Here is Where I Walk: Episodes From a Life in the Forest
Autor Leslie Carol Robertsen Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 apr 2019 – vârsta ani
It is in the Presidio of San Francisco, California, that Leslie Carol Roberts walks. The Presidio, America’s only residential national park tucked wholly into an urban setting, is a fading historic forest. Here is where Leslie’s memories of other places, people, and travels emerge. Here is where the author’s home has been for more than a decade, and here is the place she raised her two children as a single mother.
In layered stories of her life and travels, Leslie turns her daily walks into revelations of deeper meaning. From Maryland to Iowa to Tasmania, we follow a fierce and keenly observant walker through places of exquisite beauty and complexity. Her daily walks inspire Leslie to accept the invitation of the beckoning trees where she finds herself colliding with the urban coyote, the peculiar banana slug, and the manzanita. She also notes both ridiculous and poignant aspects of human ecosystems in pursuit of what it means to live a life of creativity and creation from scientist-activists battling to save environments to the tragic realities of ordinary life.
In this finely crafted eco-memoir, each place provides Leslie with exactly the scaffolding needed to survive, with nature serving as the tonic. Here is Where I Walk provides a vivid answer to how we can find our place, not only in nature but within ourselves and the world we walk.
In layered stories of her life and travels, Leslie turns her daily walks into revelations of deeper meaning. From Maryland to Iowa to Tasmania, we follow a fierce and keenly observant walker through places of exquisite beauty and complexity. Her daily walks inspire Leslie to accept the invitation of the beckoning trees where she finds herself colliding with the urban coyote, the peculiar banana slug, and the manzanita. She also notes both ridiculous and poignant aspects of human ecosystems in pursuit of what it means to live a life of creativity and creation from scientist-activists battling to save environments to the tragic realities of ordinary life.
In this finely crafted eco-memoir, each place provides Leslie with exactly the scaffolding needed to survive, with nature serving as the tonic. Here is Where I Walk provides a vivid answer to how we can find our place, not only in nature but within ourselves and the world we walk.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781948908078
ISBN-10: 1948908077
Pagini: 200
Ilustrații: 16 b-w photos
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Nevada Press
Colecția University of Nevada Press
ISBN-10: 1948908077
Pagini: 200
Ilustrații: 16 b-w photos
Dimensiuni: 140 x 216 x 18 mm
Greutate: 0.25 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: University of Nevada Press
Colecția University of Nevada Press
Recenzii
"A profound meditation on the intersection of many different histories, lives, and fates, all of which reveal different facets of a thoroughly engaging literary imagination.”
—Christopher Merrill, director of the Iowa International Writing Program, author of Self-Portrait with Dogwood
"A series of absorbing, funny, tragic, and deeply present ruminations . . . packed with a scientist's curiosity and an artist's imagination . . . a lesson in how to accept, relish, and even seek out change.”
—John D'Agata, author of About a Mountain
"These walks with Leslie Carol Roberts -—by turns exhilarating, heart-breaking, and informative—are always just what I need.”
—Camille Dungy, author of Soil; Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry.
"Roberts expertly crafts a narrative both of the places she's traveled and the events that have shaped her own emotional terrain."
—Library Journal
"The book paints a sharp picture of the natural and historical aspects of the Presidio, which acts as platform that inspires broader consideration of the environment.... There is a certain beauty and elegance in Roberts's words and the rhythm and cadence of her writing. All the while, her text exudes a deep love and respect for the world around her. Simply put, Here Is Where I Walk is a breath of fresh air."
—Foreword Reviews
… a wonderful combination of scientific thought and poetic expression."
—Seattle Book Review
—Christopher Merrill, director of the Iowa International Writing Program, author of Self-Portrait with Dogwood
"A series of absorbing, funny, tragic, and deeply present ruminations . . . packed with a scientist's curiosity and an artist's imagination . . . a lesson in how to accept, relish, and even seek out change.”
—John D'Agata, author of About a Mountain
"These walks with Leslie Carol Roberts -—by turns exhilarating, heart-breaking, and informative—are always just what I need.”
—Camille Dungy, author of Soil; Black Nature: Four Centuries of African American Nature Poetry.
"Roberts expertly crafts a narrative both of the places she's traveled and the events that have shaped her own emotional terrain."
—Library Journal
"The book paints a sharp picture of the natural and historical aspects of the Presidio, which acts as platform that inspires broader consideration of the environment.... There is a certain beauty and elegance in Roberts's words and the rhythm and cadence of her writing. All the while, her text exudes a deep love and respect for the world around her. Simply put, Here Is Where I Walk is a breath of fresh air."
