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"Three
humpbacks slide through the water of an unnamed bay in Chatam Strait.
Forty feet long and weighing nearly 40 tons, they move as gracefully as
curved light in the water, their slick backs rising and falling like dark
wing beats until finally they show their tails and dive. Alaska begins
here, in the flick of a whale's tail sending a spray of water high into
the air, a spray that falls like raindrops back into the sea."
National
Geographic Books, 2001
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"From
somewhere out in the darkness of Duncan Bay a loon calls, a low sound
shaped like the moon rising. It is early and still, and the call echoes
among the shadows pooled along the shoreline. A string of stars is still
tangled in the branches low along the horizon but already the night is
beginning to fade
Suddenly the sun lifts out of the water dripping
with light. The shadows move back in among the trees, and what is left
of the night shatters. It is morning on Isle Royale. I lift my paddle
once, sliding it silently through the dark water to turn my canoe toward
the sunrise, and then drift quietly, listening again for the loon."
Isle
Royale Natural History Association, 1989
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"[The]
endless sun fuels the burst of life which defines summer in the far North.
The Arctic is often unfairly depicted as bleak - lifeless and barren.
It is an old joke: hold up a blank white piece of paper and call it a
picture of the Arctic. But summer in the Arctic is a symphony of life.
Clouds of insects drift on the breeze like smoke. The tundra vibrates
with birdsong; patches of fireweed and cotton grass seem to bloom before
your eyes. Whole hillsides resound with the chatter of ground squirrels.
It is a frenzy. It has to be; soon it will be gone."
National
Geographic Books, 1995
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"This
was no myth. The bear had been there just moments before the bow of our
canoes rounded the bend in the high Arctic river and scraped to a stop
on the small spit of beach. In the thick air of a three-day rain we formed
a circle around the fresh tracks. Lines were sharp; the edges unbroken;
the long claw marks intact even in the rain. Bear tracks."
Roberts
Rinehart/Alaska Natural History Association, 1987
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"The
sight of a black bear in the wild draws the eye like lightning. It ripples
the air with excitement. Seeing a bear, even along a familiar trail, turns
the woods to a different place. Each cracking twig, each movement of shadow,
carries with it the possibility of a bear
The landscape is suddenly
alive."
Great
Smoky Mountains Natural History Association, 1991
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"Wild
rivers are more than just pathways of water from here to there. They are
as much pathways into ourselves. There is no rushing a river. When you
go there, you go at the pace of the water and that pace ties you into
a flow that is older than life on this planet. Acceptance of that pace,
even for a day, changes us, reminds us of other rhythms beyond the sound
of our own heartbeats."
Fulcrum,
1988
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"Wildlife
is the heartbeat of the land. The sight of deer grazing in a high meadow,
a red-tailed hawk circling in the sky, or a set of coyote tracks stretching
across the snow can make the Colorado landscape come to life. It is the
bighorn sheep and the ptarmigan that make the high country more than just
rock and ice. It is the cloud of dust behind a running herd of pronghorns
that makes the prairie more than empty horizons. And it is the song of
the canyon wren that makes the canyons more than silent walls."
Falcon
Press, 1990
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"Once,
in a shack on a roadside near a river in the southwest corner of the state,
I watched a Navajo woman, her eyes the color of worked copper, weaving
a tapestry of a river. With thick wool threads of silver, black, gold,
and a shade of green like young willow leaves, her hands drummed a rhythm
like wingbeats and on the loom appeared a river - slivers of light under
a rising moon
The old woman called her tapestry "Shining Waters"
and when I asked how soon it would be done she shook her head slowly.
"Soon," she said, "and never." The story of the rivers
of Colorado is like that too."
Falcon
Press, 1985
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"These
are the mountains of Colorado, the weavers of weather, the makers of myth.
Here some dig for riches like gold or silver. Others come to look, climb,
or just sit, gathering a more lasting treasure. Peaks become cornerstones,
landmarks in a personal landscape for those who live in these mountains.
And for those who visit, the memory of an ice-gray peak gone gold with
sunset becomes a memory as lasting as stone."
Falcon
Press, 1987
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©
2002 - all material copyrighted by Jeff Rennicke
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