“How better to address the question ‘Does hunting make us human?’ than to live the hunting life fully, unconscientiously, ethically and unapologetically? To teach by lived example, with humility and without regret, that all life feeds on death, including, eventually, our own.” – Mary Zeiss Stange
I used to go into the woods and imagine that I was the first to walk on a piece of ground and my footprints were the first to leave their mark. I was drawn to the idea of pristine wilderness. My imagination was romanced by the possibility that I was the first human to walk or paddle a place. I would see footprints from a past hiker and feel somehow disappointed or… Read More
Category: Personal Reflections Tags: Backcountry, Darwin, Hiking, Hunter recruitment, hunting stories, Nature, Nature-culture, Steven Rinella, stories
There are far too many great outdoors books to keep up with, but I like to do a couple of these posts each year to highlight some of my favourites. Summer is a great time to catch up on novels, and while the two novels in this list are moving pieces of writing, they are not exactly light-hearted. But if you are looking for outdoors books that dig into the depths of… Read More
Category: Books & Media Tags: Blood Meridian, Cormac McCarthy, Darwin, Humboldt, John Muir, Joseph Boyden, literature, Nature, nature writing, Steven Rinella, Thoreau, Walden