the ballpark experience a little more affordable would be a good place to start. More hard-working parents need to be able to bring their kids to professional games. It should be the constitutional right of every child to have his or her eyes widened and speech stopped by the bright lights and green grass of a summer night at the Yard, the way mine were on that fateful sixth birthday at Fenway. Similarly, it should be the constitutional right of every child to grow from the lessons of patience, repetition, and frequent failure that playing baseball provides.

Another intriguing target for the sport is the country's ever-growing Spanish-speaking population. With more and more Latin American ballplayers in the spotlight every day (both of last night's NL Wild Card starters were Dominican, for example), baseball – more than any other sport – could represent the forefront of our transition toward a bilingual culture. The groundwork is already there.

For now, though, I'll quietly mourn the growing irrelevance of baseball in our national conversation. I'll mourn the fact that on Monday night, every bar I passed had multiple televisions showing an NFL blowout and none showing a winner-take-all tiebreaker which represented the culmination of six months' daily grind for two organizations. I'll mourn the fact that in a college-sports-crazy town like Madison, there isn't even a college baseball team to cheer for. But mostly, as I look past the corporate gimmicks and consume the unmatchable drama of the postseason like a hermit hoarding artifacts, I'll mourn for all of the kids present and future who will grow up without the beauty of baseball and won't know what they're missing.

But hold steady, sports fans, all is not lost! There's a new game in town, one that might just approach baseball on the awesomeness scale. Ultimate is pushing its way into the mainstream picture as we speak and it's pretty darn exciting. Two weeks from tomorrow, the USA Ultimate (USAU) Club Championships will begin in Frisco, Texas and anyone with a computer and an internet connection will be able to watch the best male and female athletes in the sport compete on its biggest stage, thanks to the biggest name in sports entertainment, ESPN.

What they'll see, in between a lot of diving catches, pinpoint throws, and ferocious defense, is a sport in transition. There will be plenty of the chest-bumping and fist-pumping familiar to the mainstream jock crowd, but then there will also be the moment when two players go up for a disc in the air, one comes down with it, the other says “foul,” and everything stops.

Self-officiation represents the heart of ultimate's identity crisis. Returning to the above example, the likely course events is such: the players, after stating their cases to one another, will disagree on whether a foul occurred, and one of several orange-clad observers – now a fixture at all of USAU's most competitive club and college events – will be called upon to make a ruling. In the best-case scenario, the observer will have been watching closely, will immediately make a call, and play will resume. But far too often, the observer will ask the players to restate their arguments or even call in a colleague for deliberation. In the meantime, the broadcast has been stalled long beyond one instant replay's worth of filler material (remember, these are the same viewers who lack the attention span for an ordinary inning of baseball).

Ultimate is a sport for the future. It is cheap to play (at the informal level, at least), comes in equally-treated male, female, and coed varieties, and carries all of the regular visual excitement necessary for success on TV. Excellence requires tremendously hard work in conditioning, repetition of skills, and strategy. Most importantly, thanks in large part to self-officiating, it values humility, fairness, and respect above all else.

But that last sentence is in danger of becoming an anachronism. With two new fully-refereed professional leagues achieving moderate success in the last two years (enough that their players don't pay for travel or equipment), the mainstream assimilation movement in the sport is gaining more and more voices daily. I'd like to believe that refereed ultimate could take over the college and club levels, bringing with it a host of converted athletes and fans, and that the sport could retain its premium on accountability in the process. But I've spent enough time around the mainstream jock crowd to know that this is about as likely to happen as Metta World Peace actually becoming a peaceable human being.

Observers: a lynchpin for the future of ultimate
The truth, however, is that compromise is entirely possible. Self-officiation should hardly doom ultimate to hippie/white upper-middle class irrelevance in the public eye. ESPN likes it, even the International Olympic Committee (IOC) is interested. The key is this: raise the quality of observing to a point where it doesn't detract from the spectator experience. Observers must watch the game as if they are referees, prepared to make an immediate ruling on any disputed call. Player disputes, in turn, must be held to a relatively low time limit before being turned over to an observer, just enough time, say, for an instant replay and a few seconds of broadcaster analysis. Right now, there's still a vicious cycle in effect: the more competitive the game, the more frequent the calls and stoppages, the more frustrating the spectator experience (just ask anyone who's ever watched a CUT-Wisconsin rivalry affair). Tighten up the discussion/observer process and the sport's most alluring contests will no longer risk being some of its most disjointed.

