A delayed but still relevant personal response to a flurry of anti-recreation articles this spring.
I spent the summer of 2010 living in the home of Mardy Murie,
an adventurer and conservationist known widely as the “grandmother” of the conservation
movement. I was fortunate to live as a guest of the Muries (at least in spirit)
under the shadow of the Grand Teton. My guest room door opened to the porch where
the conservation movement was built in the middle of the last century, and it
looked out over the legacy of permanently protected, accessible public lands we
enjoy today.
As an intern for both the Murie Center and the Jackson office
of the backcountry skiing advocacy group Winter Wildlands Alliance, I spent the
summer working at the intersection of conservation and outdoor recreation –
learning about the Muries and helping at the Ranch, while advocating for Wilderness
protection and backcountry skiing. I also enjoyed the outdoors every day,
exploring on on foot, on bike and on the end of a climbing rope, fishing the
Snake, and listening to the elk bugle in the nearby field. My time there
instilled in me a conservation ethic I will never forget.
As a member of Generation Y and a professional advocate for
conservation and human powered recreation, I read with interest a couple of articles in the last few months that contend that recreation and environmental protection are at odds.
These views don’t match up with my experience or with the approach to
conservation I see the recreation community taking.
Experiencing the outdoors has been essential to the
conservation ethic since the birth of the conservation movement. John Muir, Bob
Marshall, Teddy Roosevelt, Aldo Leopold, Olaus and Mardy Murie came to love wildlife
and wild places, and dedicated their lives to their conservation, as a result
of exploring and adventuring. The conservation legacy we cherish today was born
out of these greats exploring and recreating outdoors.
To claim that the way people experience the outdoors today
does not lead to “transformational” experiences is to misunderstand both the
past and the present. Aldo Leopold wrote that our appreciation of nature and
wildlife is in direct proportion to the energy we expend. Tail running,
mountain biking and backcountry skiing—really all activities that could be deemed “too
fast” —demand a lot of energy. When you are slumped over your bike gasping for
air at the top of a trail, you have certainly worked hard enough to really appreciate
the view and the pica calling from the talus.
Perhaps that is why the recreation community is doing so
much for wildlife and landscape protection. We voluntarily close climbing areas
for nesting raptors - and enforce the closure as a community, without any
draconian laws. We identify almost a million acres of land in Colorado,
valuable for both conservation and recreation, and successfully advocate for it
to get the highest level of protection under the Roadless Rule. We organize
locally as bikers, climbers, hikers, paddlers and skiers, and advocate for
balanced land management and Wilderness.
The activities we use to get there may be different, but the conservation
ethic of current generations is the same. As our lives become faster and our
attention spans shorter, it is harder to connect people with the outdoors. In
order to maintain—not to mention build—the constituency for conservation, we
need to think differently about how to get young, diverse populations to
experience the outdoors meaningfully. To do this, we need to foster
close-to-home as well as backcountry recreation opportunities. Most of us would
trade a trail run after work for a 10-day backpacking trip, but that daily dose
of the outdoors will build potential new conservationists who will advocate for
outdoor places. Not everyone will make this leap, but many will.
As an avid mountain biker and backcountry skier, I reject the notion that recreation and conservation are at odds.
The very existence of the thriving recreation-based conservation movement is
testament to my community’s recognition of its own impacts and its dedication to
protecting wild places.
Outdoor recreation and conservation are mutually reinforcing.
Our public lands and the movement to protect them deserve collaboration between
old and new voices, not division.