Lisa’s Reviews > Rhythm of the Wild: A Life Inspired by Alaska's Denali National Park > Status Update
Lisa
is on page 82 of 256
An hour after birth, a caribou calf can follow its mother. In one day it can outrun a human. If still alive and in good condition after one month, it's considered safe from wolves. In its first two weeks it will double its birth weight and be ready to swim powerful rivers.
— Aug 11, 2025 11:18PM
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Lisa’s Previous Updates
Lisa
is on page 227 of 256
[There is] a fundamental conflict in national park management: that efforts to perpetuate natural conditions would have to be forever reconciled with the presence o large numbers of people.
— Aug 22, 2025 02:01PM
Lisa
is on page 218 of 256
We cannot come to terms with nature without coming to terms with our own work.
Greatly paraphrased - Both sides of this issue need to be taken into account for us to live side by side with nature. Perhaps this is the definition of environmentalism?
— Aug 22, 2025 03:34AM
Greatly paraphrased - Both sides of this issue need to be taken into account for us to live side by side with nature. Perhaps this is the definition of environmentalism?
Lisa
is on page 211 of 256
Sometimes it's overwhelming, all the serious problems in the world, the magnitude is so huge.
Try this. Fall in love every day. Fall in love with a friend, a flower, a cloud, a novel, a poem, an idea, a song. Fall in love with words, with life. Open your heart to the beauty around you every day.
— Aug 22, 2025 03:27AM
Try this. Fall in love every day. Fall in love with a friend, a flower, a cloud, a novel, a poem, an idea, a song. Fall in love with words, with life. Open your heart to the beauty around you every day.
Lisa
is on page 208 of 256
In 1929, President Hoover's Committee on Recent Economic Changes observed that the biggest challenge facing growth in America was the frugality of most Americans. Industrialists worried production would become so efficient it would soon turn out goods at a pace far greater than people's desire to have them. Their solution - create a culture that shifted from fulfilling basic human needs to creating new ones.
— Aug 19, 2025 08:52AM
Lisa
is on page 202 of 256
Some Alaskans still regard their national parks as being 'locked up.' They're not. They're locked open. Come on in. Learn to share. Be young again. Climb a mountain, run a river, sleep on the ground. Why? To reset your clock, repair your heart, rediscover what's real: the earth, your home, not a bad place to be.
— Aug 17, 2025 06:54AM
Lisa
is on page 183 of 256
learning was once through . . . , and story . . . the stories told in the warm light of a fire, the speaker and listeners gathered under the skins and furs of the animals they hunted and admired. In the arc of human history, this fire burned--and these listeners lived--only yesterday. Their stories, like treasured books today, were honored and passed down from generation to generation, made divine in their precision.
— Aug 16, 2025 08:50AM
Lisa
is on page 173 of 256
The land in made of stories. They color and texture everything.
— Aug 13, 2025 10:02PM
Lisa
is on page 150 of 256
I know now that love and companionship bring me my greatest joy, while open space and music make anything seem possible.
— Aug 12, 2025 07:00AM
Lisa
is on page 75 of 256
We spend thousands of hours tidying our houses and tending our lawns while in the wilderness everything is right where it belongs; no raptor is too high or flowers too low, no river is out of place or mountain ill-designed, no stone is too angular or round. Nobody complains of leaves unraked, trees unpruned, grasses uncut. Everything is in order, and not always convenient.
— Aug 11, 2025 07:18AM