Public tastes are changing as my generation takes over for the baby boomers as major consumers. Look at the overwhelming support given by the professional athlete community to NBA player Jason Collins after he came out of the closet. What was once counter-culture can now be accepted and celebrated.

So here's hoping that in its rush toward legitimacy, ultimate does not forget the counter-cultural roots that make it exceptional. And here's hoping baseball does not forget its elegant conversationalist roots in its rush to win over the iPhone generation. Here's hoping that maybe, just maybe, my two favorite sports will find parallel spotlights in a more humble and engaged future, one in which many kids fight through the growth-inspiring dilemma of The Switch.

Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Exploring the Future, Together (Another Climate Rant)

The rain finally came last Tuesday night. I'd been in Wisconsin for nearly a month and we'd gotten a grand total of one solid downpour. Needless to say, I had high hopes for this one, and not just because the shower in our bathroom was mid-replacement and I was still a bit ripe with sweat from frisbee practice.

But the spurt barely lasted long enough for me to get my hair soaked on the balcony. Another quick tease of sprinkles came early Wednesday morning and that was all. Then back to the usual: grass getting browner, daylight getting scarcer, and nary a day with over a 40 percent chance of rain in the extended forecast.

Now, granted, there's a good chance I'm over-dramatizing. I'm no expert on historical rainfall patterns in Wisconsin and at least the temperature has started dropping, bringing the glorious early fall combination of cool air and warm sun. After I wrote the above paragraphs, a real lasting rain did finally come over the weekend. Still, it's been awfully dry since I got here and I now live much nearer to that part of the country destined toward desertification if the planet continues to warm at anything close to its current rate. So if that's enough to get me writing about climate change again, I'll go with it.

Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, Mich.
First, the quick life update: I moved in with some college friends in Madison last month, bought a bike, joined a frisbee team, and have been trying – and largely failing – to write on a regular basis. I'm interviewing for a job as a technical writer with Epic Systems, a big healthcare software company where some of my friends work, and if I get an offer I'll probably take it. The prospect of living here among great friends with a steady position that at least includes the word “writer” in its title is an appealing one. Two weekends ago, two buddies and I drove north to Michigan's Upper Peninsula for a few days of backpacking along the Lake Superior shoreline (more on that later). Last weekend, it was up to Minnesota for an ultimate tournament. It's adventures like these that make me pretty happy about where I am.

But it's time to break out of my own bubble. The days surrounding September 11, if any, are days for bigger thoughts. I'm 24 years old and it has been 12 years since the terrorist attacks of 2001. That means just under half of my life has been spent post-9/11. Many of the views I have come to hold in regards to that day are summed up by Wendell Berry in his uncompromising essay “Thoughts in the Presence of Fear.” That his words are just as poignant today, with another mass shooting plastering the news and our leaders weighing the costs of military action in Syria, speaks volumes to how far we still stand from a “peaceable economy.”

What has changed since 9/11, as my generation and I have gone from wide-eyed dependents to inheritors of the burden, is the immediacy of our need for change. So I return to our shifting climate, the challenge that will inevitably define my adulthood. From Katrina to Sandy to last week's historic flooding in Colorado, we've seen our weather systems grow increasingly unpredictable and extreme. If you believe in science, this is only the tip of the (melting) iceberg.

Upon considering the weight of it all, it's easy to fall into defeatism. We're so far from where we need to be with so little time to make huge changes. Inevitably, we'll wait until the beast has already broken down the front door and started shattering the family heirlooms before we get serious about saving our home. In short, we're fucked, right? Might as well enjoy a semblance of comfort and normalcy while it lasts.

What an easy backslide to make, like when I sleep until nine or ten on an unplanned morning instead of getting up early to run or write.

Thanks in no small part to my privileged and protected upbringing, I've always considered myself an optimist, a person with deep faith in fellow humans and the long-term benevolence of God, the Mystery, Life, call it what you will. When I let the magnitude of the climate crisis sink in, it tests my optimism more than any of the other daily injustices happening in our ever-imperfect society.

The same science that is spelling our doom, however, also tells us this: for every action, there is an equal and opposite reaction. If this is universal law, can we not apply it to the arc of human history? For all of our destructive potential, is there not an equal and opposite capacity for stewardship and compassion? For all of the damage our techno-industrial society has wrought, does it not have an equal ability to save?