—Foreword Reviews
… a wonderful combination of scientific thought and poetic expression."
—Seattle Book Review
Notă biografică
Leslie Carol Roberts is an author, journalist, and essayist. She is also professor and chair of the MFA Writing Program at California College of the Arts in San Francisco, California.
Extras
Introduction
Nature is what we see—the hill, the afternoon, squirrel, eclipse, the bumblebee. Nay, nature is heaven. Nature is what we hear . . .
—Emily Dickinson
There are reports in the esteemed journal Nature that scientists have discovered what is called the Wood Wide Web, a revelation that trees and fungi converse, sharing across species information about their needs and alerting each other to predation threats. Living in the midst of one of America’s great historic forests—a forest with the same designation as historic human-built structures, these discoveries confirmed what I believe so many of us walkers-of-woods have long sensed. For what is a walk in a forest if not a chance to fully and deeply celebrate the sauntering and reflective mind? The brain hopping like some nimble coyote over rocks bridging a river? Legs astride. Arms lifting a drink of cool water to lips, water dripping down chin. Minty floral scent of the eucalyptus tree, indifferent and slightly smug robins hopping on the trailside. The woods hold in abeyance the battering ram of time and the pressures and exigencies of modern life, they summon with reckless vigor memories of people alive and dead, loved and despised. The woods are not a quiet place, we walkers of the forest know, and it is this cacophony we seek in this nature we love. We should all be at the barricades lobbying for these places of solace and interiority, these places complex and cruel, these places that need and don’t need us that can be obliterated by grasping gangrenous developers, these places that will yet exist as memory and whose pieces as seed and spore will return or relocate or represent in new ways. And so the forest is a place of blind, muscular hope.
The Presidio of San Francisco is a heavily forested and densely historical urban national park, and each walk and vista offers a performance of place almost noisy with varied voices—both of the woods and not. There is the backdrop of Army architecture and some moments where design aesthetics were privileged over military bureaucracy, and these buildings have a particular resonance. First human activities date back 10,000 years, and archeologists have unearthed evidence that the Ohlone people lived here as early as 740 AD. Fringe marshlands were home to small villages of seasonal and more permanent settlements, which ended when the Spanish military, civilians, and a single Franciscan priest arrived in 1776 to set up a presidio, or garrison.
They arrived by land, 193 civilians, 1,000 head of cattle, traveling from Sonora, Mexico. There were presidios erected across what is now called California, and the San Francisco Bay encampment faced particular challenges in the lack of arable land, the inhospitable winds and sand, and the fast habitat destruction brought on by cattle grazing.
The Presidio was controlled from 1776 until 1822 by the Spanish and then by Mexico until the United States took over in 1846. In 1972, the Golden Gate National Recreation Area was created, and includes the Presidio, Alcatraz, and Muir Woods in its 76,500 acres, making it one of the largest urban national park in the world. There are 800 acres of open space in the Presidio, or 54 percent of its total, and 145 acres support remnant native plant communities ranging from wildflowers to oak woodlands. Sixteen rare plant species make their home here, including five protected by the Endangered Species Act. In 1996 Congress created the Presidio Trust, transferring eighty percent of the former military post to its jurisdiction (the National Park Service manages the shoreline perimeters.) A board was set up, appointed by the president of the United States, and the Presidio charter was written dictating that the Presidio had to preserve what was in its jurisdiction and also figure out how to build and maintain non-federal financial support. If they failed to do so, the Presidio could be sold off as excess land. This meant that the buildings and sites needed to be repurposed to bring in tenants—nonprofits and for-profits, residents and tourists. This was an experiment of sorts—the first park with an economic mission to support itself without government aid. (The Presidio hit this goal in 2013, by the way.)
The Presidio forest is mature trees and these days a wave of younger trees—part of a forest-replenishment plan—eucalyptus, pines, cypress, planted from the 1880s through the 1940s by the US Army and slowly aging out. During the 218 years the Presidio was an Army post, tree planting was a way to shield both from the wind and weather and a way to create theater—the grand and mysterious might of a militarized Presidio masked from civilian view by dense woods. The forest today is surrounded by major roadways, including Highway 101, which tunnel through and bisect and frame it on two sides. Several of the famed stands of trees have been entirely removed and replanted because crowding had left the mature trees unhealthy and weak, prone to falling during winter wind storms. You can easily spy the sick trees on a walk in these woods: They have very long, scrawny trunks and a thin, wide canopy—a desperate reach in a dense wood towards light needed to survive. They have the same affect as starving humans, elongated and sinewy, forms folding in peculiar ways.
