This is one of my new favorite books. It is a lot like Desert Solitaire but about a cabin in the Colorado mountains. Specifically, the San Juans. Peterson writes fluidly and eloquently about wildlife, flora, chopping wood, society, shoveling snow, dogs, hunting and the decision to separate himself from the majority of popular society (with his wife and a series of dogs). He has a deep connection with the land around him that only comes from living within it, as a part of it, and studying it extensively. He is also (maybe primarily) a passionate elk hunter. His hunting style is primitive, with a longbow and wooden arrows and no sort of artificial aid, other than camouflage clothing. I’m not anti-hunting, especially as a food source, but if I were, the way he writes about it may change my mind.
Reading this book, for the first time I saw in print many things I have thought in the past, so it really struck a chord with me. I could write all day about this I like it so much, so I’ll stop now before I get long-winded. Lots of quotes to follow:
“What we are, and are not, is largely a product of the choices we make. We only live once, and most of us don’t even do that.”
“To reduce wealth to money and possessions is an incredible underestimation of our emotional life.” -Arne Naess
“The happiness of a man in this life does not consist in the absence but in the mastery of his passions.” -Alfred, Lord Tennyson
“Adventure is mostly a drag when it’s happening.”
“Nature isn’t always pretty, but she darn sure always works.”
“Never take more than not quite enough.”
“Intelligence, it seems to me, is what works best to satisfy a particular creature’s needs in the particular circumstance it must adapt to.”
“Thoughtfulness, in this warped and thoughtless world, too often leads to disappointment, discontent, anger, rage and even psychosis.”
“When I thought about it, it hurt too much. So I quit thinking about it.” -Ed Abbey
“Evolutionary fitness is measured by how well a species, plant or animal, adapts itself to fit, not fight, its environment. In the end, long-term survival and prosperity – for humanity as well as for all species – are products not of force but of finesse.”
“Certainly and tragically, we are well along the doomsday path to collective cultural insanity as a result of divorcing ourselves from the wild world that shaped and continues to nourish and sustain us.”
“To focus and obsess on the negative, emulating the nightly news, is a sinful waste of our demigod intellect and heretical to the blessing of life itself.”
“While we have little control over personal longevity, we have huge control over what we think, say and do while here, and thus how much we enjoy doing it.”