Consider the massive changes technology has brought to human life in the last 50 years. Then consider the exponential rate at which major advances are occurring. For better, or for worse, the future is wide open, wider than ever before. What a frightening and inspiring hand we have been dealt.

Another piece from the consistently excellent Orion magazine that has held my attention recently is Kathleen Dean Moore and Scott Slovic's resonant (if a bit lofty) “7 Ways to Write the Future.” What if everyone, not just writers, bought in – even marginally – to the view that “some kinds of writing are morally impossible in a state of emergency.” Imagine the progress if all sectors of society actually treated this as just that: a state of emergency. How many more biblical floods will it take for us to adopt policies with the urgency of wartime rationing, the kind that encouraged “Meatless Mondays” during the first World War and a national speed limit of 35 mph during the second?

I'll go ahead and say chances are high that the fight against climate change will never come close to resembling a military war. It's just too intangible for too many to elicit widespread anxiety and ensuing action. As the admirable (and not just for his beard) David Roberts of Grist concludes in a recent discussion of carbon targets and taxes, “it’s going to be a long slog, through our lives and our children’s lives, pushing and pulling and scrabbling together a patchwork of policies.”

All aboard, then. Some of us will be tireless door-knockers and phone-callers, champions of the front line. Some will be their voices, writers who will hopefully seek not only to renew the spirits of their fellow activists but also to reach across the aisle with reason and respect. Some will be the teachers, fighting to lift up a new generation of humbler stewards in the age of instant information and entertainment. Some will simply be parents who raise their children to live simply and responsibly.

The important thing is not how we contribute. It's simply that we contribute, more and more of us every day. Climate change isn't going away. It's time to find each of our proper strides and settle into the long, hard climb.

Meanwhile, for all of the trudging, we can't forget to admire the scenery. Edward Abbey said it best in “Joy, Shipmates, Joy," his 1976 speech to environmentalists: “It's not enough to fight for the land; it's even more important to enjoy it while you can.” We must not only find more ways to use technology responsibly, but we must find more time to spend outdoors, breathing fresh air and leaving technology behind. For it is there that we gather the fuel to climb on while also living the example which we must set of a more grounded, peaceable life.

On that note, I'll close with some words from my recent trip up to Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore in Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

--

From Au Sable East Campsite
Pictured Rocks National Lakeshore, Mich.
September 9, 2013

The seasons are starting to change in the North Country. This morning, our third and final one of the trip, has arrived gray and breezy, with the nip of autumn on the air. I can see the remnants of sunrise color on the horizon as I look out from the remains of last night's campfire, past birch, maple, white pine and hemlock to the lake. And what a lake it is – Superior. Gichigami, or the Big Water, to the Ojibwa. We've been hiking northeast through the park with the lake steadfast on our left the past two days. On Saturday we left the auto-tourists behind, hiking through ethereal fog much of the afternoon, the hardwood forest closed around us on three sides in a dozen electric shades of green, the lake a mystical wall of white mist, like a blank canvas for our imaginations.

Cambrian sandstone over Lake Superior
It finally revealed itself that evening as we hiked through the final hours of daylight, along with its magnificent shoreline that has merited national protection. The forest reigns straight and thick to the edge of sandstone cliffs, birches hanging precipitously over a 30-, 40-, 60-foot drop to the turquoise water below. And in between trees and lake is the art of geology, the craftwork of the millennia that give this park its name – streaks and swirls of mineral color, weathered-out arches, spires, and overhangs. Incredible, glorious variety.

--

It's amazing, really, for all the doomsday talk we spew, how many enchanting wild places still remain right in our home regions. I'm giddy to explore some new ones up here in the Northwoods. It may not always be as dramatic as the West, but it's just as refreshing.

Yet when I send my thoughts back to a trip, a place, hindsight often tinges them with melancholy. Inevitably, at some point, I wonder how it will have changed if I ever return. If I bring my kids in 20 years, will there remain the same wondrous diversity of trees, ferns, spiders? Will the morning breeze still carry the chill of fall in early September? What about for my grandkids in 60 years?

Not to be dramatic or anything, but the answer rests in all of our hands. Get out there, shipmates.

