Monday, October 26, 2009
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Wednesday, October 14, 2009
Monday, October 12, 2009
The Good Rain - Study Questions - sample student responses
I wanted to give you an opportunity to see responses to the study questions for the introduction to The Good Rain from classmates. This should give you a sense of what is being asked of your for these assignments:
1. Why does the river seem like a "logical last home" for Egan's grandfather's remains?
The river seems like a logical last home for Egan's grandfather's remains because he was a fisherman in the area and Egan thought it made sense to return him to the place that he loved. He compares his grandfather to the salmon in the river and how they die at the same place they are born. He wants his grandfather to have that "full-circle" experience.
2. How has the landscape around Seattle changed since Egan's grandfather was young?
It is "covered with Boeing barns stuffed with generic 737s and 757s." Every bit of terrain his grandpa used to trek, by the time of his death was all "freeways and cul-de-sacs."
3. Why were Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir considered "the twin demons of turn-of-the-century timber barons"?
At the time they met in 1903, Roosevelt was President of the United States and a well-known outdoorsman with a penchant for big game hunting. John Muir was the founder of the Sierra Club and champion of National Parks (most famously to his credit, Yosemite and Mt. Rainier). Both men were conservationists, and Roosevelt's national policies to protect certain parts of the wilderness were a direct affront to the timber and mining industries who wanted to exploit these resources.
4. What do you think Egan means when he writes, "We are not that removed--yet--from the arms of the land"?
We haven't conquered the elements. They still rule our behavior. Our roads follow rivers and our cities are built near water. We still need nature.
5. Who was Theodore Winthrop, and why is there a glacier on Mt. Rainier named after him?
Winthrop adventured in the Northwest in the 19th century and wrote a book about his travels, The Canoe and the Saddle. He was Egan's inspiration for The Good Rain.
6. "The regional icons--salmon and trees and mountains and water--spring from the elements. If people here become too far removed from those basic sources of life, then they lose the bond to a better world." Do you agree with Egan's statement? Why or why not?
A lot of what Egan says about nature echoes the teachings of John Muir. While Egan certainly doesn't share Muir's religious fervor and zeal0try, he speaks from a similar spiritual place. We need to remain connected to nature. Such a bond enriches our lives, changes our perspective, and makes us realize that there are bigger things than those created by human beings. Nature is the place where we go to be lonely, whether that is through communion with the land or becoming enveloped in the quiet solitude of the trees. Place is important.
1. Why does the river seem like a "logical last home" for Egan's grandfather's remains?
The river seems like a logical last home for Egan's grandfather's remains because he was a fisherman in the area and Egan thought it made sense to return him to the place that he loved. He compares his grandfather to the salmon in the river and how they die at the same place they are born. He wants his grandfather to have that "full-circle" experience.
2. How has the landscape around Seattle changed since Egan's grandfather was young?
It is "covered with Boeing barns stuffed with generic 737s and 757s." Every bit of terrain his grandpa used to trek, by the time of his death was all "freeways and cul-de-sacs."
3. Why were Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir considered "the twin demons of turn-of-the-century timber barons"?
At the time they met in 1903, Roosevelt was President of the United States and a well-known outdoorsman with a penchant for big game hunting. John Muir was the founder of the Sierra Club and champion of National Parks (most famously to his credit, Yosemite and Mt. Rainier). Both men were conservationists, and Roosevelt's national policies to protect certain parts of the wilderness were a direct affront to the timber and mining industries who wanted to exploit these resources.
4. What do you think Egan means when he writes, "We are not that removed--yet--from the arms of the land"?
We haven't conquered the elements. They still rule our behavior. Our roads follow rivers and our cities are built near water. We still need nature.
5. Who was Theodore Winthrop, and why is there a glacier on Mt. Rainier named after him?
Winthrop adventured in the Northwest in the 19th century and wrote a book about his travels, The Canoe and the Saddle. He was Egan's inspiration for The Good Rain.
6. "The regional icons--salmon and trees and mountains and water--spring from the elements. If people here become too far removed from those basic sources of life, then they lose the bond to a better world." Do you agree with Egan's statement? Why or why not?
A lot of what Egan says about nature echoes the teachings of John Muir. While Egan certainly doesn't share Muir's religious fervor and zeal0try, he speaks from a similar spiritual place. We need to remain connected to nature. Such a bond enriches our lives, changes our perspective, and makes us realize that there are bigger things than those created by human beings. Nature is the place where we go to be lonely, whether that is through communion with the land or becoming enveloped in the quiet solitude of the trees. Place is important.
Saturday, October 10, 2009
Extra book
So i got an extra copy of The good rain, i'll bring it to class on monday if anyone needs to borrow it.
Friday, October 9, 2009
Columbia River and Cape Disappointment
This is the Cape Disappointment light house
( http://www.funbeach.com/attractions/lighthouse.html - a bit of history on the light house)
Here you can see the many log posts that kept the canneries afloat and the lush rainforest. A few winters ago a rock was lifted and pulled out by the river. Now has a tree growing on it and when the tide is high its a little island.
This is a makeshift bridge in the rainforest that we use to get to the river from the house.
This is the last stretch of the Columbia River before Astoria and the Ocean
Wednesday, October 7, 2009
A useful resource . . .
Check this out for local news and highly opinionated opinion: http://crosscut.com/
Sunday, October 4, 2009
A map of major shipwrecks at the mouth of the Columbia River
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Welcome!
Welcome to The Lure of the Local, Fall 2009. Please make use of this space to track course activities and assignments, share observations, ask questions, and post photos from field study.