So I know that my last entry was
more like a stream of consciousness essay about my beliefs, so I thought I
would spend more time on the work that I am doing and some stories from the
past week. I have been working for
the Truckee Ranger District for almost a month and I think that I have gotten
the hang of the day-to-day tasks and lifestyle. The office itself is fairly laidback for a government
building. Everyone is very
pleasant and willing to help out with whatever task is at hand. Most of employees are not at their
desks everyday and presumably that means that they are out in the field, which
is pretty cool since field work is always more fun than office work. Today I am working at the front desk
and answering any questions that the public may have about trails or
recreation. More importantly, that
means that I am in uniform. There
is something about putting on a uniform with a badge that makes you feel special,
or at least set apart. It is an
outward manifestation of a position of importance to the public. Mostly, it just makes you feel like a
badass. You stand a little
straighter, walk a little taller and smile more toward those around you,
because you are no longer just representing yourself; you are representing
everything the Forest Service stands for. And that is a good feeling.
Unfortunately,
the office is fairly dead and I have yet to answer one question pertaining to
my department. So instead I will
tell you about some work I did a couple days ago on a trail.
Mountain
biking is fast becoming a major outdoor sport in America and our department is
making moves to manage more trails for bikers. One of the most popular trails that we manage is the
Overland Commemorative Emigrant Trail.
It consists of 15 miles of cross-country biking bliss that roves through
stands of Jeffery Pine, alpine meadows, and granite basins. Last Tuesday we got a call in that
there were two sizable trees that had fallen across the trail. Some bikers relish these challenges and
make little ramps out of rocks to jump the logs. Although it is comical to watch bikers try to fly like
superman after their bike hits the log, they tend to meet the ground at
breakneck speed, so to speak. We
at the Forest Service try to avoid casualties and injuries on public lands: they
tend to create even more paperwork than we have to deal with already.
More realistically, most bikers see
the log and end up going off trail to avoid them. This means that multiple trails start forming which leads to
increased erosion, water on the trail, plant/sapling damage, and the bikers
having to suddenly change course. So
it falls to the recreation department to manage the trails and remove the
fallen logs. So our team loaded up
and headed out to the nearest access road to the section of the trail with the
impeding logs. My coworker, Bob,
produced a fairly ingenious backpack with straps designed to hold a
chainsaw. The side straps held
canisters of gasoline and oil to reduce friction on the saw teeth. He then donned specialized chainsaw
chaps, gloves and a hard hat. After helping him into the gear I felt as if I
was a squire outfitting a knight for the battle ahead. I myself carried an axe just in case
things got dicey. Thinking back to
my childhood I remembered the afternoons spent chopping firewood for the family
and simultaneously cursing my father’s station as the chore-mongerer. But, in retrospect those long hours of
using tools like splitting mauls and hatchets to effect usable materials out of
cords of wood have become invaluable experience for most of my jobs here at the
Forest Service.
Bob, whom I affectionately call
Bobcat to his chagrin, began to move up the trail garbed in the necessary armor
and weaponry. Joe and I followed
after Bob, axe and radio in hand.
I learned how to use the radio this week, and tentatively hoped that I
would get to use CB talk and make up my own callsign. But no, only plain talk is used, and my aspirations of my
super cool callsign (Hawkeye) were replaced with a three-digit number. For some reason, they take things like
emergency radio transmissions pretty seriously at the Forest Service. As we moved up the trail, Bob pointed
out certain aspects of trail management that I was previously unaware of. The fact that I hadn’t noticed the
evidence of work on trails is intentional, since the aim of trail maintenance
is to have the trail look as naturally formed as possible. Bob explained formations like berms
(raised edges of trails created by heavy use) and cupping (water created
erosion pathways on trails) that trails are designed to resist and
weather. As we mounted a hill, we
came upon a forested valley that stretched out below us for a few hundred yards
before rising again in the distance and peaking a mile or so away. As we began down the valley on the
trail Joe suddenly stopped us and pointed to the middle of the side of the
valley we were on.
“Coyote.” Joe whispered under his breath.
My
breath quickened as my eye connected with another pair that belonged to one of
the most elusive and controversial animals in the United States. In the western states, European
settlers have regarded coyotes and wolves as livestock poachers and
“varmints”. I don’t know about
you, but whenever anyone says varmint I think of Yosemite Sam and his
overactive trigger finger.
Unfortunately, that cartoon imagery is not far from the historical
reality of the West. Only recently
has the sentiment towards wolves and coyotes changed for some in the West. In December, the first wolf was spotted
in California since 1926. Wolves
were so persecuted and heavily hunted in America that a group of 66 Canadian
wolves had to be introduced into Yellowstone in 1996 to try and restore the
ecosystem.
