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Chapter Seven: The Right Way into the Wilderness
For most of the first four decades of the twentieth century, the
Sierra Club encouraged and developed new and more sophisticated techniques for wilderness
recreation. In the 1930s Club members began to discuss the right uses for this technology.
For instance, David Brower criticized skiers who "admired their apparel, while the
peaks went unnoticed . . . Now men ski superbly," he wrote, "but what have they
lost?" Ski resorts were, after all, practice slopes for something better. In a
similar vein, Ansel Adams warned that "the mountains are more to us than a mere
proving ground of strength and alert skill. Rock climbing should be considered a thrilling
means to a more important end." This matter of recreational philosophy was rooted in
the beliefs of Muir, who distinguished sharply between conquest and true recreation, and
the technical and spiritual. The purpose of climbing mountains, Muir had argued, was not
simply to become a great athlete, but to "get their good tidings," and to gain
insight from the experience.
This discussion of recreational philosophy affected the Club's outings program. By the
late 1930s the High Trip had grown so large that many members desired smaller, more
intimate groups, and they responded enthusiastically to the idea of new types of outings.
Under the auspices of Richard Leonard, who became chair of the Outing Committee in 1936,
outings were diversified. First came the Burro Trips in 1938, begun by Joel Hildebrand's
son, Milton. These permitted a more leisurely experience for families with small children,
and allowed participants more complete self-reliance. On Knapsack Trips, begun by David
Brower in the same year, participants carried their own food and equipment, were most
independent, and were easier on the mountain environment. Two years later Oliver Kehrlein
organized Base Camps; participants traveled to one place, where they stayed for two weeks
and were cared for by a professional staff, in the High Trip tradition. Yet the High Trip
remained the central Club occasion. It was, as Brower remembers, "the best source of
the conservation warrior."
There were also environmental reasons for the Club to begin its transition away from
the large High Trips toward smaller, more diversified outings. During the era of the Colby
High Trips it was the general view that nobody else was in the wilderness. As that became
less true in the 1930s and after World War II, the Club became concerned that its large
groups were disturbing the other visitors to the mountains. Before the war, the National
Park Service began to study deterioration of Sierra mountain meadows as a result of the
use of pack stock. And in 1947 Richard Leonard coauthored the article "Protecting
Mountain Meadows" with Lowell Sumner, an influential Park Service biologist. Although
this article pointed out that the Club had been careful with pack stock, and was not
"loving the mountains to death," the writing was on the wall. Large parties
using many pack animals would increasingly become a problem, even in the spacious
backcountry of the Sierra.
As a corollary to this concern over the impacts of backcountry recreation, the Club
became increasingly concerned with federal management of wildlands. Club Director and
professional wilderness packer Norman "Ike" Livermore, Jr., proposed that the
Club conduct a wilderness conference to bring together administrators and users of
California's wild country. Held in 1949, the conference was attended by about 100 federal
and state land managers, outing leaders, and professional outfitters and guides. Its
success led to the biennial Wilderness Conferences, which continued for more than two
decades and greatly influenced conservation policy.
As wilderness recreation expanded in the postwar years, so did the potential for
development to mar wildlands to an extent little imagined a few years earlier. One result
of this was that many members became concerned that Club purposes had not kept up with
changes in the Sierra. To these members, the phrase in the Club's statement of purpose
that read "to . . . render accessible the mountain regions" seemed fitting to
the horse-and-buggy era in which the High Trips had been started, but inappropriate to a
time when engineers were planning roads throughout the mountains and hikers could be
encountered in every wildland. Even if only by trail, increased access implied not only
crowding in the mountains and deterioration of the wilderness experience, as the Bulletin
noted in an article called "Yosemite's Fatal Beauty," but also the potential
deterioration of the environment itself.
It was at this point that the so-called "Young Turks," such people as David
Brower, Richard Leonard, Ansel Adams, Charlotte Mauk, Harold Bradley, and others began to
challenge the philosophy of William Colby, who believed that the more visitors to the
Sierra, the better. Colby argued that the Club had faithfully followed Muir's ideas both
when it advocated new trails and when it participated in the planning of new or improved
roads. Now, the Young Turks argued, the emphasis of the Club needed to shift; it was
no longer so difficult to reach the backcountry, and technology had eased the burden of
wilderness travel. This argument was first raised in opposition to proposed new roads into
Kings Canyon National Park and the "improvement" of the Tioga Road in Yosemite
National Park. In 1951 the Board of Directors recommended that the Club's statement of
purpose be revised from "explore, enjoy and render accessible . . ." to
"explore, enjoy and preserve the Sierra Nevada and other scenic resources of the
United States." Soon after, this change was approved by the membership.
Because conservation, education, and recreation were linked, this change in Club
purpose was reflected in the nature of the Club's outings over the next decades. Outings
weren't curtailed, but they were controlled. The High Trip continued, yet increased
attention was paid to "minimum impact" camping. Going Light--With Backpack or
Burro, edited by Brower, was published by the Club in 1951. Individual Club outings
grew smaller, more self-reliant, and more varied during the 1950s and 1960s, while the
total number of people participating in the outings increased dramatically. As the Club's
conservation interests extended beyond California, outings were scheduled to wilderness
areas of national importance, such as the North Cascades in Washington, the Sawtooths in
Idaho, and the Wind River Range in Wyoming.
In a particularly important development, when Dinosaur National Monument was threatened
by federal plans to build a dam at Echo Park in the early 1950s, David Brower and Harold
Bradley urged the Outing Committee to plan a river trip to Dinosaur's spectacular canyons.
With the development of flat-bottomed inflatable rafts, large numbers of people could be
transported by a few experienced boatmen.
Three one-week trips were scheduled by Outings
Chairman Stewart Kimball, each taking 65 people down the Yampa and Green canyons,
the
heart of the monument. Families with small children went on these expeditions,
demonstrating that, with precautions, rafting could be a safe and universal recreational
experience.
More important, though only 13,000 people visited the monument in 1950, with
fewer than 50 rafting the rivers, in 1954 nearly 71,000 visitors appeared and
more than 900
floated down the canyons. These river trips took influential people to this endangered
wildland, allowing them to see the monument in a way that was not otherwise available,
and might never again be possible if Echo Park Dam were built. This was the
traditional Club
strategy with regard to outings--utilizing new technologies while encouraging
appropriate recreational use in a threatened wilderness. Outings had their
effect, as Muir had argued,
when travelers came back from the wilderness ready to fight for its preservation.
David Brower has called this the "place no one knew" strategy. There is
nobody to protect a place nobody knows. More outings would be organized for the wild
rivers of the Colorado Plateau of Utah, and in the Grand Canyon in the 1960s to build
opposition to dams that were planned there. A river-touring section began in the San
Francisco Bay Area, and the coming decades saw increased national interest in enjoying and
preserving rivers all across the continent.
Even in a changing environment, where quotas frequently must be used to limit
recreational impacts, and in a Sierra Club with priorities that have come to include
protecting clean air, soil, and water as well as wilderness, the original philosophy of
outings continues. It has been clearly stated in On The Loose, a book written by
young members Terry and Renny Russell, published by the Sierra Club in 1967:
Not to escape from but to escape to: not to forget but to remember. We've been
taking care of ourselves in places where it really matters. The next step is to take care
of the places that really matter.
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