There is a resonance and sense of awe in these woods, the forest’s determined survival against the odds: how the trees define the 1,480 acres of park, trees laced with hiking trails, ringed by sandy beaches and soaring cliffs and vistas, trees tucked into the northern corner of San Francisco, patrolled by coyotes, skunks, and raptors, banana slugs slouching amidst scraps of euc leaves. Even as humans redesign the place to make it suited to modern recreation and corporate life and the arts—people in tight cycling kits roar around on road bikes, heaving plates of artisan tacos served with agave liquors, a museum celebrating the cartoons of Walt Disney; a corporate headquarters for the Star Wars artists complete with Yoda statue; the majestic forest dominates it all.
My family and I moved to the Presidio in 2005. We were coming home to San Francisco and our former neighborhood in the Mission had lost its charm for me. My mother-lens saw in high-relief how trash accumulated on sidewalks and around curbs, how on weekends crosswalks jammed with drunks in search of bacon-leavened donuts, mussels and fries or whatever the latest food craze might be—was no place for me to rear young children.
From the first days in the Presidio, I walked the woods. In the beginning, the Presidio was underpopulated and the homes were in ill repair. The only other walkers were a diplomat from the local South Korean consulate—always nattily attired in a shiny silver suit and bright tie—and a Buddhist monk in an orange robe. We would smile and nod at each other.
On these many years of walks, over the months, the forest has given me ample time to commune with the place and with my own memories. I don’t doubt that the trees are in conversation with each other; and I don’t doubt that they are also speaking to me. Trees are wonderful companions in thinking, and they provide a particular aesthetic that has caused artists, writers, and naturalists across the years to pause and ponder how glorious a tree is in all its singular characteristics.
There is a particular cypress tree I look at each day, morning and night. It stands at the top of the dunes immediately behind my house. It is a tangled messy tree, using a strategy leveraging half cracked off, huge lower branches to serve as support against the rough Pacific winter storms. This quality often prompts guests to ask if I should hire an arborist to trim these unsightly branches, to facilitate my view west, an otherwise open shot across the Pacific Ocean to the Farallon Islands. I then explain what the tree is up to, how it accommodates the weather and wind with its plan to press fallen limbs in a sort of skirt around its base. I also explain that without the tree, the wind and rain would blast me and the already quivering window panes might be inclined to blow right out here on top of the dunes.
So the tree, I conclude, has my back, and my story of its needs is a way for me to have its back in turn.
Seeing beauty in a fallen limb, observing an Anna’s hummingbird alight on a tendril; tracing the path of the great-horned owl as it finds its place as night falls: All of this artistry is given to me by this one cypress tree. And I am grateful for it.
I also found the trees eased my mind. I would turn away from the mundane anxieties of life as a single mother in an expensive city, and in turn flow towards ideas about art, about my own life as a creative, from girlhood walks and studio art classes, to reporting the news in far-flung places like Antarctica, to the elations of my children’s births and young lives, to the sadness of people lost along the path. So the forest came to be a place for me to hear my own story and when I returned from my walks, sometimes with fresh jottings in a small brown notebook, I would sit down for an hour or so, in the bright morning light, and put down these thoughts. Or I would wait for my children to fall asleep and then I would sit at my Steelcase desk, a greenish-grey desk, pushed against the window and in the dark stare at my tree and bash out words as they came to mind. And so. I embrace this conversation fomented and encouraged by the trees and for the fact that each walk in each forest or wood is an interaction singular and rich.
Nature is what we see—the hill, the afternoon, squirrel, eclipse, the bumblebee. Nay, nature is heaven. Nature is what we hear . . .
—Emily Dickinson
There are reports in the esteemed journal Nature that scientists have discovered what is called the Wood Wide Web, a revelation that trees and fungi converse, sharing across species information about their needs and alerting each other to predation threats. Living in the midst of one of America’s great historic forests—a forest with the same designation as historic human-built structures, these discoveries confirmed what I believe so many of us walkers-of-woods have long sensed. For what is a walk in a forest if not a chance to fully and deeply celebrate the sauntering and reflective mind? The brain hopping like some nimble coyote over rocks bridging a river? Legs astride. Arms lifting a drink of cool water to lips, water dripping down chin. Minty floral scent of the eucalyptus tree, indifferent and slightly smug robins hopping on the trailside. The woods hold in abeyance the battering ram of time and the pressures and exigencies of modern life, they summon with reckless vigor memories of people alive and dead, loved and despised. The woods are not a quiet place, we walkers of the forest know, and it is this cacophony we seek in this nature we love. We should all be at the barricades lobbying for these places of solace and interiority, these places complex and cruel, these places that need and don’t need us that can be obliterated by grasping gangrenous developers, these places that will yet exist as memory and whose pieces as seed and spore will return or relocate or represent in new ways. And so the forest is a place of blind, muscular hope.
