Study Resources :: The Environmental Movement

Evolution of Conservation Movement in the United States of America

Significant Authors:

Add your suggestions  — other authors whose writings have shaped the conservation movement in the United States.  Use  the comments area on this posting to share information.
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Websites for Travel Writers

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Places to Publish Your Nature Writing

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The Deerstalker

The Deerstalker

© L. Peat O’Neil 2009
Flipping through a hook and bullet magazine while collecting articles for my nature writing students, I learned that hunters should wear bright pink.  Shocking pink is invisible to deer, yet easily distinguished by humans forging through winter woods. Will he-men with guns wear hot pink?  
I’ve shadowed deer in genuine wilderness and protected pseudo-wilderness,   “Quasi” because if a human can get there easily, it’s not true wilderness.   
Mostly, the deer I stalk live in and around their own gated communities  — semi-suburban enclaves, parks, state controlled nature areas.  The deer are my neighbors, live closer to me than some of my siblings.  I know where the deer hide in regional parks and preserves, but that’s not saying much, since they parade with ease along highways, across lawns for gourmet ornamental shrubbery, and into town for brief celebrity in local news rags.  You’ve seen the photos when a deer leaps through a store-front window, spooked by its own reflection.
When I am in their territory, I follow the paths graven by their hoof marks or marked with scat.  Deer paths emerge as a distinct line of scuttled leaves in the ground cover of fall and winter, a muddy track in spring, or flattened grass in summer.  Nearly every walk along their byways, I’ll see the twitching white plume of a tail. I’ve seen leaping solitary bucks, herds of doe that nuzzle their young and lie close. Near an erratic outcropping of rock at the end of a shuffled leaf trail, the moss is upturned. I wonder do they have enough to eat?
As the skeins of forest thin and break at the hands of developers, the deer hew to tightly plaited paths where they can no longer roam widely.  The deer paths demonstrate an intelligence and instinct.  Within hailing distance of convenience stores, ramblers, schools and skating rinks, the deer-ways curve with the land using topography or fallen trees for cover. 
When deer are wild in the woods, they retain the shroud of mystery; when they are common as pigeons or rats, they lose their immunity lodged in beauty. 
Is there an answer for the crowded suburban deer who live along your backyard fence?  More state sponsored deer-kill seasons with volunteer hunters dressed in pink?  
White-tailed deer, Odocoileus virginianus, with their vulnerable Audrey Hepburn eyes, turn your heart when you see them shadowed on a lawn or poised to leap a roadside barrier.  But to a homeowner or driver, they signal disaster, even death. Deer darting across country byways cause crashes.  My mother’s Hosta collection were midnight snacking grounds for the deer until she moved all the plants to a fenced garden.
The deer have a four million year history, got along just fine with the indigenous residents and our immigrant forebears. When did enough room to roam become nowhere at all?
I know deer are losing their fear of humans. I don’t need to wear pink to be invisible.  They’re used to my scent.  The foals are complacent, stand and stare back, their only display of authority to strut in place with their white tails at half-mast.  
With deer living in parks, fool-‘em strips of trees along the highways and suburban vest-pockets woods, they’ve become semi-domestic fixtures, like goats or dogs.  They live with squirrels and ground hogs and opossum.  And die like them too, as road-kill.  A neighbor butchers fresh deer killed by motorists and gives it to the food bank for poor folks.
Is it heretical to think we need more deer hunters? Somebody needs to thin the herds that have resulted from rapacious outer suburban development. I’ve never hunted, but lately, I’ve been thinking of learning how to shoot.  I’d look great in hot pink hunting cammis.

~~~
Portions of this blog post were published in a longer essay on the subject in Potomac Review, Summer 2001, Number 31.
                                                                                      
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Travel Writer’s Organizations

Explorers Club

Organizations for Travel Writers and Outdoors Journalists

 
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Books for Writers

Books for Freelance Writers
 by L. Peat O’Neil
Freelance writers are lucky today.   Look at the rows of books on writing, creative process, marketing and publishing. Consider the wealth of material for writers on websites like MatadorNetwork,  WebDelSol or Travelwriters.com.
We have books by Natalie Goldberg, Stephen King, Anne Lamott and Julia Cameron that  urge prospective writers to try their wings.  Writer’s support magazines and websites supplement the how-to-write books issued every year. I’ve written one myself, on travel writing.
There wasn’t such an array of books for writers when I started freelancing back in the 1980s.  You wrote your piece, checked Writer’s Market for a likely periodical, sent a query or the manuscript out and crossed your fingers or chewed your nails.  Targeting a magazine and honing style and length for a particular market were evolving concepts for freelancers.
I suppose we still hurl our work and ideas into the unknown, but the process is faster now. And there’s certainly lots more information available to help a freelancer with online options and digital publishing.

Get Out of Your Own Way

I also like Get Out of Your Own Way for guidance on conquering procrastination and perfection obsessions.

