Spring 2006 - the Wyoming State Library
Transcription
Spring 2006 - the Wyoming State Library
Library Wyoming Spring 2006 Roundup Outdoors C.J. Box Jim Zumbo Mardy Murie Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 Don’t fence them in When those wide open spaces around Jackson seem a a love of wildlife and of the Teton Valley area. In 1977, little more open, you might want to thank volunteers Chuck began teaching ornithology for seven summers at Carol and Chuck Schneebeck, who coordinate fence the Audubon Ecology Camp of the West in the Torrey removal for the Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation. Valley near Dubois. While Chuck taught, Carol managed “These are all fences that were either abandoned from the camp’s small library and their two pre-school old grazing allotments or old ranches that no longer sons. Both boys went on to work for environmental have cattle,” Chuck explained. No longer needed, the organizations: the eldest, Carl, for Bluewater Network fences fall into and Casey for disrepair. The Nature Wildlife Conservancy. attempting Their to go over or volunteering through them extends to can get injured many other or even die projects and when they organizations, get cut or including one entangled. “It’s near and dear not good for to Carol’s the wildlife, by heart: The any means,” he Teton County said. Library. She’s The program President of has removed the Friends of 96 miles of the Library fence in the Board, Teton Valley working total; about hard to 55 of those strengthen the were under the organization. Carol and Chuck Schneebeck are winding the wire along with friends and their dog Schneebecks’ She’s also Buster - a search & rescue dog. watch. All a docent at the wire is recycled – some for scrap, some for art. the National Museum of Wildlife Art and a literacy They work with the Foundation and numerous other tutor. Among Chuck’s many activities, he’s President agencies to target migration routes and areas with high of Wyoming K-9 Search and Rescue; their dog, Buster, concentrations of wildlife. is both a rescue dog and the unofficial fence removal Carol and Chuck coordinate efforts of 80 local mascot. volunteers. In addition, other organizations bring in Whether opening migration routes or opening minds volunteers – including troubled teens and kids from through books, you’ll find the Schneebecks hard at work impoverished areas of the inner cities. giving back to their adopted community. “It was really fun to watch them get into it,” Chuck said Organizations that have helped fence removal include Bridger-Teton of one of these groups. “It was hard, dirty work. We were National Forest District, Becket Valley YMCA from Massachusetts, working in a burn area that was just nasty, and the kids Grand Teton National Park, Interagency Fire Crew, Jackson Hole were excited about it, they were fun to be with. It was Conservation Alliance, National Elk Refuge, Red Top Meadows good for all of us. So a lot of things happen other than Residential Treatment Center, Rocky Mountain Elk Foundation, Utah just fence coming down.” Conservation Corps and Wyoming Game and Fish. Retired educators, Carol and Chuck have long shared Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 5 Library Wyoming Spring 2006 Roundup Wyoming State Librarian, Lesley Boughton. ............................3 Jay Lawson Game & Fish’s chief warden.......................4 table of contents Mysteries born in Wyoming C.J. Box.......................................5 Past, Present and Future Yellowstone Research Library......9 17 Wyoming’s famous hunter .................................11 Jim Zumbo She found her dog, horse and cowboyHelen Higby...................................14 22 Wilderness is personal to . ............................17 Mardy Murie Leadership in the Wild — ...............................................20 NOLS Draper Museum........................22 Exploring nature’s boundaries ..............................23 Ted Kerasote Toppan Rare Books Library. ....25 Bookshelf for Wyoming Readers....27 National Museum of Wildlife Art.....................................................30 Top: C.J. Box at a book signing in Lyman. Middle: Mardy and Olaus Murie, photo courtesy of Murie Center Archives. Bottom: Interactive trail of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem - Draper Museum of Natural History - Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody, Wyoming (BBHC photo by Sean Campbell) Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 Artichoke Elk 2 pounds elk steak Milk to cover steaks Flour to coat steaks 1/2 teaspoon salt 1/2 teaspoon pepper 1/4 teaspoon garlic salt 4 tablespoons vegetable oil 1 lemon 1 cup white wine 1/2 cup marinated artichoke hearts, chopped Cut elk steaks into serving sized pieces. Pound each filet until it is about twice its original size. Place meat in shallow bowl, and add enough milk just to cover steaks. Soak steaks in milk for 15 minutes. Drain milk and dredge meat in mixture of flour, salt, pepper, and garlic salt. Heat oil in skillet, add steaks and cook on one side until brown. After turning steaks to cook the other side, squeeze the juice of one lemon over the meat as it continues to cook another couple of minutes. Add the white wine, cover and simmer another 2 to 4 minutes. Add the artichoke hearts, cover and simmer another 1 to 2 minutes until artichokes are heated through. Serve at once. Serves 6. This recipe is compliments of Jim Zumbo, see article on page 11. You can find more of Jim Zumbo’s recipes in his book, Amazing Venison Recipes or online at www. jimzumbo.com. photo courtesy Thomas Kelsey, The Outdoor Channel Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 Library Wyoming Roundup Official publication of the Wyoming State Library, the Wyoming Library Association, and the Wyoming Center for the Book Volume 48, Number 2, Spring 2006 ISSN: 0043-9738 Tina Lackey Editor and Designer Susan Vittitow Assistant Editor and Writer Wyoming State Library Publications and Marketing Office 2301 Capitol Avenue, Cheyenne, WY 82002 307-777-6338 Cover photo: Wildflowers in Yellowstone National Park, courtesy of Wyoming Tourism. Wyoming Library Roundup is published quarterly by the Wyoming Library Association and the Wyoming State Library. All rights reserved. Contents of this magazine may not be reproduced without the express permission of the publishers. The Wyoming Library Roundup is produced in part with Library Services and Technology Act federal funds awarded to the Wyoming State Library from the Institute of Museum and Library Services. lesley boughton, wyoming state librarian On an overcast and cold Sunday morning in early March I was driving from my home in Glendo to town to get my paper. As I came around the reservoir, I noticed eagles roosting in trees near the road. I pulled over and counted 17 bald eagles. Awe inspiring! Sometimes, at dusk, I watch deer move down Elk Horn creek. And often, on cold, clear nights, I hear coyotes howling and yelping very close to my home. Spellbinding! Lesley Bou ghton’s gra nddaughte Boughton, r, Kayla after her e lk hunt la st O ctober. Have you ever driven to Jackson along Highway 26 and seen the Tetons after you crossed Togwotee Pass? Have you been to Lake Marie? Seen the wagon ruts on the Oregon Trail at Guernsey? Breathtaking! Some time ago, when I was the director of the Platte County Library in Wheatland, some folks from the American Library Association in Chicago came to visit. They had driven up from Denver after 5:00 p.m. and could not get over how dark it was from Cheyenne to Wheatland. Not a single traffic light and very few highway lights in 70 miles. “The stars,” they said. “There are so many stars!” This issue of the Wyoming Library Roundup gets to the heart of why we love Wyoming. Those of us lucky to live here share the beauty of our surroundings and sometimes the harshness of the environment. We drive long distances to support our children in myriad school activities; our “neighborhood” is 97,000 square miles. Former governor Milward Simpson is credited with the observation that “Wyoming is a small town with a long main street” and he was right. For a “small town” we have marvelous libraries and museums that collect, organize and provide access to information about and images of the outdoors. I do not hunt or fish. But my children and my grandchildren do. I hope Jim Zumbo (see story on page 11) enjoys the picture I chose to accompany this letter. My granddaughter, Kayla, is a 15 year old, green eyed, blond, passionate hunter. Here she is with the elk she shot last October near Glendo. It scored 340 on the Boone and Crockett Score Chart of North American Big Game. You can get their Records of North American Big Game at the library. Lesley Boughton, Wyoming State Librarian Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 3 jay lawson, wyoming game and fish department 4 I am often asked what led to my interest in the outdoors and a career in wildlife management. The answer is two-fold. First, it was my good fortune to grow up in central Wyoming during the 1950s and 60s. This was the finest outdoor setting one could ask for; I was exposed to wildlife and wild lands on virtually a daily basis. Secondly, I discovered a collection of books on natural history, hunting, fishing and outdoor adventure at the Natrona County Public Library while in grade school. By high school, I had read every volume cover to cover—the better ones twice. Camping, fishing, and hunting sparked a fascination with nature and also ushered in my avid reading of natural science and outdoor books. The knowledge gained through this reading would serve me well through the years of formal education and even to this day in my capacity as a wildlife professional. Our public and private libraries reflect Wyoming’s outdoor heritage, with respectable collections of outdoor-related books found in even the smallest communities with even more available through interlibrary loan. The majority of residents participate in outdoor activities—so it is little wonder we delve into the books when one can’t actually be there. There are also many special collections of outdoor literature throughout the state. The Toppan Collection, which I wrote about for this issue, is a treasure trove of such material. Other examples are the Rocky Mountain Herbarium Library at the University of Wyoming, the McCracken Research Library at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center, the Heritage and Research Center Library in Yellowstone National Park, as well as many others too numerous to list here. All of these wonderful libraries and book collections help foster an appreciation for Wyoming’s intrinsic qualities - the mountains, prairies and high deserts that surround us every day. They also perpetuate our outdoor traditions and preserve the history of those outdoor men and women who created them. To ensure future generations spend time in the open and value the natural environment of Wyoming, we must expose them to it firsthand, hence the wildlife agency mantra, “Take a Kid Fishing.” But we must also introduce them to the exceptional outdoor writing that is housed in our libraries. Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 Jay Lawson Chief, Wildlife Division Wyoming Game & Fish Mysteries born in Wyoming C.J. Box C.J. Box always read everything he could find that was written about or set in Wyoming but none of them told the story he wanted to tell. “Although a lot of it was really well written, it never seemed like the portrayal was from the inside-out, from people who lived here,” he said. “What I wanted to do was put my stamp on a story that was more about the real Wyoming I knew growing up than the one I was reading about.” Box did this with stunning success in 2001 with his award-winning debut novel, Open Season. Set in Wyoming and featuring game warden Joe Pickett as its protagonist, Open Season was a New York Times Notable Book of 2001 and was named by The Chicago Tribune as one of the ten best mysteries of the year. It wasn’t bad for a book that no one wanted. “It had languished for about four and a half years with an agent in New York who said that nobody was interested in that kind of book,” Box said. “He would say it’s not really a mystery, it’s sort of environmental, it’s set in Wyoming – nobody’s interested in that.” When his agent essentially told him, “Don’t call me, I’ll call you,” Box didn’t – for two years. Finally, at a writers’ conference in Denver, he discovered his agent had been dead for a year. Understandably, his expectations were modest when it finally did go to print. “I thought it might be of interest in the Rocky Mountain West because it was very local,” he said. Instead, the book launched a series of Joe Pickett mystery novels: Savage Run, Winterkill, Trophy Hunt and Out of Range. Five years later, Box’s sixth Pickett novel, In Plain Sight, has just been released and the seventh book is in the works. His work has been translated into 12 languages. Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 5 Box is a Wyoming native and an avid outdoorsman who has hunted, fished, hiked, ridden and skied throughout the West. He and his wife, Laurie, co-own an international tourism marketing business that promotes destinations in Wyoming, Montana, Idaho and the Dakotas. They live outside Cheyenne with their three daughters. He began his career as a journalist. He edited the school newspaper at Kelly Walsh High School in Casper, where he grew up. He earned his degree in mass communication from Denver University, where he began writing fiction on the side. After college, he returned to Wyoming to work as a newspaper reporter at the Saratoga Sun in Carbon County. “My first job interview was actually in a boat,” he said of his Saratoga experience. “The publisher, Dick Perue, picked me up, or I drove, and we got in the boat and went down the river and drank beer. By the end of that, I would have paid him to work there. It was really pretty clever, because he paid nothing, but that was just such a nice thing after living in Denver for four years.” After living and working in Saratoga for three and a half years, Box moved to Cheyenne, where he worked for the American Automobile Association (AAA), contracting with local tow truck drivers for emergency road service. The job took him to every small town in Wyoming twice a year, and he drove every paved stretch of road in the state. “But also, that was really interesting meeting some of those guys,” he said. “That was real rough, kind of blue-collar stuff. I remember finding the tow truck driver in Ten Sleep as he was butchering an antelope in his garage that he’d poached and he thought I was with the Game and Fish, because no one else would show up then.” Sixteen years ago, Box and his wife, Laurie, started Rocky Mountain International (RMI), a marketing firm that promotes inbound tourism from Europe and Scandinavia. They have five employees in Cheyenne and seven contractors overseas. It was while he was reporting in Saratoga that Box began drafting Open Season. The Joe Pickett character started taking shape – an honorable man, devoted to his wife and daughters, who gets swept up in larger events when a local poacher turns up murdered on his woodpile. “Even though it’s fiction, whenever it’s on a real subject I try to make it as accurate as possible, whether it’s cattle mutilations or coal bed methane or whatever, I don’t want anybody to read those and say, ‘That’s not right.’” 6 Box wasn’t trying to write a mystery, though – he was trying to write an issue. “There is a murder in it – there’s several of them – but to me it was more about the Endangered Species Act and how really well-meaning legislation can go screwy on the ground where it really takes place. It was classified as a mystery, but to me, it was more about ‘small town, big laws’ than it was about solving a mystery or a plot. Each book to me is about something, and then I figure out how to work a plot into it. I don’t want to just write whodunits.” After tangling with the Endangered Species Act in the first book, Joe Pickett wound up investigating the mysterious deaths of ecoterrorists in Savage Run dealing with militant survivalists in Winterkill, and coping with both a friend’s suicide and Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 animal rights activists in Out of Range. It wasn’t until Trophy Hunt, where Pickett encountered cattle mutilations, that Box intentionally wrote the book as a mystery, planting clues for the reader to puzzle out. “But then again, the mystery really isn’t solved in that one, because in the end, there’s no way to really solve the cattle mutilations thing. That’s left open, which some readers didn’t like, but I wasn’t going to solve it. I don’t know what happened.” One of the great appeals of Box’s books is the character of Joe Pickett, described by Booklist as “a Gary Cooper for our time.” In the first draft, Pickett was a sheriff, not a game warden. “I didn’t know much about sheriffs and those I’d met I didn’t like,” Box said. “Then it was going to be a small-town journalist, but that didn’t work, because I wanted him to be able to carry a gun. He had to fight back, not just write about it. At the time, I was doing ride-alongs with the local game warden in Saratoga and I saw what a perfect fit that was. “Wyoming game wardens have these huge territories. They don’t have back-up. They’re on their own – they’re real Lone Rangers out there. Everybody they encounter is armed, and usually back-up is too far away, so they have to deal with it. So I thought this is the perfect kind of protagonist for this book, because he would be involved in the resource stuff as well as the law enforcement. Box said several game wardens are convinced that the character is based on them, “And their wives are, too. So I think I really got that character right. He has a lot of foibles. He’s not perfect, he makes mistakes. He makes a lot of mistakes. I think he’s very human in a way. But the game wardens in the field like him.” Not surprisingly, Joe Pickett has made a few enemies along the way, and one comes to call in In Plain Sight in the midst of a local battle over a ranch empire. Word has it that Pickett will move from the fictional town of Twelve Sleep to Yellowstone and get a new job in the seventh novel. “I don’t like series where nothing ever changes, where horrendous things happen in book four, and in book five they’re never referenced and everybody’s the same and they haven’t aged a year,” Box said. “I don’t like that, so in mine everybody gets a year older, including the kids, and because of all these things Joe Pickett has gone through, he’s getting a little harder-edged, getting a little more cynical. It’s changed with each one – everybody has.” Box wrote three complete novel manuscripts before he wrote Open Season. None has been published, although he did go back through them and mine them for material for the Joe Pickett series. “If I could have chosen to get a book published straight out of college, I would have done that,” he said, “but it was also good that that didn’t happen, that I was nearly 40 when it did, because now I can really enjoy it and don’t think it’s my due. I think everything that happens is just really cool and is sort of frosting as opposed to, ‘I earned it. I deserved it.’” He said journalism strengthened his fiction. “If I were to give advice to a writer, I’d say a journalism background is better than a creative writing background, because a journalism background forces some C.J. Box with his horses at his home near Cheyenne. photo by Roger Carey discipline in how to write a story. There’s no difference between an opening line and a killer lead in a feature story. I find that a lot of the writers that I like to read have journalism backgrounds, not creative writing backgrounds, because they’re telling stories and they’re giving you information as well as the plot. It’s not as self-indulgent as a creative writing background.” Journalism also taught him how to research: “Even though it’s fiction, whenever it’s on a real subject I try to make it as accurate as possible, whether it’s cattle mutilations or coal bed methane or whatever, I “Librarians are real cheerleaders when they find something that they like. They’re like independent bookstores. It’s word of mouth; they tell people to read these books, and they do.” don’t want anybody to read those and say, ‘That’s not right.’” Most times, he said he gets it right, but like Joe Pickett, he flubs it occasionally. A few readers seem to scour the text for real and imagined mistakes. “The biggest nitpickers of all are gun nuts. Those are the ones that really adamantly take offense if I’ve got a .308 Winchester Magnum, but it should be a .300 Winchester Magnum. That really just makes them mad. I talk to some writers – Harlan Coben is a big, bestseller, New Jersey guy, and he was talking about that. He doesn’t know anything about guns. He tried to put different kinds of guns and weapons in his story, and he’d always get them wrong, and people would always yell at him, so now he just writes, ‘He picked up a gun. He shot the gun. He put the gun back.’ He never gets into any specifics.” While turning out a book a year, Box remains active in the family business. He spends his mornings writing at his home in Cheyenne, in a quiet room with a view of a window well. Afternoons, he heads into town to the office. “I can’t really write well in the afternoon anyway,” he said. Above: Buttons made to promote the One Book, One Community event in Uinta County featuring C.J. Box’s book, Winterkill. Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 7 C.J. Box at a seminar in the South of France, 2004 “It’s pretty good to get out of this basement and go to work somewhere. I know I’d get weird if I just stayed here all the time. I’ve talked to too many writers who do that.” He also gets out and about, promoting his work and taking part in book events. Among his many appearances, he visited Uinta County February 23 and 24 to cap off the local “One Community, One Book” celebration. A “One Book” event encourages everyone in the community to read and discuss the same book – in this case, Box’s Winterkill. The Uinta County Library Foundation purchased hundreds of copies of the book and distributed them freely. In addition to traditional book groups, diners at local restaurants and bars found discussion questions at their tables, and computer junkies could use an online forum. “They really got everybody enthusiastic about it,” he said. “It was just overwhelming to be in a community where everybody’s read the book.” An avid reader, Box has supported Wyoming libraries by donating characters to fundraising silent auctions – the donor’s name goes in the book, but only Box gets to decide what happens to their character in the story. He recently donated 450 hardback mystery books to the Laramie County Library System that he received when he was a 2005 judge 8 for the Edgar Award. “I’ve always used libraries,” he said. “Growing up in Casper, I was always at the library. That’s where I learned to read different kinds of books. I remember every place I lived, that’s one of the first places I’d try to establish myself: in Lander, in Saratoga, which had a tiny library at the time. “What I found is how unbelievably supportive Wyoming libraries have been of my books – invited me to talk, and always had the books there. Librarians are real cheerleaders when they find something that they like. They’re like independent bookstores. It’s word of mouth; they tell people to read these books, and they do.” He added, “Wyoming embraces their writers and it’s almost like kind of a southern tradition in a way. We’re a small population, but they really read everything. Old guys in the YMCA will have just read the new Mark Spragg book because it’s set here, and they do that with mine. It just amazes me how literate and how much the state is really into it.” Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 Upcoming Wyoming appearances by C.J. Box C.J. Box is kicking off a national book tour in May to promote his sixth Joe Pickett novel, In Plain Sight. See him at these Wyoming locations • Laramie: Chickering Bookstore, 11 a.m. May 20 • Cheyenne: City News Bookstore, 2 p.m. May 21 • Casper: Ralph’s Books, May 22 (Time TBA) • Sheridan: The Book Shop, 6:30 p.m., May 24 • Cody: Western Writers of America conference, June 15-18 (More info: www.westernwriters.org) • Pinedale: Sublette County Library, 7 p.m., Sept. 7 • Casper College: Equality State Book Festival, Oct. 19-21 (More info: www.equalitystatebookfest.com) Photo of bison looking into the Yellowstone Research Library courtesy Yellowstone National Park, Museum Collection. Photographer: Bridgette Case. Yellowstone Research Library Past, Present and Future Just before the break of dawn, two librarians cautiously open their doors. They look right, then left, checking to see if the large shadows outside are anything other than cars. If the path is clear, they start down the hill, on their way to work in Yellowstone National Park. In the winter, we (the two librarians) arrive in the dark and leave before sunset. Through the library windows, we watch the sun dawn slowly across the landscape and then slip quietly into the mountains. We have seen elk, pronghorn, and bison graze on the grassy hill across the road. Ravens and hawks often dip in front of the local school, located next door. Snow and rain sometimes sweep toward us over the mountains. Other days, the clouds meander slowly across the landscape, never quite reaching the Gardiner Valley. The sound of rain on the glass of the dome overhead is soothing on a hot summer’s day. In the summer of 2004, the library moved (with the museum and archives) from the basement of the Albright Visitor Center. Formerly located in Mammoth Hot Springs, the library is now on the second floor of the Heritage and Research Center (HRC), five miles north. Instead of looking up at the feet and legs of passing visitors, people at the library now look out at a vast expanse of mountains and can even catch a glimpse of the Roosevelt Arch. The reference desk, located behind a glass wall on the lobby of the second floor, faces out toward the floor-to-ceiling windows of the entranceway to views that are truly spectacular. With a situation like ours, it is not hard to empathize with the wonderment of the first visitors to Yellowstone Park. These travelers were used to the bustling cities with crowded streets. Here, fresh air and open spaces were marred only by the occasional passing animal. While visitors probably felt jaded by the entertainments offered in the East, the wonders here were natural and unique. Yellowstone offered (and still provides) distractions like nothing travelers could see anywhere else in the world. Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 9 This was a place that, not being a viable plot of land for farming and not being conducive to development, was set aside for the enjoyment of the people. It was to be a pristine paradise where Easterners could come to gape at the beautiful canyons, the roaring waterfalls, and the majestic geysers. Yellowstone was a spot that a newly emerging country could compare to the great architectural history of its forefathers. It helped to create a sense of national pride. Unfortunately, not all of the first visitors found as much peace as we experience here today. In several journals from the library collection, visitors bemoan the fact that the park does not live up to the advertisements promised by the railroads. The inconveniences of reality far outweighed the promised romance. Pervasive dust and lack of accommodations, combined with geysers and animals that did not perform on command, caused some people to regard Yellowstone with ill-favor. However, there are just as many people who write of the wonder they found in this place. Those who were lucky enough to see geysers such as Beehive and Geyser wax lyrical about what they have seen. Some visitors were amazed at the chance to have seen such animals as wild bison and fearsome bears. When many of these early visitors went home, their accounts were often written up in local newspapers, sharing their experiences with those who had stayed at home. Even though the park was considered by many to be “the wilderness,” that didn’t mean that certain expectations were dropped. One such expectation included constant entertainment. Many people were happy with watching the bears and geysers or with dancing in the halls or sitting by the fire. Others were grateful for the chance to do something more edifying. 10 A small army library was formed, early in the park’s history. In 1904, Alfred Talbot Richardson noted in a traveler’s report, “under Major Chittenden’s supervision there has also been gathered at engineer headquarters in the last two years, a library, as full as it could be made, of Park literature, including magazine articles and newspaper clippings, as well as books – a thing of which many an interested visitor has felt the lack in the past.” In 1933, the creation of the Yellowstone Library and Museum Association (today, the Yellowstone Association) helped the library to grow further. Funds were made available for new acquisitions, as well as the hiring of library staff. The connections between the Yellowstone Association and the library continue. Many of the classes offered at the Yellowstone Institute wander the great outdoors, and then come to the Heritage and Research Center to experience some of the culture and to read books we have on the topic. At the same time the Yellowstone Association was being established, the basement of the visitor’s center was excavated to make room for the library and museum collections. It has been available to park employees and visitors since that time. However, the collection has expanded considerably from the original shelf. The library still collects park literature, magazine articles and newspaper clippings in addition to books. Our collection is made up entirely of items relating to Yellowstone Park, its hallowed history as well as the geography, geology, flora and fauna found within its borders. Even with hundreds of new items published every year, we manage to collect most of the materials published about the park. Collections at the Yellowstone Research Library help researchers and the public connect with the world outside. Access to specific Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 information on everything from bison to the bacteria that live in thermal areas is available here. We don’t claim to have every item written about Yellowstone National Park, but we don’t give up hope that we will one day have them all. Until then, we continue to work with the (still extensive) collection that we have now. The new HRC provides plenty of space for these materials. We now have a large reading room, with very comfortable furniture, courtesy of the Yellowstone Park Foundation. There is plenty of room for our stacks as well as the vertical files. There is plenty of room for researchers to move through the collection without having to maneuver around the staff who had desks located in the stacks. There are large tables with room to spread out as well as carrels for more private study. Visitors today experience both the wonder and frustration that early travelers felt. Many of the same geysers still play. People still come to look at the animals which wander free. While some of the inconveniences, such as that of dusty roads, are no longer an issue, they have generally been replaced by other difficulties such as bear jams and overcrowded parking lots. The Yellowstone library collection provides a glimpse into the outdoor world of Yellowstone. At the same time, we create a bridge to the past. Materials here span the entire written history of the park. Every day, when the two librarians leave the Research Library, they are proud to know that they have helped patrons discover a little bit more about the wonderful slice of Nature that is Yellowstone National Park. -Jessica Gerdes, Yellowstone librarian since June, 2005. Jackie Jerla, Yellowstone librarian since August, 2003. 9 Jim Zumbo A Living Legend Photo by Thomas Kelsey, The Outdoor Channel. Jim Zumbo writes about cooking and hunting the West, choosing to live where he says is the best place for hunters in the U.S. — Wyoming. Jim Zumbo has been entertaining and educating sportsmen for years as Hunting Editor of Outdoor Life magazine. In addition to his skills as a book author and cooking expert, Jim’s pretty handy with a rifle, hunting his way through life with the trophies to prove it. He has written 23 books, has been a lecturer on big game hunting for 25 years and is now hosting a year-round TV show, “Jim Zumbo Outdoors,” on the Outdoor Channel. What in your life led you to be an outdoor writer? When I was a kid, I was raised in the East, and I had parents and family that were very much involved in hunting with the family, even though we were from New York. So from early on I had mentors and I always liked to read when I was a kid. The library was my favorite spot. I couldn’t get enough stories about animals and the outdoors. So English was my best subject in school for some strange reason. I went on to a junior college to study forestry. I wrote a story about an old, elusive deer that was published in a small college paper. I went out West to Utah State and somehow I got a position with the university paper as the outdoor editor, but in the meantime I had gotten two degrees in forestry and wildlife and went on with a fifteen year career with the government. But all that time I was writing because I loved to do it and it paid money. It was a win-win. I was able to use my spare time to make some income for the family. Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 11 Libraries were a part of your childhood? Very much so, I can name a dozen books right now that I read as a kid. One was Maverick the Beaver and I think I read every Paul Bunyan book there was. There was another book about otters and another one about waterfowl, pretty much just fiction animal books. Those really turned me on to reading. I really liked to read about the early explorers. I always liked the adventure stuff. I always thought I was born 100 years too late. How did you choose to live in Wyoming? That’s easy. When I came out West in 1960, I was on a bus coming from New York State to Utah to finish my bachelor’s degree. I remember looking out the window in this bus, and I had been riding for like 60 hours and it was early in the morning, just breaking daylight and I looked out the tinted window and I realized we were no longer in 12 Nebraska. No more corn, no more alfalfa, just buttes and desert and sagebrush and funny looking animals that I assumed must have been antelope. And I was about 19 or 20 years old and I told myself, I’m going to live in this state someday. How I actually got here, I went to Utah to get my degree and had a fifteen year career in the government and went back East at West Point for eight years in the military department. I ran the hunting and fishing department. I worked in Utah as a wildlife biologist and I got a job offer in 1978 to work for Outdoor Life full-time. So I gave up 15 years of government as a wildlife biologist. It was a time with my family when the kids were just right to move, so being a full-time writer now, all I needed was a typewriter (this was before computers) and a telephone and a mailbox. So I said, where do I want to live? I decided it was going to absolutely be Wyoming and Cody was my far-away first choice because I have hunted every state, all fifty states and all over the world and to Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 me, this is the best big game hunting there is anywhere, of any area. Also, being close to Yellowstone Park, I live in the mountains here, here west of Cody, I’m 25 miles from the park and I do a lot of photography. And right now there’s bighorn sheep on the highways and elk in the backyard. It is THE place to live as far as I’m concerned. But Wyoming as a state is also the best place to be, the politics here for game management and hunting are number one with no close second. The game department here is doing a great job. We have the best quality hunting and fishing and outdoor potential of any state in the west. What has been your most rewarding experience as a writer? My best experiences as a writer are when I have been able to sway public opinion toward some conservation battle or battle where outdoor people Jim Zumbo with a contest winner. Photo by Thomas Kelsey, The Outdoor Channel. benefit. Other rewards have been when I have taken my kids hunting or fishing for the first time. I once took my wife and my two youngest kids across Canada in a motorhome on a fishing trip from the Pacific Ocean to the Atlantic Ocean on a story for an RV magazine. Moments like that create the most memories. I’ve also been responsible for catching a murderer who killed two game wardens because my story had his picture in the article and he was recognized. There’s just been a lot of things that come to mind when I’m asked that. People often ask, “What’s your favorite stories?” It’s really hard to say, but generally it’s hunting with family and friends and fishing and just being outdoors and having that bond. How and why did you make the transition to television? Well, to tell you the truth, I had done everything else. I don’t want to sound arrogant or vain, but I’ve been the hunting editor for Outdoor Life and with the magazine for 27 years. Outdoor Life is the biggest hunting magazine in the world, I write a monthly column, and I’ve written 23 books. I’ve done a lot of videos, I do speaking tours and seminars all over the country. The one thing I had not done and wanted to was maybe TV and I was dragged kicking and screaming by the guys at The Outdoor Channel. I really didn’t want to do it because I didn’t know much from the production standpoint. We sat down after many years of discussion and many years of me being very elusive and we came to terms and I have my own show which is going on its fourth year. To tell you the truth, television is not fun from the hunting standpoint. I’ve got a cameraman five feet away from me 24/7. I can’t get away from the guy. That’s his job. It is no longer a real, realistic hunt; it’s a performance, because I can’t pull the trigger unless he tells me to. And we try very hard to get all the footage before and after the hunt. We have to do some recreates, and then come the graphics and the music and the editing and back and forth, my production guys live in Missoula, MT and we are constantly FedExing and emailing back and forth, so it’s a major, major deal. But saying that, when it finally airs, I’m proud of it. In the show, I’ve noticed