The Presidio of San Francisco is a heavily forested and densely historical urban national park, and each walk and vista offers a performance of place almost noisy with varied voices—both of the woods and not. There is the backdrop of Army architecture and some moments where design aesthetics were privileged over military bureaucracy, and these buildings have a particular resonance. First human activities date back 10,000 years, and archeologists have unearthed evidence that the Ohlone people lived here as early as 740 AD. Fringe marshlands were home to small villages of seasonal and more permanent settlements, which ended when the Spanish military, civilians, and a single Franciscan priest arrived in 1776 to set up a presidio, or garrison.
They arrived by land, 193 civilians, 1,000 head of cattle, traveling from Sonora, Mexico. There were presidios erected across what is now called California, and the San Francisco Bay encampment faced particular challenges in the lack of arable land, the inhospitable winds and sand, and the fast habitat destruction brought on by cattle grazing.
The Presidio was controlled from 1776 until 1822 by the Spanish and then by Mexico until the United States took over in 1846. In 1972, the Golden Gate National Recreation Area was created, and includes the Presidio, Alcatraz, and Muir Woods in its 76,500 acres, making it one of the largest urban national park in the world. There are 800 acres of open space in the Presidio, or 54 percent of its total, and 145 acres support remnant native plant communities ranging from wildflowers to oak woodlands. Sixteen rare plant species make their home here, including five protected by the Endangered Species Act. In 1996 Congress created the Presidio Trust, transferring eighty percent of the former military post to its jurisdiction (the National Park Service manages the shoreline perimeters.) A board was set up, appointed by the president of the United States, and the Presidio charter was written dictating that the Presidio had to preserve what was in its jurisdiction and also figure out how to build and maintain non-federal financial support. If they failed to do so, the Presidio could be sold off as excess land. This meant that the buildings and sites needed to be repurposed to bring in tenants—nonprofits and for-profits, residents and tourists. This was an experiment of sorts—the first park with an economic mission to support itself without government aid. (The Presidio hit this goal in 2013, by the way.)
The Presidio forest is mature trees and these days a wave of younger trees—part of a forest-replenishment plan—eucalyptus, pines, cypress, planted from the 1880s through the 1940s by the US Army and slowly aging out. During the 218 years the Presidio was an Army post, tree planting was a way to shield both from the wind and weather and a way to create theater—the grand and mysterious might of a militarized Presidio masked from civilian view by dense woods. The forest today is surrounded by major roadways, including Highway 101, which tunnel through and bisect and frame it on two sides. Several of the famed stands of trees have been entirely removed and replanted because crowding had left the mature trees unhealthy and weak, prone to falling during winter wind storms. You can easily spy the sick trees on a walk in these woods: They have very long, scrawny trunks and a thin, wide canopy—a desperate reach in a dense wood towards light needed to survive. They have the same affect as starving humans, elongated and sinewy, forms folding in peculiar ways.
There is a resonance and sense of awe in these woods, the forest’s determined survival against the odds: how the trees define the 1,480 acres of park, trees laced with hiking trails, ringed by sandy beaches and soaring cliffs and vistas, trees tucked into the northern corner of San Francisco, patrolled by coyotes, skunks, and raptors, banana slugs slouching amidst scraps of euc leaves. Even as humans redesign the place to make it suited to modern recreation and corporate life and the arts—people in tight cycling kits roar around on road bikes, heaving plates of artisan tacos served with agave liquors, a museum celebrating the cartoons of Walt Disney; a corporate headquarters for the Star Wars artists complete with Yoda statue; the majestic forest dominates it all.
My family and I moved to the Presidio in 2005. We were coming home to San Francisco and our former neighborhood in the Mission had lost its charm for me. My mother-lens saw in high-relief how trash accumulated on sidewalks and around curbs, how on weekends crosswalks jammed with drunks in search of bacon-leavened donuts, mussels and fries or whatever the latest food craze might be—was no place for me to rear young children.
From the first days in the Presidio, I walked the woods. In the beginning, the Presidio was underpopulated and the homes were in ill repair. The only other walkers were a diplomat from the local South Korean consulate—always nattily attired in a shiny silver suit and bright tie—and a Buddhist monk in an orange robe. We would smile and nod at each other.
