The final few weeks of this program
have been for me as laid back, simple, and unhurried as the first two
months were stressful, hectic, and quick-paced. In contrast to what I
melodramatically like to refer to as our corps' proving grounds in
Baton Rouge, there isn't an overflow of work or a frenzied urgency
pushing us ceaselessly to its completion here in Kentucky. A main
difference is the nature of the work. Baton Rouge was - to borrow a
military term - boots on the ground just days after a massive
disaster large enough to earn a place in the national spotlight for
some time, drawing swarms of volunteers and mind-boggling tonnage of
donated goods from far and wide all rushing to the aid of a state
submerged nearly in its entirety. Here, as our newly formed team of
eleven volunteers amble along narrow trails winding their way through
the tranquil, primordially beautiful Red River Gorge, the only
urgency I feel is the occasional stabbing pain in my Achilles' (a
souvenir from New Zealand) and the ever present, undiscerning desire
to stuff my face with the nearest available source of calories.
Trail work is important. Maintaining
responsible access to the wilderness allows the public to discover
for themselves the beauty and serenity of what the world once was,
and still could be, if we took better care of it. However, the
grasping, viney arms of Rhododendron overgrowing Swift Camp Creek
Trail aren't going to die if we don't get to them all today - though
after a few hours wielding loppers, Zubats and my trusty serrated
pocket knife in the battle to kill or trim half of them anyway, I've
caught myself wishing they would and save us the effort.
We're also no longer the fresh faced,
green volunteers we were 9 months ago. Everyone is to some degree
burnt out. Some have had it with the program's hierarchy and
operations, others with their teammates, and just about everyone is
sick of communal living. The nature of the work here may not have as
much objective urgency, but we've lost much of our own innate
enthusiasm too. I can't claim that I don't have my dejected or
less-than-inspired days, but I do my best to keep them to myself in
relative silence. I have to say it can be difficult to keep up
spirits the rest of the time when many people around you loudly and
consistently voice their negative opinion of the circumstances. This
program is not perfect, the people running it are not perfect, no
project and very few days are without flaw and neither is any of us;
but the spirit of national service is still something I agree with,
find inspiring and believe is worthwhile.
There are few things I detest more
than busywork, willful or avoidable incompetence, and wasted time,
but I've learned that sometimes we have to look at the big picture of
what we're doing and slog through the less-than-well-used hours or
days in support of the grander ideal of national service which these
losses are unavoidably a part of. And if we can agree to do that and
have committed to it, we might as well keep our heads up and enjoy
what's around us. Appreciation of the little details, when the middle
space between these and the greater ideals we currently serve is
unappealing to dwell on at the moment, can go a long way to keeping
up one's satisfaction.
Some of those details: we work and
live outside now, sometimes hiking as much as ten miles a day on the
trails. The temperature generally still ranges from frigid to cool
and nearly always damp. This allows us to get fantastically filthy at
work, much to the gawking evening curiosity of other camp visitors,
but usually not all that sweaty. There is a bath house in the
campground that spews water at such indecisively alternating extremes
of temperature as to make Shaquille O'Neal ashamed of his one-time
endorsement of Icy-Hot cream if he knew about this place. I always
used to mock my dad's ridiculously slow process of warming up to the
water in pools or the ocean, a fleeting thought I could barely hear
over the sound of my own screaming the first time I used that bath
house. Some teammates are doing a conservation-minded shower fast for
the full five weeks of this project. Even considering the
consistently unpleasant experience of showering here I've so far
refused to join them for more than four days at a time.
We sleep in tiny but determined single
person tents, flimsy green plastic cocoons that have resolutely
weathered several driving thunderstorms, dutifully keeping us snugly
dry like little grey caterpillars awaiting the first sunny day of
Spring in our cocoons (for the first week and a half, it was so cold
most of us slept in our uniforms to avoid the chilling shock of
changing in the morning). We have a trailer, an old pull-along RV,
for cooking, storage, and shelter during the worst of these storms
but it is over-taxed and frequently crowded, dirty and loud. It does
have electricity but the Gorge is mostly a cellular and internet
desert, so my laptop and phone aren't as attractive uses of my time
as usual anyway. Simple things like changing, brushing one's teeth,
and cooking take much longer or are more difficult in camp. However
once one becomes accustomed to a certain level of constant minor
misery, these relatively primitive conditions are actually pretty
enjoyable. In the absence of much else to do, I find myself outdoors
most of the time.