you’re very passionate about showing that you eat what you hunt. That’s exactly right, you go hunting and by golly, why not show the rewards of the hunt because that brings it full circle. When I was working with guys at The Outdoor Channel, I said, I want my show to be different. I don’t want it to be just killing stuff and shooting stuff, I want to tell a story, I want the local culture, I want traditions. So, for example, when I went to Botswana, in Africa, we did a three part episode series of the people in the villages and their fight with AIDS. And how everything we shot we brought into the people. We brought them clothing, sleeping bags, and got into their lives and told that story. On another episode, or series of episodes, we were up in the Arctic with the Eskimos, just last year, in fact that just aired recently. We talked about the Eskimos and how we speared fish and their hardships and how they dry their meat and their fish. It tells a story. I want to get into the environment of the place where I’m at. What are your expectations for the future of hunting in places like Wyoming and the West? Let me rub my crystal ball here, and I’ll tell you… I think the biggest threats to hunting don’t necessarily come from animal rights people or anti-hunters. Of course they are very active, they are very well funded. They have some very smart attorneys. They attack hunting by litigation and legislation and ballot box management. Yes, that is a formidable group that you need to be aware of. But for me, the biggest danger to hunting is the fact that statistically the average age of the American hunter is getting older. And what that means is that there’s less recruitment. There are fewer kids hunting. And that’s easy to figure out. We are moving from a rural society to an urban society. Heck, when I was a kid, there was no internet, there were no malls, and we just went outdoors and enjoyed it. Now kids have so many things to do. Everything considered, we have fewer kids out there and that, I think, is a big danger. On the brighter side, there are more women hunting than ever before. That’s documented, and that’s not a surprise either, women are doing a lot more stuff that men used to years ago. And I really welcome that. I see more and more gals who are passionate hunters. That kind of takes away from us guys are out here being heroes and being he-men and guzzling down beer, because when you see a 17year-old, blue-eyed, blond girl out there with her friends hunting, you can’t really make that claim. But as far as hunting in Wyoming, if hunting ever stops in the U.S., Wyoming would be the last state where it stopped. Wyoming is such an outdoororiented state. I think this is the best state to live in as far as someone who loves the outdoors. People come here because they love the outdoors, for the most part. So, it’s different. I love the fact that there’s more mule deer than people in Wyoming. Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 13 Helen Higby- She found her dog, horse and cowboy in Wyoming Helen Higby was not the first woman to climb the Grand Teton. She was, however, the first woman to stand on its 13,772-foot summit in the dead of winter, Jan. 4, 1974. Her husband, Larry, stood by her side. The Higbys were part of a National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS) expedition, led by Paul Petzold. Two women on the expedition, both experienced 14 climbers, had already attempted the summit and failed, one hitting bad weather and one succumbing to altitude sickness. “People say, ‘How did you do that?’” Higby said. “Heck, if you’d had Larry Higby behind you poking you in the butt with an ice ax, you would have made it, too.” Today, Helen is retired after many years of working in Wyoming libraries. She lives at the home in Lander that she and Larry once shared and raises the “mostly Morgan” horses they bred. Larry died in March 2004 from injuries sustained in an automobile accident. She still considers her landmark winter ascent as a fluke, and typically downplays it. “I don’t consider myself a climber,” she said. “Nobody else does either, for that matter.” Higby grew up in New York State. “I went to college in New York City and hated every minute of it,” she said. She majored in geology, because it got her out of the city and into the outdoors and the West. Sometimes, just in her mind, as when in the classroom things like the Grand Canyon and Devils Gap. were discussed “I’m going to tell you something. People think it’s cute, but it isn’t intended to be cute; it’s as fundamentally honest as I know how to say it. From the time I was about ten years old, I wanted a dog and a horse and a cowboy. And I got everything I wanted. I don’t mean a drugstore cowboy, and I don’t even mean a rodeo cowboy. You don’t find a true cowboy in New York State. As soon as I was in control of my own destiny, I was in Denver, Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 and then I was in Wyoming.” After graduating from college, she took a NOLS course in August, 1968. “It was the perfect therapy,” she said. “Instead of wanting to be dead, I wanted to be alive. And instead of being in a claustrophobic city, I could see for dozens of miles.” After finishing that first course, she decided to go on a winter climb of the Grand Teton over New Years 1969. The weather that year didn’t allow anyone to reach the summit. It was on that trip when she met her “cowboy”- Larry Higby. Larry was an outdoorsman - expeditioner, hunter, mountaineer - who was instrumental in the founding of NOLS. The two were married Jan. 23, 1971. “Best thing I ever did. For 33 years and two months, we had the kind of marriage most people only dream of,” Higby said. “The man exuded confidence. He was experienced, not just in mountaineering, but in essentially anything that had to do with outdoors. Safety was intuitive. He didn’t have to think about being safe. He did what it took to be safe. He knew how to be comfortable in the out of doors. Larry would build a comfortable camp. Whatever the setting, whatever the equipment, he would do what it took to make things comfortable.” To make things more comfortable on the next winter ascent of the Grand (1969-70), Larry Higby convinced NOLS founder, Paul Petzold, to use snow caves instead of tents. Higby said the snow caves were an improvement over tents. “People think that they would be just awful, so cold and claustrophobic. I’m a little surprised that I didn’t find them claustrophobic, Temperaturewise, you have to keep it below freezing, because if you don’t, they start to melt and drip on you, and you certainly don’t want that. So the temperature outside can be whatever, and the wind can be howling, and you get inside the snow cave and you’re warm, for being on a mountain on the winter, and it’s completely quiet. You don’t have to listen to the wind.” On her second winter ascent, Helen Higby and Larry’s daughter Alison made it to the high saddle, at 13,000 feet. On that trip, Higby said, “We had some spectacular visual delights. There was a plane from some TV station in Idaho circling. The fellow took some pictures, so we actually had some aerial photos of the group of us on the high saddle. The clouds were below us, but it was kind of hazy even up to where we were. We could stand there and wave our arms and see our shadows out in the haze. It was fantastically wonderful. Alison and I were indeed the first women to make it to the high saddle in the winter, so that was kind of neat.” Earlier on that trip, below the low saddle (11,000 feet), Larry was carving out a labyrinth of snow caves “It kept about four or five or six of us busy scooping the snow away that he was chipping off. And all of a sudden, we just hollered at him, ‘Come out! Come out! You must come out!’” Grumbling a bit, Larry emerged and all of them basked in alpenglow. “Lots of people talk about alpenglow. They think it’s when it’s dusk and the sky is that kind of salmonpeach color,” Higby said. “Well, that isn’t alpenglow. Alpenglow is when all of the ice crystals in the air are reflecting or refracting orange, and the air is orange. And that sounds preposterous, but that is true alpenglow. A person is IN it. And that, that has to be maybe the most spectacular visual experience I’ve ever had. I’m falling far short of describing it. When I say orange, it’s not the orange that you get out of the Crayola box. It is sunset orange, is the only way I can think to describe it.” On the 1973-74 winter climb of the Grand Teton, “There was a fair amount of rivalry about who was going to be the first woman to the top,” Higby said. “I thought it’d be a fun thing if I were, but I wasn’t spending any adrenalin on it.” Two women - both experienced climbers - tried and failed to reach the summit. “A summit assault in the winter is not like driving up to the base of El Capitan and climbing up,” Higby said. “The gear you have to carry, the clothing you have to carry. The wind is a factor. Coupled with the temperature, you have the wind chill. Avalanche is a factor. So it’s several quantums more dangerous.” Because of the gear needed, a winter ascent also requires more team support than a summer attempt. “You would be foolish in the ultimate to attempt a winter climb on your own. So, as soon as you start adding more people, it becomes more complicated.” The day of their ascent, Helen and Larry woke early and burrowed out of their snow cave that had drifted shut. They climbed to the low saddle, where they met with other members of the expedition. “We socialized for a little while and then decided if we were going to make it to the summit, we’d better get on our way. It went along successfully and the weather was good. The one thing that was hard for me - I’m not real tall. My legs do reach the ground, but I’m still not very tall. And the guys that had gone ahead had kicked the steps into the snow, and they were tall, so the steps were vertically, they challenged me.” She laughed, “I was literally ‘vertically-challenged.’” At the high saddle, there was a mix-up in communications as to whether the Higbys should attempt the summit or climb back down. The forward climbing group left the “protection”- the pitons and other climbing gear - in place, and the two headed for the top. “The scariest part of that climb was what is called ‘The Crawl,’” Higby said. “It’s on the North face, and if you can visualize going across the top of a roof, you’ve got one knee on one side, and one knee on the other and one hand on one side and one hand on the other, and you’re really very secure. You’d have to work at falling. “The difference between crawling on a roof and crawling on ‘The Crawl’ on the Grand is that on your right side, there’s a cleft in the wall. So there’s a “roof” above you and at the far end of this, you have to really get down on your belly and simply wiggle along. The scary part is that it’s a 3,000 foot drop on your left side, it’s pretty close to sheer, and you can indeed see down 3,000 feet.” Helen and Larry Higby cooking over a campfire on a dry desert “lake” bed. Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 15 Larry kept telling her to look down the drop, but she refused. “You can order your climbing partner or your spouse to do a lot of things, but you can’t order them to focus on something they don’t want to focus on. “Up to this point, there were a couple of ‘gulpy’ places. The technically difficult part of it is at the end of the Crawl. When you can stand up, you have to lean back a little bit out over this 3,000-foot precipice to grab your handhold to get you up to the next place. And that - that was definitely a gulp.” Once through the Crawl, they headed for the Chimney. “It’s a vertical area that is three-sided. You put your back against one side, and your hands and your feet against the other and you just keep scooching yourself up. I guess some people found that difficult, but I didn’t. Guess I’ve got enough weight on my lower back to give me lots of “purchase” holding power? “Once you get through the Crawl you’re going to make it unless some horrible weather condition blows in. Even then, it’s better to go to the top, because coming down, you don’t have to go through The Crawl, you can do a rappel.” After the Chimney, she said, “Some of what you have to go through is a fairly steep pitch, and you do want to pay attention because you don’t want to go sliding off into Idaho. But it’s not difficult, and you just sort of keep walking until you get to the top. “Once you get to the top, you have a 360-degree view, which wherever you are is a magnificent thing to have, but having a 360-degree view on the top of the Grand Teton is a lifetime experience.” Rather than crawl back, the group took the easier 140-foot rappel back down. “The last 30 feet is free,” she said. “You’re just dangling there in the air. The wind was blowing and at that point in my life I was light enough that the wind blew me off course. The guys at the bottom had 16 to grab the end of the rope and pull me back.” It took a couple of days for the expedition to get back down to Teton Park. “Paul [Petzoldt] was trying to get all the publicity he could for NOLS, so there were reporters and quite a few people at the park headquarters. Publicity is not my thing,” Higby said. “Really the best thing about getting down I was able to go in the women’s restroom and sponge off a little bit and put some clean clothes on. Boy that felt wonderful.” After her climb, Helen returned to her job at the Fremont County Library, where she worked from 1971 to 1983. She earned her master’s degree from the University of Denver School of Librarianship in 1980 She served as Library Development Officer at the Wyoming State Library from 1983 to 1986, before becoming director of the Sweetwater County Library System. When Helen retired from her work as a librarian on Oct. 1, 2001, she and Larry rode horseback more than 100 miles from the main library in Green River to their home in Lander. “Almost the whole way we were going, we could see Sweetwater Gap, which is where we were going to cross the Winds and get into Fremont County,” she said. “Larry kept pointing at it and saying ‘There it is, there’s where we’re going, there’s where we’re going.’ I think the part that I loved the most was when we came to the sand dunes, which would be southeast of Farson. The horses loved it and we just galloped and galloped across the dunes. It was the greatest fun. “We took a week. We laughed at ourselves for taking that long because if we’d been serious, we probably could have done it in three days. But what was the point? The point was to make a transition, to spend some time with each other doing what we loved to do. It couldn’t have been better.” The 1973-74 trip was the last winter Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 climb up the Grand Teton for the Higbys. They did climb it two or three times, as well as a few other peaks in the summer. They spent a lot of time outdoors in the mountains and wilderness, gradually migrating from backpacking to horsepacking. Helen considered herself more of an expeditioner than a climber, and Larry, “Oh man, if you’d asked Larry what he was, he probably would have told you ‘A hunter.’ Because come hunting season, everything else went by the wayside and we went hunting. Believe me, some of those hunting expeditions were definitely expeditions. In the snow, in the cold, many miles, many hours from what Larry called civilization.” “He would just get so excited when he’d see animals - elk or deer or even antelope on the plains or oh my gosh, badgers. If he saw a badger, it didn’t matter if he was driving or horseback or whatever, he’d bail off and go chasing that badger. He’d say, ‘People ask how far do you chase a badger? Well, you chase the badger until the badger gets tired of it and starts chasing you.’ Animal life just gave him a high.” Love of the outdoors was a fundamental attitude they shared. “When you’re in the mountains, or on the desert for that matter, and the area that you can see is measured in miles rather than feet or even yards, and the miles are significant, it makes my soul expand,” she said. “Now how’s that for corny? But I’m sitting here, and that’s what I’m feeling. That’s the big picture.” “But the small things are also magnificent. You get up into the high mountains and the alpine flowers are tiny, but it’s as if they still have the same amount of pigment in them. Their size is so reduced that that pigment is concentrated. The alpine forget-me-nots, there’s an alpine paintbrush and there’s a ground cover called mountain heath, and it’s sort of a heather, and that’s - if Larry and I have a flower, that’s it.” “For Mardy Murie, wilderness is personal” I f one person was the heart of the American conservation movement in the 20th century, it was Margaret “Mardy” Murie. She died at her home in Moose, Wyo. in 2003 at the age of 101. Mardy was part of one of the country’s foremost conservationist families. Her husband, Olaus, was director of the Wilderness Society from 1945 until his death in 1963. Olaus’s brother, Adolph, was known for his pioneering research on predators in national parks, particularly in Alaska. His wife, Louise, traveled with him and was involved with conservation efforts. Yet, somehow it was Mardy’s voice that became best-known and best-loved. When President Lyndon Johnson signed the Wilderness Act in 1964, Mardy Murie stood by his side. Her work had also helped bring about the creation of the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. In 1998, President Bill Clinton awarded her the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian honor. Photos courtesy Murie Center Archives. Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 The Murie Center Archives A small cabin in the Murie Ranch complex houses a small, but unique, collection of materials about American conservationists Adolph, Olaus and Mardy Murie. The collection fills a room perhaps 20 feet by 30 feet. It includes many of Mardy Murie’s personal papers, photographs and scrapbooks, donated by her family after her death in 2003. The Archives has the Muries’ personal library of books on natural history, wildlife biology, Alaska and the Arctic, and all of their speeches and writings. They also have a collection of books from environmental philosopher Paul Shepard, donated by his widow. The Murie Center Archives is still in its infancy. Linda Franklin, director of archives, said that work has only recently begun on organizing and cataloging materials to make them available for research. She hopes to have materials accessible later this year. “This is sort of a new thing,” Franklin said. “The basic intention is to have a central place where people can come and research and read more about the Muries and their lives,” What are already available are the photographs: Mardy’s childhood, Mardy’s and Olaus’s famous 1924 dogsled honeymoon, their growing family in Jackson Hole. “Then lots of photos starting more in the 50s and 60s, which was really the heyday for the Muries and their life as activists,” Franklin said. Archival holdings aren’t limited to just “official” missives, or even limited to paper and books. Franklin said they have files of “special letters” – such as an encouraging letter from one of the nation’s best bird artists to a young Olaus Murie. There are the “fan letters” from people whose lives were touched by the Muries. There are the courtship letters between Olaus and Mardy in the 1920s. “That’s just really interesting to see how much they shared their world view and like values – and also, they were both so poetic. They were both eloquent writers,” Franklin said. “We also have some objects, or artifacts from their lives. They went on a famous expedition in 1956 to arctic Alaska that directly led to the establishment of the Arctic National Wildlife Range in 1960. So we have things like their old canvas and wood backpacks from 1956. We have things from their home. We have the typewriters that Mardy used – when she was Olaus’ assistant and secretary during their 40 years together. So we have this variety of historical objects that also have to be inventoried and cataloged.” The Murie Center mission is to inspire mindful action on behalf of wild nature. “The Muries were really pioneer conservationists, but they also spoke from the heart about conservation issues,” Franklin said. As the archives take shape, she added, it will make the Muries’ legacy more accessible to all kinds of people. Wyoming Roundup Spring 2006 18 Wyoming Library Library Roundup • Spring•2006 Today, the nonprofit Murie Center operates out of the Murie Ranch, the cluster of cabins just inside Grand Teton National Park that was once home to the Murie families. On February 21, 2006, it was designated a National Historic Landmark – one of fewer than 2,500 properties so designated. The Center’s mission is to continue the family’s legacy by inspiring people to act mindfully on behalf of wild nature. Mardy’s life and work have been captured in Arctic Dance, a documentary co-produced by Jackson, Wyo. filmmakers Bonnie Kreps and Charles Craighead. The film was seen on public television stations throughout the country during pledge week. Kreps and Craighead also created a companion book (see review p. 27). “She had a special quality that endeared her to people whether they agreed with her or not,” said Kreps. “She came from the heart, she knew her stuff and she spoke with a kind of maternal conviction, without putting people who didn’t agree with her in any kind of difficult position.” Born in Seattle in 1902, Margaret Elizabeth Thomas grew up in Fairbanks, Alaska, where she met her husband, wildlife researcher Olaus Murie. The two married in 1924. Their honeymoon was one of Olaus’s field research trips – 550 miles by dogsled in winter through northern Alaska, an adventure Mardy would recount in her book Two in the Far North. The cover of Arctic Dance, shows Mardy as a beaming newlywed in trail furs. Her mother’s friends called it the “funny trousseau.” Even in Fairbanks, it was a bit unusual. Olaus’s work brought the couple and their young family to Wyoming to study the Jackson Hole elk herd in 1927. In 1945, he left government service to become the first director of the Wilderness Society. In 1946, both Murie families purchased the former STS Ranch, a dude ranch, and made Mardy and Olaus Murie, both committed to saving the wilderness. Photo courtesy Murie Center it both their home and a hub for the American conservation movement. From those first research trips, Mardy worked by Olaus’s side, supporting his work. After his death, she continued advocating on behalf of wilderness. “She was genuine,” said Craighead. “She had been to all of those places that she was trying to save. She had lived in the wilderness. Her whole early life was based on that wilderness. There was no way the politicians could argue with her. They couldn’t say she didn’t know what she was talking about.” Both Kreps and Craighead said the highlight of filming was when naturalist and author Terry Tempest Williams spoke with Mardy Murie with the cameras rolling. “I would not call it an interview, that is a very intimate dialogue they had,” Kreps said. Craighead said the two were the “same person, different generations.” The closeness is apparent on film – it feels like sitting in on two friends chatting, rather than watching a biography. The film took nearly 10 years to make. Craighead said one snag was that initially, they looked for a broadcast venue, but none wanted to remain true to the story. “In their proposed scripts, basically they wrote her out of her own story. There was one in particular which turned into famous people that knew Mardy. They wanted lots of action; their idea of the Arctic thing was helicopters and snarling huskies and that whole thing.” A second hold-up was that Mardy Murie may have slowed down with age, but she never really stopped. “She kept doing things,” Kreps said, “and it was the one and only story of her life, so there’s no way we could just shut down when she was still going off to Washington D.C. to get the Medal of Freedom.” Kreps had a personal connection. She lived on the Murie Ranch for 12 years. One of Mardy’s gifts was that she brought a consideration for human needs and emotion to the debate over conservation. “She established the fact that conservation and preservation of wilderness weren’t just a political process,” Craighead said. “She realized that there was a personality to the land and an emotional attachment that people had and needed. I think it made people realize there was a human side to all of these places.” Always eloquent, one of Mardy Murie’s most famous and telling statements came in the 1970s when she was speaking before Congress on the Alaska Lands Act. She first quoted the mountaineer Sir Edmund Hillary. At a hearing in New Zealand, Hillary said, “They accuse me of being emotional about this. I want to ask, what’s wrong with a little emotion?” Mardy Murie continued in that vein: “I am here before you today, gentlemen, as an emotional woman… I am only trying here to tell you why I, an emotional woman, but a woman familiar with Alaska, think they should all in their innocence and beauty be cherished… Newton Drury, when he was Director of the National Park Service, said: ‘Surely the great United States of America is not so poor we cannot afford to have these places, not so rich that we do without them.’” Brooke Williams, director of the Murie Center, said, “To me, emotion became, at that moment, a dimension of the wildlands issue that had been ignored or considered too ‘soft’ for discussions of this type.” He believes Mardy Murie’s words that day inspired many people – including his wife, Terry Tempest Williams – to know that “heart” belonged in environmental activism. “Nature is not something to which a connection is optional,” Williams said, “but is an integral and therefore essential part of our lives.” Behind the emotion, Mardy Murie’s achievements came from humility and hard work. Both Kreps and Craighead said they hoped people who see Arctic Dance understand how one ordinary life, built around commitment, can make a difference. “She was just a normal person who ended up doing these extraordinary things because she was persistent and she believed in what she was doing,” Craighead said. “She went out and she worked hard and she did all the little things: she wrote the letters, she helped on the manuscripts, she got up and testified at the hearings as a citizen. “Those are the things she actually did that made a big difference. I didn’t want people to be intimidated by the myths that may have developed about her. Just go out and do what you can, and it’s going to make a difference. That’s what she did.” Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 19 Leadership lessons from the wild Lander, Wyoming is home to the international headquarters of the National Outdoor Leadership School (NOLS), one of the world’s premier wilderness training organizations. NOLS was founded in 1965 by legendary mountaineer and outdoorsman Paul Petzoldt. Operating out of Sinks Canyon that first summer, NOLS took 100 students – all men – on monthlong trips through the Wind River Wilderness. Today, NOLS has more than 75,000 graduates and offers a variety of outdoor skills courses in locations throughout the world. While on one level, NOLS courses are about developing practical skills needed to navigate challenging natural environments. On another level, they’re about developing the teamwork and leadership skills needed for a successful expedition. “We teach this concept of expeditionary leadership and expeditionary training for a group,” explained John Kanengieter, director of NOLS Professional Training. “If you’re working within a group out in the mountains or if you’re working in a group at a business trying to achieve a specific goal, the concepts are the same. It’s still people working with other people to achieve a goal.” Expeditionary leadership, Kanengieter explained, is “that idea of starting at one place, ending up at a different place, having accomplished a specific goal in-between and getting everyone along as a team through that. Maybe the antithesis of that is the concept of an organization or leader attaining the goal at all costs, including losing group members along the way.” Fellow NOLS instructor Missy White explained, “It’s true that our leadership philosophy developed from month-long wilderness expeditions, yet we hear consistently from our alumni that what they learned at NOLS has impacted the rest of their life in all aspects. “All of life can be viewed as an expedition, be it a new job, a marriage, living together in a college dorm or raising a family. The same skills that we rely on to summit a mountain – effective communication, teamwork, good decision-making, developing sufficient skills, the ability to handle curve balls, constantly learning – all apply every day in all of our lives.” NOLS helps each person look at their leadership role within a group, whether as designated leader, peer leader or active follower. “Within those roles, we practice different skills of leadership,” Kanengieter said. “So we pare it down to seven skills: expedition behavior, competence, communication, judgment and decision-making, tolerance for adversity and uncertainty, selfawareness, and vision in action.” In a traditional NOLS wilderness course, the outdoors itself serves as a teacher. “You’ll often have three instructors,” Kanengieter said, “and we’ll call the outdoors or the weather the fourth instructor, because it teaches so much. It brings in reallife situations that are not contrived, or they’re not simulations. A big thunderstorm, for instance, teaches you a lot about uncertainty and tolerance for adversity. The outdoors brings those things right up in the forefront, and it’s a pretty powerful teacher when we get groups in the field like that.” In 1999, NOLS established its Professional Training division to offer customized leadership courses to organizations – including those who want to get those lessons in a classroom instead of on the trail. “Through NOLS Professional Training, we can share the leadership lessons we’ve learned over the last 40 years with those who want to improve their leadership and teamwork, but 2001 Library Leadership class doing a “group massage.” 20 Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 The Seven Leadership Skills NOLS teaches: Expedition behavior Competence Communication Judgment & Decision-Making Tolerance for Adversity & Uncertainty Self-Awareness Vision & Action don’t have the time, interest or ability to be outdoors,” said instructor Missy White. “We believe that great leaders create an environment that inspires individuals and groups to achieve their full potential. What group doesn’t want a leader like that?” One of these custom courses is the Wyoming Library Leadership Institute. Established in 2001, the Institute helps the state “grow its own” library leaders through mentoring and training. Kanengieter, White and organizational consultant Jep Enck teach the Institute. “The librarians have been really one of our favorite client groups to work with,” Kanengieter said. “There’s always been a great sense of humor and a great sense of camaraderie. Librarians have always shown up as eager learners, and I’ve also seen folks put themselves into situations where they’re stretching themselves a little bit. When you’re teaching, those are all really great things to see mirrored back.” The Library Leadership Institute is strictly a classroom endeavor. “People will ask me, ‘So, are we going to be climbing ropes?’” said Chris Van Burgh, Wyoming State Library outreach librarian. “No, we don’t get to climb mountains. But NOLS has learned so much in what they do outdoors in team building: natural leaders that come out if something goes awry, pulling your own weight, that you need more than one type of personality.” Holding the Institute in Lander allows it to tap into the NOLS expertise. Another advantage, Van Burgh said, is “getting people out of their setting, out of their home town, out of their library, getting them with folks – their peers that they don’t even know they have.” Since the Institute was established, 70 Wyoming library employees have graduated. Participants are selected from all types of libraries and positions on a competitive basis. Van Burgh said the two biggest things they gain are confidence in their own skills and connection to a statewide peer group. The Institute was started with a generous grant from the McMurry Library Endowment, and is now funded with Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA) funds. Van Burgh said she hoped at some point to bring past graduates together for a reunion and refresher course. Van Burgh has seen Institute graduates taking on leadership roles in their libraries, professional associations and communities – both meeting their own personal goals and the goals for the Library Leadership Institute. “It keeps happening, and we keep growing our own leaders,” she said. “We have a program that actually sets out to do something and does, year after year after year.” For more information: Wyoming Library Leadership Institute: http://will.state. wy.us/training/wlli.html National Outdoor Leadership School: www.nols.edu. Jep Enck: www.enckresources.com Above photo: © Deborah Sussex/NOLS Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 21 Draper Museum explores Yellowstone’s natural history A gem of a natural history museum is located in Wyoming’s northwest corner at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center (BBHC) in Cody. The 55,000square foot Draper Museum of Natural History opened to the public on June 4, 2002 – the first natural history museum established in the 21st century. The museum highlights wildlife, geology and human presence in the Greater Yellowstone region. It attracted more than $1.3 million in funding from the National Science Foundation for its immersive, interactive exhibits. “The Draper adds the spice of natural science to the already rich broth of humanities disciplines that has characterized the Buffalo Bill Historical Center for many decades,” said Charles Preston, Chief Curator for the BBHC. He is also Founding Curator of the Draper Museum, hired in 1998 to lead design and development. BBHC board member Nancy Carroll-Draper planted the spiritual and financial seeds for the museum when she joined the board in 1990. It was a challenge for a staff and board focused on Western art and history to add a natural science component. “We view humans as being a part of nature, rather than apart from nature,” Preston said. “We decided early on that our best approach would be to 22 draw on the strengths of the Center and integrate natural sciences with humanities as appropriate. We were able to incorporate original artwork and prints, archival documents, Plains Indian cultural materials, firearms, and other cultural and historical objects and interpretation in our exhibits. This greatly enriches our presentation beyond a more traditional ‘scienceonly’ approach.” The Draper Museum contributes to the understanding of Wyoming’s outdoors resources and heritage in four broad ways. The first is through research to create new knowledge about the area’s natural environment. Current projects are exploring logging impacts, Yellowstone raptors, human and grizzly encounters and land use patterns. The second way is through the collections. One innovation of the Draper Museum has been its focus on collecting visual and sound recordings of wildlife, vegetation, landscapes, and other natural resources of the Greater Yellowstone region, rather than reproducing the large physical collections already housed in other natural history museums. The third way is through the exhibits, which occupy 20,000 square feet of the Draper Museum and take visitors on a fun and educational Greater Yellowstone Adventure. Finally, the museum engages in Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 educational outreach with lectures, presentations, classes and organized trips out to the field to see wildlife and wild lands. “Our educational outreach programs have been overwhelmingly successful,” Preston said. “Last year we served more than 15,000 participants.” Many of the lectures and programs are filled to capacity, and “our only limitations have been a staff that’s stretched too thin and lecture spaces that have too few seats.” The BBHC has long been one of Wyoming’s best-known cultural centers, attracting 250,000 visitors a year. “Through the last several decades, the Buffalo Bill Historical Center has developed a stellar reputation as a wonderful cultural heritage center of the Old West,” Preston said. “With the addition of the Draper Museum of Natural History and after only three short years of operation, the BBHC has made great strides toward developing an equally stellar and widespread reputation as a natural heritage center of the ‘Wild’ West, past, present, and future. “ Visit the Draper Museum of Natural History’s web site at http://www.bbhc. org/dmnh/ . Photo above: Tile map of the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem - Draper Museum of Natural History - Buffalo Bill Historical Center, Cody, Wyoming (BBHC photo by Sean Campbell) Exploring nature’s boundaries Ted Kerasote When Wyoming author Ted Kerasote first came West as a sophomore in college, “I knew right away that I was home and that I’d been born in the wrong place.” Kerasote’s writings on wildlife, nature, outdoor recreation and conservation have appeared in numerous publications, including Audubon, National Geographic Traveler, Outside, Sports Afield, and The New York Times. He’s published four books – Navigations, Heart of Home, Bloodties and Out There – and edited a fifth, Return of the Wild. His latest book, Merle’s Door: How Dogs Might Live If They Were Free, will be published in Spring 2007. Kerasote claims sloth made him a writer. “I was never intrigued very much by work. As a kid, I prefered to go fishing , hunting or skiing.” The summer before he entered college, his father insisted that he get a real job. “Being a pretty good kid, I rode my bike into Oyster Bay, which was the nearest big town, and got a job at a hardware store. After three days of cutting glass, weighing nails and delivering plywood, I quit and said, Dad, I can’t do this. I’m not going to spend the summer inside.” Instead, he spent the summer fishing – surfcasting for striped bass – and wrote about it. He sold the story to Outdoor Life for $350, more than he would have earned at the hardware store. “So I thought, cool, I am quitting the American workforce as of now, and I’m going to become a freelance writer.” He’s dabbled in “real jobs” since then – being a chef while skibumming in Aspen, guiding for Outward Bound, loading jets and working as