On these many years of walks, over the months, the forest has given me ample time to commune with the place and with my own memories. I don’t doubt that the trees are in conversation with each other; and I don’t doubt that they are also speaking to me. Trees are wonderful companions in thinking, and they provide a particular aesthetic that has caused artists, writers, and naturalists across the years to pause and ponder how glorious a tree is in all its singular characteristics.
There is a particular cypress tree I look at each day, morning and night. It stands at the top of the dunes immediately behind my house. It is a tangled messy tree, using a strategy leveraging half cracked off, huge lower branches to serve as support against the rough Pacific winter storms. This quality often prompts guests to ask if I should hire an arborist to trim these unsightly branches, to facilitate my view west, an otherwise open shot across the Pacific Ocean to the Farallon Islands. I then explain what the tree is up to, how it accommodates the weather and wind with its plan to press fallen limbs in a sort of skirt around its base. I also explain that without the tree, the wind and rain would blast me and the already quivering window panes might be inclined to blow right out here on top of the dunes.
So the tree, I conclude, has my back, and my story of its needs is a way for me to have its back in turn.
Seeing beauty in a fallen limb, observing an Anna’s hummingbird alight on a tendril; tracing the path of the great-horned owl as it finds its place as night falls: All of this artistry is given to me by this one cypress tree. And I am grateful for it.
I also found the trees eased my mind. I would turn away from the mundane anxieties of life as a single mother in an expensive city, and in turn flow towards ideas about art, about my own life as a creative, from girlhood walks and studio art classes, to reporting the news in far-flung places like Antarctica, to the elations of my children’s births and young lives, to the sadness of people lost along the path. So the forest came to be a place for me to hear my own story and when I returned from my walks, sometimes with fresh jottings in a small brown notebook, I would sit down for an hour or so, in the bright morning light, and put down these thoughts. Or I would wait for my children to fall asleep and then I would sit at my Steelcase desk, a greenish-grey desk, pushed against the window and in the dark stare at my tree and bash out words as they came to mind. And so. I embrace this conversation fomented and encouraged by the trees and for the fact that each walk in each forest or wood is an interaction singular and rich.
Cuprins
Table of Contents
Introduction 7
Episode 1: January: On Coyotes 12
Notebook 1 26
Episode 2: February: On Ecology Trail 31
Notebook 2 46
Episode 3: March: On Slug Trails 48
Notebook 3 59
Episode 4: April: On Borders 64
Notebook 4 73
Episode 5: May: On Drawing 75
Notebook 5 88
Episode 6: June: On Place 96
Notebook 6 101
Episode 7: July: On Blue Gums 113
Notebook 7 128
Episode 8: August: On Remediation 133
Notebook 8 140
Episode 9: September: On Dunes 142
Notebook 9 157
Episode 10: October: On Forest as Text 161
Notebook 10 170
Episode 11: November: On Brains 173
Notebook 11 185
Episode 12: December: On Chorography 191
Notebook 12 200
About the Author 204
Acknowledgments 205
Introduction 7
Episode 1: January: On Coyotes 12
Notebook 1 26
Episode 2: February: On Ecology Trail 31
Notebook 2 46
Episode 3: March: On Slug Trails 48
Notebook 3 59
Episode 4: April: On Borders 64
Notebook 4 73
Episode 5: May: On Drawing 75
Notebook 5 88
Episode 6: June: On Place 96
Notebook 6 101
Episode 7: July: On Blue Gums 113
Notebook 7 128
Episode 8: August: On Remediation 133
Notebook 8 140
Episode 9: September: On Dunes 142
Notebook 9 157
Episode 10: October: On Forest as Text 161
Notebook 10 170
Episode 11: November: On Brains 173
Notebook 11 185
Episode 12: December: On Chorography 191
Notebook 12 200
About the Author 204
Acknowledgments 205
Descriere
While living in the Presidio of San Francisco, Leslie Carol Roberts became enchanted with the park’s 125-year old forest, native plant and habitat restoration, serpentinite rock formations, and wild beaches just outside the Golden Gate.
Roberts unearths stories of scientists, spiritualists, and artists around the globe engaged with specific and peculiar places, from the Indiana Dunes to Tasmanian eucalyptus forests to the work of landscape painters, to Iowa classrooms— in this memoir pursuing an understanding what it means to live a life of creativity and creation.
Roberts unearths stories of scientists, spiritualists, and artists around the globe engaged with specific and peculiar places, from the Indiana Dunes to Tasmanian eucalyptus forests to the work of landscape painters, to Iowa classrooms— in this memoir pursuing an understanding what it means to live a life of creativity and creation.