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9781940860169

Wilderness Journals Wandering the High Lonesome

by ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9781940860169

  • ISBN10:

    1940860164

  • Edition: 1st
  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2015-08-07
  • Publisher: Boone and Crockett Club
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Summary

Wilderness is smooth sippin'-whiskey for the outdoorsman's soul. But it's also espresso for those determined to keep America's wildest places untrammeled by man.

For Jack Ward Thomas, it was both.

Wilderness Journals tells the story of how Thomas came to know the “high lonesome” and how his experiences packing into rough country with fine horses and good friends would fuel his passion and vision as chief of the U.S. Forest Service.

A true journal-style memoir, Thomas describes adventures along the trail, including encounters with bold bears, reclusive war veterans, and vast expanses of the West that only the heartiest explorers ever see. He writes about the wildlife, forests, meadows, and mountains with two voices. One is the voice of an emerging conservation leader looking into the future of natural resource management. The other is the voice of a backcountry horseman simply doing what he loves.

When Thomas moved to Oregon in 1973 to begin work as a research biologist, he found a mentor and enduring friend in Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife regional director Bill Brown. It was a camaraderie that changed Thomas's life and career. Together, the two embarked on a decades-long odyssey of wild-country experiences that would galvanize Thomas's will to beat back the exploiters who gaze upon America's wildernesses and see only dollar signs.

An appendix in Wilderness Journals includes specific examples. During his tenure as Forest Service chief, which began in 1993, Thomas intended to enhance and expand America's wilderness system. But changing the status quo comes hard for a federal agency. In revealing commentary, Thomas probes behind-the-scenes political struggles, internal resistance, final analyses of his defeats—as well as his hopes for the future.

Author Biography

A child of the Dust Bowl era who became a sportsman, biologist, and leader in conservation, Jack Ward Thomas has devoted his life and career to the outdoors.

His professional service included the dustiest trenches as well as the highest offices of natural resource management—culminating with his 1993 appointment as the thirteenth chief of the U.S. Forest Service. His personal adventures spanned hunting rabbits for Mom's skillet to leading pack strings up into the “high lonesome” of western wildernesses.

A Texas native, Thomas earned progressive degrees from Texas A&M, West Virginia, and Massachusetts universities. He spent twenty years in forest, range, and wildlife research in Oregon, becoming increasingly involved in natural resource sciences and politics in the years leading to his tenure as Forest Service chief.

Thomas later became Professor of Wildlife Conservation at the University of Montana, a position endowed by Boone and Crockett Club, before retiring in 2007.

Table of Contents

Foreword by John Maclean

Preface

1. The Old Forest Service Guard Station at Mormon—Snake River Canyon

2. No Beginning, No Ending, Only Eternal Turning

3. Hells Canyon—Jack's Cabin and the Old Grimes Place

4. A Three-Day Wilderness Getaway? It Can Be Done

5. Minam River in the Eagle Cap Wilderness—Red's Horse Ranch

6. New Pilgrims in the Wilderness—Fast Learners Preferred

7. Does Wilderness Have the Power to Heal? Maybe

8. "The Promised Land Always Lies on the Other Side of a Wilderness"

9. Competition Even in the Wilderness—Sharing the Bounty

10. If Not Grouse, We'll Settle for Brook Trout

11. Riding Out Front Is Different from Trailing Behind

12. "You Gotta Know What's Enough"

13. Green Pastures and Still Waters

14. Wilderness and a Summer of Discontent

15. The Wenaha-Tucannon Wilderness, Bill Brown's Pride

16. A Return to the Eagle Cap—None Too Soon!

17. A Trip to the Wilderness with the Undersecretary of Agriculture—A Chance to Say Thanks and Good-Bye

18. One Last Return to the Eagle Cap Wilderness

Epilogue

Map of Northeast Oregon

Appendix
National Forest Wilderness Areas—A Try at Improved Management
The Sixth National Wilderness Conference

Publisher's Note

Author's Acknowledgments

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