a carpenter, “I always came away saying, ‘Thank God, I don’t have to do that for the rest of my life,’ though I did love my job at Outward Bound—being in the mountains every day.” For the last 20 years, Kerasote has lived in Kelly, Wyoming, a village of 90 people that sits between Grand Teton National Park, the National Elk Refuge and the Gros Ventre Wilderness. “What’s nice about living in Kelly is that the interface between the wild and the civilized is very porous,” Kerasote said. “A lot of my writing has examined this interface and the ever-evolving relationship between wildlife and people. Maybe five to six thousand years ago, all of us were hunter-gatherers and were totally dependent on wildlife for a good part of our sustenance. So there was a very one-to-one relationship between wildlife and our own survival. “Most people today live pretty distant from the wild. And yet, natural systems, as is becoming increasingly apparent, support us. So my work has often plumbed that dependence of people on wildlife and how very often we tend to ignore it and try to be observers of wildlife rather than participants in the natural cycles that run the planet.” Part of that natural cycle is hunting, a subject he plumbed in-depth in his book, Bloodties. “Bloodties had the distinction of being condemned by some members of the hunting community as well as by some members of the animal rights community, which I took as a great compliment.” A former vegetarian, Kerasote is an avid hunter – but for subsistence, not sport. “I’m not in favor of competition in hunting,” he said. “I think going out and shooting animals to put them in the record book is not a wise way or a compassionate way to interact with wildlife.” In Bloodties, “I wanted to investigate the ethics of killing charismatic megafauna in the 20th and 21st century. One of the ways I addressed this question was to say I don’t think any of us are really exempt from killing Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 23 wildlife.” Hunting, he pointed out, kills directly, but agriculture kills indirectly through habitat loss and fossil fuel use. Mechanized harvesting kills rabbits, snakes, rodents and ground-nesting birds. “We can try and exempt ourselves from the traditional cycles of predation, but someplace, someone is dying so that we can eat. Should everyone, therefore, read Bloodties and become a hunter? No. It just means that we should be honest about our dietary choices and reflect on and thank all those beings who are out there supporting us, most of them unwillingly, without whose sacrifices we couldn’t exist.” Out There: In The Wild in a Wired Age examines another interface – that between technology and solitude. In the book, Kerasote canoed through one of the most remote parts of the globe. His canoeing partner took a satellite phone for emergencies, but used it instead to check in every day with friends and family. “It provided an opportunity for me to explore how we go to wild places and what their particular benefits may be for people who are harried by modern lifestyles,” Kerasote said. “What I find fascinating these days is that more and more people are really not willing to disconnect. Even when they have the opportunity, they’ll take their satellite phones, they’ll take shortwave radios, they’ll take videos – you know, portable DVDs – and have all the kinds of stuff that we have back at home and which we so often complain about – that it fritters away our time and doesn’t give us any real peace. Increasingly, the challenge of going to the outdoors will be leaving home the communication devices and simply listening to the silence.” If Kerasote’s writing has one theme, “I think it would be to take responsibility for one’s actions and be honest about the cost that your lifestyle inflicts on the rest of the environment,” he said. “I’ve been on a bunch of boards here in Wyoming 24 and Montana and there are some really well-meaning folks who serve on them, working on environmental issues, yet their lifestyles are the antithesis of sustainability. They don’t seem to be able to make the connection between having three SUVs, four homes, and a staff of people to keep things running, and the loss of biodiversity. “Fortunately, those of us who live in Wyoming can still experience relatively untouched landscapes. We are incrediblyblessed to live in a place that has so few people and so much open space and wildlife A lot of my writing has talked about the joy and peace of mind that people get from those kind of environments.” These days, Kerasote isn’t writing about hunting or the environment. “What I’m writing about now is my dog, Merle, whom I had for 13 years, and dogs in general. It’s called Merle’s Door: How Dogs Might Live if They Were Free, and it’s about how dogs might become more self-actualized if we gave them more freedom. It’s a book that is near and dear to my heart. It’s somewhat of a departure, but I think you can only write about the environment for so long before you turn crotchety with all the bad news.” Kerasote met Merle on the San Juan River in Utah in 1991. “He was about a 10-month-old pup, roaming in the desert all by himself, making his own living. He was looking for a human to hook up with, and it was just love at first sight. I put him in the raft and took him down the river, and he swam between the kayaks and hiked with us up canyons and at the end I said, ‘You want to come to Wyoming?’ He said, ‘Sure,’ and jumped in the truck. “I brought him up here and I gave him his own dog door so he could come and go as he wished, and he became this amazingly self-possessed dog that later got the nickname of the ‘Mayor of Kelly’ because he would make thrice-daily rounds around the whole village.” Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 He said Merle was an amazingly steady dog, especially with children. “The more I read about dogs, the more I realized that one of the biggest problems with dogs’ behavioral problems today is they don’t have any freedom. They don’t have the opportunity, especially if they live in urban places, to be outside, getting a nose-on and paws-on experience of the world, so it’s very difficult for them to learn how to be a social being amongst other social being. They can’t learn it from TV. They can’t learn it from books. They have to learn it through interaction, and most of the time, they’re interacting with others at the end of a leash and they just don’t have enough experiences in the greater environment to become whole beings. So the book, Merle’s Door, is mostly about Merle, but each of his experiences is a jumping off point, a vehicle for discussing how dogs learn, how we can help our dogs learn more while also creating dog-friendly cultures, especially in urban spaces.” Kerasote did extensive research for Merle’s Door, with the help of his local public library. “It’s been a real joy to be able to go online each day while I was doing my research and put in interlibrary loan requests, which Carol Connors, here at the Teton County Library has fielded.” he said, “She is true library heroine and has processed, at this point, a couple hundred interlibrary loan requests for me over the last year. Anywhere from a few days to a few weeks later, I’d get a phone call and go down and collect this pile of photocopied articles and books. So, the interlibrary loan system has made the writing of this book possible and in a way that has speeded up the process. It just happens so quickly and so efficiently, that it’s a wonderful, service for a professional writer living in a rural place.” Learn more about Ted Kerasote at http://www.kerasote.com/. Merle’s Door: How Dogs Might Live if They Were Free will be available Spring 2007 from Harcourt. The Toppan Rare Books Library Wyoming’s Premiere Collection of Outdoor Literature It seems fitting that one of the nation’s finest collections of rare books on hunting, fishing, and natural history would reside in Wyoming—where many of the historic outdoor events actually occurred. The Toppan Rare Books Library is located at the American Heritage Center on the University of Wyoming (UW) campus in Laramie. Nestled in a corner of the second floor, you feel as if you have discovered a hidden treasure when entering its cozy environment with thousands of volumes neatly arranged in custom-built bookcases. Artwork lines the walls and long reading tables with book cradles invite you to sit down and examine some of the rare books at your leisure. It is home to UW’s rare book collection, including all of the University Libraries’ pre-1850 books. Major subject areas include: • History and literature of America (particularly the West) • History of literature of the British Isles and Europe • World-wide travel and exploration • Fishing, hunting, and natural history • Books written by women authors (particularly before 1900) • Various religions • Examples of the book arts (illustration, paper, and binding) This collection of rare books and manuscripts is named after Clara and Frederick W. Toppan. Following the death of her husband in 1966, Clara, a UW alum, donated their personal library of more than 4,000 books, and this formed the core of a collection which now includes more than 45,000 items. Rare books comprise the majority of the assemblage, but there are also many valuable newspapers, magazines, illuminated manuscripts, and ancient artifacts. Clara passed away in 2001, but she left a generous endowment to fund the library in perpetuity. Anne Marie Lane, Curator of Rare Books since the library’s inception, put it this way, “We would not be here, the books would not be here, were it not for Clara.” When I first viewed the Toppan Collection, I was astounded at the number of books on fishing, hunting, and natural history. Through the glass doors of beautiful hardwood bookcases, hundreds of outdoor titles beckoned to me. Lacking the time to Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 25 delve into even a single shelf, I vowed to return. Fascinated by the treasure trove of books I had discovered, I made arrangements to meet with Curator Anne Marie Lane prior to my next visit. Her infectious enthusiasm for the library was immediately apparent and she graciously gave me a tour of the collection, carefully pointing out those areas that held outdoor books of greatest interest to me. As a former archeologist who made a mid-life career change to library science, Anne Marie seems the perfect curator for such a diverse and historic collection of literature and artifacts. According to Curator Lane, there are approximately 500 books on hunting. These run the gamut from 19th century accounts of hunts in Asia and British East Africa on up to the most notable author’s tales of hunts in early 20th century North America. Subject matter is also diverse, with numerous volumes on both bird and big game hunting for different species throughout the world. Examples of intriguing hunting titles provide a glimpse into the quality of this collection: •Sporting in Both Hemispheres (1858) by J. D’Ewes •Hunting in Many Lands; The Book of the Boone and Crockett Club (1895) by Theodore Roosevelt, George Bird Grinnell •In Haunts of Wild Game: A Hunter-Naturalist’s Wanderings from Kahlamba to Libombo” (1896) by Frederick Vaughan Kirby •Musk-ox, Bison, Sheep and Goat (1904) by Caspar Whitney, George Bird Grinnell, and Owen Wister •Camp-fires in the Canadian Rockies (1906) by William Hornaday •Hunting at High Altitudes (1913) by Col. William D. Pickett and George Bird Grinnell •Fifty Years a Hunter and Trapper: Experiences and Observations of E.N. Woodcock (1913) by E.N. Woodcock 26 •Happy Hunting Grounds (1920) by Kermit Roosevelt •Cleared for Strange Ports (1927) by Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt, Sr. •My Gun Dogs (1929) by Ray P. Holland •Deerstalkers (1930) by Frank Forester •Trails of the Hunted (1932) by James L. Clark •Tranquility: Tales of Sport with the Gun (1936) Col. Harold P. Sheldon •Falling Leaves: Tales from a Gun Room (1937) by Philip H. Babcock •Blood Lines: Tales of Shooting and Fishing (1938) by Nash Buckingham The Toppan collection is perhaps best known for its fishing books. Numbering more than 600, they include such rare volumes as a 1797 edition of Izaak Walton’s Compleat Angler, and Favorite Flies (1892) by Mary Orvis Marbury, and an original edition of the Western Angler by Roderick Haig-Brown. The rarest and most intriguing fishing book in the collection is Dry Fly Entomology, First Deluxe Edition. Published in 1897 by Frederick M. Halford, each page is recessed in the center, and holds actual flies tied by Halford; there are 100 fly patterns in all. Only 50 copies of Halford’s book were ever produced, so this is indeed a treasure among rare fishing books. A more contemporary collection of angling books was inaugurated in 2002, when the University of Wyoming Flycasters donated the LaFontaine Memorial Angling Book Collection in honor of the late Gary Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 