Jul 8, 845pm ~~ Review asap.
Jul 9, 3pm ~~ I enjoyed this book mainly because I am familiar with the Gila Wilderness area in New Mexico. Well, truthfully not with the wilderness proper, just with the Cliff Dwellings and Silver City, both of which I have visited many times in the past. I was never able to trek into the actual wilderness, but any time spent close to it is special. You feel it right there, or at least I did. Hubby of those years was never impressed, but he was not as much of a Nature Baby as I am. Which is one reason he is now hubby of those years and not these. lol
Anyway, reading about a slice of life in the Wilderness appealed to me, and I appreciated the author's enthusiasm for his workplace and the Nature he saw every day. I did feel as though I was in the lookout tower with him, keeping my eyes open for smoke but also enjoying the incredible view of familiar territory.
Like other reviewers, of course I noticed that the author is self-absorbed. He has reasons for that, which he explains in greater depth in his second book, All The Wrong Places. I am reading that at this time (July 9, 2022) so will have thoughts on it in a few days.
A solitary nature helps in this line of work, of course. Between the space a writer needs and the unavoidable space a wilderness lookout gets, the combination of careers seems to fir Connors to a tee. He has his demons, as do we all, and this is his way of wrestling with them.
The book is not merely a diary of time spent in the tower. He talks about the ongoing debate about letting fires burn (they are natural and sometimes essential for the life of the trees and forest) and suppressing them as rapidly as possible (because they will destroy timber the Forest Service hopes to sell, alter the scenic views, and destroy property owned by people who are encroaching ever further into places they should not be in the first place).
He talks a great deal about Aldo Leopold, who began his career with one viewpoint and ended it with another. This intrigued me, since I knew the name but nothing really about the man. Two more books on the way thanks to Connors. I wanted to read more about Leopold, more of his own words, even with the many quoted section included in this book.
Connors makes his own ideas quite clear, and I wonder how he would have felt about the giant fires in a different area of New Mexico that began as controlled burns but got out of hand. I suppose it is too late now for a wild area to remain truly wild, but I would love to see that. No roads, no people allowed, just let the wilderness be itself, leave it alone. Completely. And have a buffer zone around the wilderness so that Man in all his destructive 'progress' cannot cozy up right to the edge and then slip inside like the camel into the tent.
There was one incident that made me want to throw the book across the room, though. The season that Connors describes was not his first in the wilderness, so he should have known not to do what he did when he came across a baby deer one day while out hiking. He thought it was abandoned. He picked it up and took it back to his cabin and tried to feed it. How could he have made such a rookie mistake? He had been in the woods and the wild more than long enough to know better. You never ever touch a baby animal. If it is a fawn, it is likely doing exactly what Momma told it to do: hiding until she comes back and says it is safe to come out. If it is a bear, Momma will be closer than you think and you will be in a mess of your own making.
The pages relating this incident and his feelings about it were supposed to show how a desire to help can backfire. But how is it that this supposed woodsman even had the idea that he needed to 'help'? Why didn't he know better? Wild animals are wild animals whether they are cute little fawns or bear cubs or all those buffalo in Yellowstone that keep goring people because the people think they need a close-up selfie. This whole topic just irks me something awful. Sigh.
But enough of the rant. Fire Season was worth the read, and as I get to understand Connors better in the pages of his second book, I am already looking forward to A song For The River, where he returns to the Gila. Although from what I've seen about it so far, that book will be dark and traumatic for both the wilderness and the people who love it.
Seems to me that mood will fit the current situation of the world perfectly. Very hard not to be depressed and pessimistic about our planet after all we have done to her over the centuries. I hope at least a few wild places stay that way. Or return to that state. And I hope that Human Beings learn to leave them alone next time around.