Coyotes have not had the same
treatment. Coyotes are not listed
as an endangered species like the grey wolf is and still holds the reputation
of a nuisance. It is legal to hunt
coyotes year round in California and some areas that have large numbers of
ranchers hold annual coyote hunting competitions. Bob said that one year he was passing through one of these
towns and saw a stack of coyote corpses that was chest high. Aside from the obvious bloodthirsty
waste that comes with hunting predators, from an ecological perspective,
hunting a keystone species is terrible for an area. Coyotes prey upon a variety of animals and are necessary to
keep population numbers of other species in check. Think of an ecosystem like cyclical dynamic. The plants feed the herbivores, the
herbivores feed the predators, the predators feed the detritivores, and the
detritivores break down the dead matter into usable parts for plants. If you remove or reduce a section of
the cycle, the balance is thrown into chaos and the ecosystem does not
function.
The coyote near the trail warily
eyed us from the distance, its brown and red fur rippling in the wind. With one last look it bounded into the
valley, instantly camouflaged by the brown soils behind it. It was my first coyote sighting in the
wild. We continued along the trail
and reached the area where the downed logs were located. One had already been moved off the
trail, but the other remained. It
was small enough for the three of us to push off the trail, which is preferable
to using the chainsaw anyway since it reduces noise pollution and saves
gas. Our task completed, we
started to head back down the trail towards the rig.
On our way back Bob started telling
me about the various people that can live at elevation. He mentioned that recently a girl was
found in the basement in a house nearby who had been kidnapped on the southern
shore of Lake Tahoe and held for twenty years. Oh, I forgot to mention that he had two children by her. Wonderful story, I know. He postulated that the elevation and
remoteness makes for disturbed human beings. He told me that
once he was camping in the wilderness with his wife and went off to explore a
bit on his own. From a distance he
saw that two men had saw his wife and began moving towards her from
behind. The men were still a ways
off, and so Bob was able to rush back and stay with his wife as they
passed.
“You can never be too careful with people in the wilderness.” Bob explained. It truly is the lawless Wild West out here in some ways. All of these stories had me in a particularly dark mindset on the trek back to the rig. Lost in my thoughts about kidnapping and crazy mountain people, I followed Bob and Joe trudging along the trail, eyes on the track below me.
“You can never be too careful with people in the wilderness.” Bob explained. It truly is the lawless Wild West out here in some ways. All of these stories had me in a particularly dark mindset on the trek back to the rig. Lost in my thoughts about kidnapping and crazy mountain people, I followed Bob and Joe trudging along the trail, eyes on the track below me.
Suddenly, from behind I heard a
voice, not 10 feet away from me that seemed to carry all the promises of a
swift demise on the trail:
“On your right!” the demonic call
sounded to the rear. Thoughts of bearded-moonshine swigging-pickaxe-wielding
phantoms flashed in front of me and I jumped a foot straight up towards the
tree crowns. After landing, being
of swift agility and doused with fear-induced flight I quickly sidestepped the
trail.
A fearsome figure ran past me:
naught but just over 5 feet tall and clad in running gear, with a huge grin
upon her face. Bob immediately
burst into laughter and after I discovered that I was not going to become the
next ingredient in mountain man soup, I laughed as well. On her return run, the scarecrow runner
and I exchanged a smile and a chuckle.
I later told Bob, “That is how you really pickup girls: let them scare
the crap out of you and show them how sensitive you are.”
I always thought that those movies
and shows with guys sitting around the campfire telling scary stories were
ridiculous and prided myself on not being subject to such low frights. Well, I guess I learned that scary
stories can be pretty effective.
“We reached the old
wolf in time to watch a fierce green fire dying in her eyes. 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. I was young then, and
full of trigger-itch; I thought that because fewer wolves meant more deer, that
no wolves would mean hunters' paradise. But after seeing the green fire die, I
sensed that neither the wolf nor the mountain agreed with such a view.”
-Aldo
Leopold, Sand County Almanac.
Happy Memorial Day Weekend, Jake!
ReplyDeleteYou're going to be busy this weekend, I'll bet. Love your blogs... they are entertaining and informative all at once. When you describe the detail of the wolf, coyote, and the delicate ecosystems it is all very moving. I have such a passion for Mother Earth. You reflect that beautifully in the detail and weave it together with pertinent information... excellent! So glad that you are doing this internship and learning, having fun, and being a true adventurer and public servant... love, synergy(EMK)
Thank you! I know that I have gotten some of my appreciation for nature from you. And you should look into diving anyway, you may find that you have waited just the right amount of time...
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