Wyoming Game and Fish Department’s Jay Lawson looking through rare books at the Toppan Library in Laramie. LaFontaine, a noted author of fishing books. It includes much of the best writing on angling since the 1960s. There are also many rare books on natural history and the outdoors, including a first edition (1854) of Henry David Thoreau’s Walden. There is also an 1882 edition of Journal of Researches into the Natural Histroy and Geology of the Countries visited during the Voyage of H.M.S. Beagle Round the World by Charles Darwin. I look forward to delving into this section on my next visit. If you have an interest in fine books and the outdoors, I highly recommend the Toppan Rare Books Library. Library hours are Monday - Friday from 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. (summer 7:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.), phone (307)766-2565. I am sure you will find Curator Anne Marie Lane highly knowledgeable and extremely helpful. -JAY LAWSON Jay Lawson has worked for the Wyoming Game and Fish Department for 30 years and currently serves as Chief Game Warden and Chief of the Wildlife Division. by Douglas W. Smith and Gary Ferguson 2005. Guilford, Conn.: Lyons Press, 256 p. ISBN: 159228700X, $23.95 Kate Mutch, Public Services Librarian Natrona County Public Library, Casper Arctic Dance: The Mardy Murie Story by Charles Craighead & Bonnie Kreps 2002. Portland, Ore.: Graphic Arts Center, 128 p., $19.95 ISBN: 155868686X, (pbk.) FOR WYOMING READERS The reintroduction of wolves to Yellowstone was certainly a polarizing decision. Most people were adamantly for or against such an act, with few people in the middle. The last wolf in Yellowstone was killed in 1926, and in 1995 efforts to reintroduce the wolf to this region culminated in the release of 31 gray wolves. A decade after this controversial release, there are 170 wolves running free. Decade of the Wolf: Returning the Wild to Yellowstone by Douglas W. Smith and Gary Ferguson is the story of many of the wolves and what researchers discovered about them in those ten years, providing insight into the lives of many of these wolves, referred to by numbers. The best part of the book is the 30 pages of color photos of these wolves, with a particular favorite showing a mother wolf nursing her young. These Yellowstone wolves, who have an average life span of less than 3.5 years, have helped the researchers explore what the wolf means to the ecosystem’s functioning. Wolves sit on the top of the food chain, and their existence impacts the animal and plant community around them. Reading this fascinating book, one cannot help but respect this magnificent animal and the scientists who research them. bookshelf Decade of the Wolf: Returning the Wild to Yellowstone Based on the critically acclaimed documentary movie, Arctic Dance: the Mardy Murie Story shows the life and the impact that Margaret “Mardy” Murie had on the modern environmental movement. The book is designed like a scrapbook, with page upon page of photographs, many used in the filming of the documentary. Interspersed between the narratives are excerpts from her diary. This gives the book a very personal feel to it. It details her childhood in Alaska, her courtship and marriage to Olaus, and her adventures exploring the Alaskan wilderness with her husband. It also tells the important story of her work in protecting the environment during an era in which nature was seen as a tool to use. A wonderful book, that tells a wonderful story about a wonderful woman. Erin Kinney, Digital Initiatives Librarian Wyoming State Library, Cheyenne 27 Out There: In the Wild in a Wired Age by Ted Kerasote 2004. Stillwater, Minn.: Voyageur Press, 160 p., $16.95 ISBN: 0896585565 In a world that’s increasingly connected, how do you get away? Ted Kerasote’s Out There takes the reader with him to one of the most remote spots on the globe: a canoe trip down the Horton River to the Arctic Ocean through the northernmost part of Canada’s Northwest Territories. It’s unbroken wilderness, hundreds of miles from the nearest road. However, his travel companion brings a satellite phone “for emergencies,” but instead checks in daily with his family, his friends and his law office. Don’t look for this book to be a purist rant against cell phones in the wilderness, though. Instead, Kerasote approaches the subject with honesty, kind humor and reflection. What does it mean to be “out there,” but still connected? How does it change how you experience the wilderness? What chances you take? Wrapped around all this is Kerasote’s masterful, poetic language. It brings every detail of the trip alive – from the wildlife and glorious 24-hour Arctic daylight to the muscle aches and mosquito swarms. It’s not surprising that this book won the National Outdoor Book Award in 2004. Out There is a lovely read, one for a quiet afternoon where you want to enter a whole different world without roads or computers or telephones. Well, only one telephone. And only for emergencies. Susan Vittitow, Publications Specialist Wyoming State Library, Cheyenne In Plain Sight by C. J. Box 2006. New York: Putnam, 320 p., $24.95 ISBN: 0399153608 A new boss that epitomizes bureaucratic kingdom building, a missing matriarch and the escalating violence over who will inherit her ranch (the biggest in the area), revenge for past perceived wrongs; what more could you ask for in the sleepy little county of Twelve Sleep, Wyoming! C. J. Box takes Joe Pickett in a direction that you might just think you should have seen coming, but like most of us, you didn’t. Domestic problems in Joe’s own family and in the families of his friends and neighbors are all too familiar for most of us and C.J. Box ties the resulting home tensions in with work problems with a backstabbing new boss very effectively. Add in a killer determined to enact revenge for a perceived wrong, who is to blame for the missing matriarch and who gets to inherit what in a good old fashioned dynastic squabble, and you have a real humdinger of a story. This continues the excellent development of a very human game warden and family man and has left me wondering what is coming next in Joe Pickett’s life. Paul Pidde, Branch Manager Glenrock Branch Library 28 The Open Space of Democracy bookshelf The Open Space of Democracy by Terry Tempest Williams 2004. Great Barrington, MA: Orion Society, 107 p. $8.00 ISBN: 0913098639 (pbk.) Terry Tempest Williams has made democracy personal. She leads us through life enlightening the reader to specific issues that have become personal to her and how she has involved her neighborhood as well as state senator to look at problems that threaten our democracy. Williams’ diligence has helped others see why these issues threaten our open space of democracy. Williams was asked to speak at the University of Utah’s commencement address May 2, 2003. She was able to meet with several of the seniors before the engagement. She was struck by their desire to find solutions and alternatives to the problems facing their generation. Therefore, she delivered the speech that brought cheers and boos from the audience. She ended the speech with “Question. Stand. Speak. Act. Make us uncomfortable. Make us think. Make us see. Keep us free.” This sparked controversy that took Williams and Senator Bennett to the Artic National Wildlife Refuge. The vivid descriptions allowed the reader to view the area as if he were with her. The desire to protect such areas became a more important issue. The area where Williams lives was another issue for keeping democracy alive. She spends time describing the problems and the solutions the neighborhood used. This desert land is very fragile and houses endangered species of plants, so the neighborhood set about protecting their valley. This book allows contemplation of one’s own values and what democracy means to the reader. Judy Morris Retired from Big Horn County School District 1 A Green River Reader A Green River Reader edited by Alan Blackstock 2005. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 240 p., $17.95 ISBN: 0874808375 (pbk.) A Green River Reader is a compilation of journals, explorations and experiences of various travelers to the area of the Green River dating back to the early 1800s. Its pages transport you into a world of wilderness and take you back to the beginnings of man’s attempts to conquer the challenges of a wild and free river as it traverses the miles, sometimes threatening to snuff out life itself. He weaves a spellbinding view of the breathtaking beauty of the river in its ever changing landscapes. Blackstock is well qualified to write about the Green River as he has studied and researched it extensively through the journaling of earlier visitors to the region as well as through his own travels. He embraces both the past and present attractions of the area and the varied pleasures it offers to all who come within its boundaries. Blackstock is an educator who has both taught and experienced the lure of the Green River. The anecdotes and personal experiences shared from the journals of early visitors to the area really bring the story to life for the reader. Having spent the major part of my life in the region featured in Blackstock’s book only increased my appreciation for the history and beauty of the Flaming Gorge, Brown’s Park and other surrounding areas. I will no longer take for granted the great attraction it offers to all who are willing to experience life and adventure on the Green. This is a wonderful guide book for learning of the past and becoming better acquainted with the area traversed by the Green River. Bonnie Hanks, Media Aide Evanston High School 29 Man and nature connected at Museum of Wildlife Art The National Museum of Wildlife Art in Jackson, Wyo. has nearly 2,300 works of art, some dating as far back as 2000 b.c. This year Wyoming’s Congressional Delegation, Senators Craig Thomas and Mike Enzi and Representative Barbara Cubin, are working to make it one of less than 20 nationally designated museums – an elite group that includes the Smithsonian museums. “National designation signifies something unique that belongs to all of the people of our nation,” Sen. Enzi said. “The National Museum of Wildlife Art is the premier museum dedicated to enrich and inspire public appreciation and knowledge of fine art related to nature and wildlife. National designation would acknowledge that a major museum in Wyoming is the most important museum in the nation of its kind.” The museum’s web site notes: “Wildlife art is one of humanity’s earliest art forms, dating back to prehistoric cave paintings. Its long existence in virtually every culture exemplifies humankind’s vital relationship with nature.” Founded in 1987 with a private gift of a collection of art, the museum overlooks the nearly 25,000-acre National Elk Refuge near Jackson, Wyo. The museum strives to enrich and inspire public appreciation of fine art and humanity’s relationship with nature by focusing its exhibitions and programs on wildlife. The NMWA has a library collection, opened in 2001, that is part of the Wyoming Libraries Database (WYLD) network of libraries. “The library collection represents a virtual treasure trove of information,” said librarian Melisa Nicoud. The library collection has approximately 5,000 titles covering not only the museum’s artists, but also American art history, photography, natural history, zoology and Native Americans. Audio-visual holdings are growing: videos, DVDs, nature music and other compact discs.The library is a non-circulating research collection, open to the public and researchers 1-4 Mon.Fri. or by appointment. “This is a special and, in many cases, unique collection,” Nicoud said. “Many first and limited editions, autographed and rare works pertaining to natural history and the evolution of fine wildlife art, make this library a very special complement to the local public and historical society collections and an asset to the greater virtual community in the pursuit of fine art research.” The National Museum of Wildlife Art is open daily, Closed Columbus, Veterans, Thanksgiving and Christmas day. To learn more about the museum, visit the web site at http://www.wildlifeart.org. http://will.state.wy.us/roundup The Wyoming Library Roundup is a quarterly publication of the Wyoming State Library, the Wyoming Library Association and the Wyoming Center for the Book. If you would like to continue to be on our mailing list, if your address has an error that needs correction or you know of someone who would like their name added or you would like your name removed from our mailing list, please send your request to: Wyoming State Library, Publications and Marketing Office, 2301 Capitol Avenue, Cheyenne, WY 82002. Library Wyoming Roundup Wyoming State Library 2301 Capitol Avenue Cheyenne, WY 82002 CHANGE SERVICE REQUESTED Wyoming Library Roundup • Spring 2006 Presorted Standard U.S. Postage PAID Cheyenne, WY