Tuesday, August 20, 2013

Lessons from the Colorado Trail

The warmth and smoothness of the whiskey was almost sensual as it slid down our throats. Leaning back against the big boulder in the middle of our campsite, its surface still holding a pleasant heat from the July sun, we watched as the western sky darkened to black and the stars emerged, piercing indifferently like a million possible futures.

“So, twenty-four years old, huh Matty?” Rhys said. “Sounds like a pretty good age.”

It was certainly off to a pretty good start. July 16, 2013, my 24th birthday, found me nestled in the heart of the Sawatch Range with a couple of friends, camping creekside between the Holy Cross and Mount Massive Wildernesses. Rhys was hiking the whole 500 miles of the Colorado Trail from Denver to Durango, a farewell to his home state before he left on a yearlong fellowship to teach English and Computer Science in China. Pete and I were along for a few segments of the ride. We'd all played ultimate frisbee together at Carleton College, that frisbee-crazed quirk of a school plopped down in the Southern Minnesota prairie. Now I, two years removed from the place, the youngest of three brothers, was rather relishing the chance to play sage elder for my just-graduated buddies.

As the flask of Jack passed back and forth, the conversation ranged on into the night, from romance to politics to life after Carleton. It was good, genuine talk, the kind that reminds you why your college friends often remain your best friends. And on one thing we all agreed: we were preposterously lucky to be where we were, doing what we were doing.

Wild beauty and human camaraderie: a recipe for happiness.
It's a feeling that wouldn't go away during my two weeks on the trail. The next evening we camped beneath Mt. Elbert then rose early enough to beat the bulk of the peakbaggers to the rooftop of Colorado, the lower 48's second-highest summit at 14,433 feet. We shared the climb with Laine, a CU student and fellow thru-hiker we'd met two days before. Later that afternoon we descended in a cooling drizzle through vast colonies of quaking aspen, the view to either side of the trail a wall of staggered cream-white trunks and dark brown eye-knots. Reaching a trailhead with fortuitous timing, we crammed into a Jeep with three soggy middle-aged Texans and hitched the couple miles into tiny Twin Lakes, Colorado, a one-road mountain town perched beneath massive peaks beside a pair of picturesque glacial lakes. We pitched our tent that night in the backyard behind the Twin Lakes General Store, falling asleep exhausted after a day which began with mountaintop grandeur and ended sharing beers and laughs with a couple other thru-hikers-turned-friends. (Trail time has a way of accelerating friendships: ask any casual observer which three out of our five had gone to college together and they wouldn't have had a clue).

It was this combination – equal parts wild beauty and human camaraderie – that made those two weeks so memorable. From rolling stretches of ridgeline tundra, where every quarter mile seems to yield an even more spectacular postcard vista, to cold coursing streams and meadows stuffed with the popping colors of asters, paintbrushes, columbines, lupines, etc., there was a heaping smorgasbord of natural splendor made all the lusher by a large dose of now-melted spring snowfall. But it was the unexpected human culture of the thing which set the Colorado Trail apart from my other experiences in the western backcountry. Between Laine (one semester away from graduation at CU), Cody (34-year old ex-rugby star who'd just thrown in the towel on a lucrative Wall Street career), and Doug and Denise (retired desert rats from Utah – she a park ranger, he an EMT), every thru-hiker we met seemed ready and willing with a fascinating story, a bad joke, a sage piece of advice. And whether we shared five days or five minutes together didn't really matter. Nobody cared too much about anything but the present.

The trail is waiting: get out there and find it.
Following his “experiment” at Walden Pond, Thoreau delivered perhaps his wisest conclusion of all with one repeated imperative: “Simplify, simplify, simplify.” After two weeks during which I turned on my cell phone two times, during which all the materials I needed to thrive weighed under thirty pounds and fit comfortably on my back, during which happiness had very little to do with technology and a whole lot to do with wilderness and unfiltered human connections, I can think of no better method for following the Concord hermit's advice in today's world than an extended backpacking trip.

I had no intention of hiking the Colorado Trail this summer until I saw Rhys at an ultimate tournament in May and we got to scheming. Three months later, I've returned to a still-uncertain future in society carrying barely a shred of anxiety after a couple of the most rejuvenating weeks of my life. The woods and the lakes and the hills are still out there, friends. If you're lucky enough to have the time and the resources, make it happen. Who knows, maybe you'll spend your next birthday sipping whiskey at 10,000 feet too.