During the years I’ve been writing on a freelance basis, I’ve often turned to books for help with the mechanics and for inspiration.  Early on, I found a copy of Freelance Forever: Successful Self-Employment, by Marietta Whittlesey, Avon Books, 1982.  The title was reassuring; this freelance writing experiment could pan out.  Other people did it–forever. Some information is dated (tax and insurance advice) and the internet was just a gleam in the Pentagon’s eye when the books was written.  There are useful tips for setting up a workspace, securing contracts or collecting debts. Whittlesey’s common sense advice for nurturing the psyche while working alone resonates with any freelancer.
Another  guide for writers that I’ve read and underlined is The Independent Scholar’s Handbook, by Ronald Gross, Addison-Wesley Publishing, 1983. It presents enduring information on how to navigate the fiords of academe.
The issue of a writer’s time is always sensitive. Now that I hold a day job helping diplomats with social media, blogging and writing a wiki, my freelance work gets less time.  I still teach writing workshops a few times each year.  Allocating private time for writing is my most difficult assignment. Other freelance writers tell similar stories.  Friends rarely understand that we’d rather be actively researching a project than going to movie or some other spectator event. A writer’s work hours occasionally defy circadian rhythms, which can annoy housemates.
 A Writer’s Time: Making the Time to Write by Kenneth John Atchity, W. W. Norton, 1995 (revised ed.) taught me that a writer can be working anytime, anywhere.  When you are thinking about your subject–fiction or non-fiction, you are instructing the subconscious, laying down scenes and phrases that will dart from your fingers to the screen or notepad the next time you have a moment to set down words.
Most writers need assistance with style and grammar. I steer towards handbooks that will entertain me as I improve my spelling and rhetoric.  You may open a copy of Usage and Abusage by Eric Partridge, Penguin Books,  1963 with a smirk — the title suggests arcane bondage techniques–but this always amusing reference book proffers clever definitions of linguistics that will gloss your writing with a patina of British diction.  Here you can learn that a group of leopards is a leap and “teeming with” is incorrect for “rich in.” Seven entries for “like” suggest to me the prevalence of that word in the unconsidered speech of the young or illiterate is not unique to our times, because the book was first published in 1947.
I regularly revisit the silky prose in William Zinsser’s On Writing Well   and William Strunk and E. B. White’s The Elements of Style.  Other useful technical no-nonsense texts include a Thesaurus, the OED, several foreign language and specialty dictionaries, the Associated Press Style Book, Chicago Manual of Style and the Prentice Hall Handbook for Writers.
After organizing an office, nailing down a contract, marking off time, and checking your grammar, what’s left but inspiration.  I dip into a writer’s diary or a collection of an author’s letters to remind myself that writing has never been easy and creative people must forever nurture themselves and each other.
Self-direction, the essence of the freelancing life, invites constant renewal.
Insightful books for psychological motivation include:
*Zen in the Art of Writing by Ray Bradbury,  Capra Press, 1990
*Letters From the Earth, Mark Twain, Fawcett Crest, 1942
*If You Want to Write: A Book about Art, Independence and Spirit by Brenda Ueland, Graywolf Press, 1987
*Women & Writing, Virginia Woolf, The Women’s Press, 1979
*Reading and Writing, Robertson Davies, Univ. of Utah Press, 1992
*The Art of Fiction: Notes on Craft for Young Writers, by John Gardner, 1983
Resources
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Contest :: Identify the location of the banner photograph

Hint:  it’s a lake on an island in the Southern Hemisphere.

Send your guess to the comments for this posting.

Prize will be a travel book.

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Volunteer As You Travel

Volunteer Programs/Goodwill Ambassadors

How to Live Your Dream of Volunteering Overseas By Joseph Collins, Stefano DeZerega, and Zahara Heckscher.  Penguin Books.

This book is the ultimate reference source for anyone considering an international volunteer experience.

More resources:

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Hitchhiker’s Guide to Earth

Hitchhiker’s Guide to Earth
–getting started–

I recently heard about a project initiated by Everett Pompeii — a college student currently studying in Japan.

In his words:
 “The more people you inspire to get out there, the better off the world is (in my view, anyway). Before we get too far, a bit about me. I’m a college student from the US, but I’m studying abroad in Japan. On the way here, I backpacked and hitchhiked through most of Australia, New Zealand, and the US’s East Coast. I’m currently working on a how-to manual specifically for travelers like me; it’s called The Hitchhiker’s Guide to: Earth. The project is on a crowd-sourcing website called Kickstarter, and it runs until June 29th, 7:00 PM EST.”
Everett asked me for advice and seems like a blog post might help spread word about his project.  Does he know I have about 20 different blogs? Have a look at his travel blog to learn more about this enterprising nomad’s paths.
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AdventureTravelWriter.com

Welcome to AdventureTravelWriter.com  We’re now AdventureTravelWriter.org

Still dedicated to helping writers reach their goal to be professional travel writers.  Still providing information for new travel writers and published freelancers.  Still teaching travel journalism.

Founded in 1999 by Washington Post journalist L Peat O’Neil, AdventureTravelWriter took a break during an apex of social media effort while O’Neil created blogs and wikis for the US Department of State’s Office of eDiplomacy.

Resources:

http://www.peatoneil.com

http://www.francefootsteps.com

http://pyreneespilgrimage.com

http://adventuretravelwriting.wordpress.com

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