#07 A GOOD BOOK
+ Having grown up in Nebraska, I didn't have much exposure to fire lookout towers until a family vacation took us to the top of Harney Peak in the Black Hills of South Dakota. On the summit, there is a Civilian Conservation Corps era stone lookout tower reminiscent of a mountaintop fortress. Since then I've always associated fire lookouts with an inaccessible romantic past, but did you know you can still get a job as one? In Fire Season: Field Notes from a Wilderness Lookout Philip Connors recounts his varied experiences as a modern-day fire lookout in the Gila Wilderness of New Mexico. From unexpected run-ins with bears, occasional visits from through-hikers, and the ever-exciting lightning storm, it turns out the solitary life of a fire lookout isn't quite as boring as one might think! On a deeper level though, Connors reflects on how fire has shaped, scarred and renewed the landscape for generations and how a bit more time in nature may be better for all of us.
To be solitary in such a place and such a way is not to be alone. Instead one feels a certain kind of dignity. There are their lookouts on other peaks in the same forest with stunning stretches of country beneath them... but none of them quite like mine. Dignity and singularity: these are among the blessings of solitude in a high place.
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