Some of us have started a “100
push-ups, 100 pages a day” challenge to fill our time. When we're
not reading, eating, or doing push-ups, and we haven't had a
particularly punishing hike during work hours, we'll spend some time
at the lumber gym: a small collection of conveniently dense logs and
a long, thin tree we use for lifting - they say Boredom is the mother
of creativity, and Necessity of invention. There's something
satisfying about doing squats with a thick log across your shoulders
rather than a bar of iron. I could almost imagine myself as a
lumberjack in the Alaskan wilderness, burly, wooly-bearded and clad
in red flannel under suspenders that cost far less than the average
modern hipster would be willing to spend. Never mind that I can't
grow a beard, I'm wearing filthy khaki cargo pants poorly patched
twice at the crotch, and that historical lumberjacks probably didn't
waste a moment fiddling with some half rotted log after work because
their job was to move heavy
things all day long, effectively negating the necessity of modern
sedentary humans to dedicate special time to developing muscles. It's
fun.
As a whole camp life is fairly simple, as is our actual work. So far we've hiked probably somewhere around 80 miles of trail, cleaning out rainwater drains, picking up a surprisingly small amount of trash, closing off illegal campsites and dispersing fire rings. We've spent a couple days clearing vegetation from the side of a wilderness track, trimming back mostly rhododendron and ripping out baby trees (immediately following two days we spent planting 1500 trees in clearings created by careless campers, a logically understandable but painful lack of psychological distance between the two tasks). The most difficult but interesting day so far began with a two mile hike into the gorge to a creek where we waded perhaps a half mile down stream in either direction from a crossing, clearing out trash and debris. We found a total of six old tires and had to drag them out of the creek, clean the rusty, foul smelling sludge out of them, and haul them back up the trail. I tried to carry one by myself. It was wide with deep, thick treads and an attached metal hub so ridiculously beefy it must've been made in the ecologically ambivalent sixties – but that's probably just my wounded pride talking. After about fifteen minutes a teammate and I wound up carrying it between us on a spit, doggedly marching it up the gorge like a silent, sullenly bound captive destined for our tribal bonfire.
We've had quite a few interesting days
on the trail, made so by forced observation to detail and good
conversations, two skills I'm always trying to work on. The memory of
one in particular I think is worth sharing, in part because it's the
only one I recorded in detail. One day this past week, Matt, the
ranger for the Stanton district of DBNF, met us at a trailhead along
with the backcountry ranger interns. Our task for the morning was to
follow him down a ways to a clearing beside a stream that had been
trampled by careless campers and replant the area with seedlings.
The morning had begun with rain, the
spattering tail end of a massive, bloated cloud that had bombarded
our tiny tents all that night and still hung thickly in the sky,
emptied but stubborn. By about midmorning the sun had gathered
sufficient strength to shine through this insubstantial remnant,
creating an effect like an enormous photographer's diffuser. A soft,
silvery light spilled into the gorge as we rounded a corner to reveal
a steep ridgetop running almost parallel and to the right of our own,
following our descent until the two ridges pinched and melded
together again at the floor in a shallow ravine. The sky was a solid
sheet of white light, concentrated just above the opposite ridgeline
and half silhouetting the hemlocks, maples and oaks jutting up into
their ethereal backdrop. The narrow gulley was thick with
rhododendron glistening from the night's rain, the tops of their bushy, rounded
canopies reflecting the light like hundreds of mesmerizing pools of
liquid silver.
When we returned about an hour and a
half later, our baby trees successfully deposited, the clouds had
mostly burned off and the silver was gone, replaced by damp bushes
and a fond memory.
Earlier that day I managed to talk to
the four forest service interns a little. Of the four, Jay was
perhaps the most interesting and I found him a wealth of information.
He's about 5' 6” and 120 lbs, sports a furry black beard, round eye
gear that can only be properly described as spectacles and an
expedition cap I've never seen him without. All the interns look the
part in their two-toned green USFS uniforms: the dark and sturdy
pressed slacks, the starchy collared shirts; but Jay is the most
enthusiastic.
He volunteered at a national park for
two years instead of going to college and wound up in the same place
as those who had in less time and without the cost. He taught me how
to tell a hemlock from a white pine and got me hooked on eating
hemlock needles straight off low hanging branches like a billy goat.
He claims not only do they taste great, but they make the best pine
needle tea. Later he showed me a ground cover plant with little red
berries that he claims taste like bubble gum, but I decided not to
overextend my trust and stuck to pine needles.
Matt, the Stanton forest ranger and
our occasional project lead is everything I expected a forest ranger
should be. He has a way of explaining the contents of his office, so
to speak, that lays bare the demystified and logical inner workings
of nature as though the secrets of ecology were common place while
still obviously impressed and quietly wondrous of them himself. He
gets appropriately angry at irresponsible weekenders damaging the
forest, noticing all the little details of their careless passing. He
was quite appreciative, and I was quite proud of myself, after I
climbed a precariously leaning tree to cut down a severed end of a rope that'd
been pissing him off for a long time. All those pull ups were finally
useful for something.
Tall and fit, with close cropped black
hair usually kept under a green USFS baseball cap, Matt wears a thick,
groomed black goatee that if allowed would flow down his neck to join
the undoubtedly equally thick mane beneath his shirt. His irises are
so dark as to be nearly black, yet they are paradoxically bright. His
upper lip doesn't seem to curl up when he smiles in the stereotypical
wide U shape; instead his mouth just opens wider, revealing perfectly
straight white teeth descending from his straight upper lip. As our
guide he strides through the forest with an air of purposeful,
familiar ease, alert and happy to answer my persistent questions but
just as happy to amble along in silence tapping trees with the butt
end of his axe, pausing from time to time to look at some curious
moss or inspect a hemlock for the tell-tale white fungus that betrays
the presence of the lethal wooly adelgid beetle. He is used to
walking by himself, as evidenced by the occasional lapse of restraint
and resulting burst of speed that sends his towering frame bounding
lightly up a root-stair accompanied by a thunderous belch. He's
purposeful, laid back, and a wealth of information – when we can
keep up with him.
He
explained many things to me: how to identify several kinds of trees
in the gorge, secret spots for an upcoming trip into the wilderness
my teammate and I are planning, the process of digging for fishing
bait, the best hiking boots and the tender loving care of such, how
to tell how long a tree has been down based on the texture of its
exposed ends and the growth of moss – the list goes on. One of the
natural wonders Matt explained to me on the same day we planted trees
at the creek was a natural iron pipe jutting out of a sandstone rock
shelter on that trail. It was part of a whole mess, a beautiful array
of large waves of iron ore winding through the bluff, partially
exposed from the eroded sandstone in flowing rust red ridges. While
perfectly cylindrical shapes are not common, the formation of iron in
sandstone apparently is. To me, it was a wonder.
Normally
such geological curiosities of the gorge occur in its rock-shelters:
sedimentary cliffs eroded at varying angles by the elements over
millenia, leaving rounded-wedge shaped cavities. These spectacular
overhangs come in every size from cavernous cliffs to spaces a
squirrel could find cozy. On the interior often form patchwork
systems of dripping sandstone, reminiscent of cell structures
melting, or fossilized honeycombs of gargantuan proportion.
However
a geological oddity among geological oddities appeared in the form of
a lone boulder, perhaps ten feet high and thirty feet long which sat
in hulking solitude by the trailside, robed in moss and ferny growth,
looking for all the world as though it had stood watch there since time immemorial. Along its sides occurred a pattern of ridges
that looked like miniature waves of cooled lava; close set
symmetrical layers of delicately curved lines with angular kinks in
them. It resembled very closely the wispy yet bark-like texture of a
north-eastern wasp's nest. Even Matt couldn't explain the formation of this particular wonder. “I wasn't there when it happened,” he
says good-naturedly.
We
leave the Red River Gorge on April 18th.
There will be a three day backpacking trip into the wilderness area
of the gorge before then, leaving only nine work days remaining until
departure and graduation soon after. I'm grateful for all the
experiences I've had, the places I've seen, the people I've met and
everything it's all taught me, but I'll be relieved to be done with
it all. I think I'll celebrate my first day back in Jersey with three
real, bready, warm poppy bagels for breakfast - one toasted and
buttered, one stuffed with eggs, cheese and taylor ham, and one
entirely plain. For lunch I'll devour an entire authentic pizza from literally any
pizzeria in the state for lunch, and for dinner a thick, juicy, dripping burger
from the Homestead Rest. To hell with the fall-out. It'll be worth every minute.
Til next time,
Dan
Dan
"I called out to the Lord from my narrow prison and he answered me in the freedom of space."
Psalm 118:5
Well written blog my friend. Your grammar, sentence structure, and flow are reminicent of an educated writer. Well done.
ReplyDeleteOn a side note, I remember it being closer to 2000 trees. The first day was 1000, the second was 800 and the final bit was 180 if I can recall correctly.