|







|
Become a friend of
the Klamath Bucket
Brigade
Send
Donations Here
All donations are tax
deductible
|
|
This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
10, 1921 - June 17, 2005
|
|
|
Environmental
huddle riles
Modoc
County
locals
Kevin
Fagan, Chronicle Staff Writer
June 3, 2008
Pasted into that mountainous northeastern corner of forestland and high
desert where California rubs both Nevada and Oregon, Modoc County is a
proudly rugged backwater that defines what's left of the frontier way.
Locals describe it as: "Where the pavement ends, and the West
begins." Not much room for hippies, beatniks and environmental city
slickers here.
But that's just who the cowboys and small-town folks say will be
invading come Thursday.
They're not happy about it.
A four-day "Common Ground" symposium begins that day in
Modoc
County
's bucolic
Surprise
Valley
, and it will present a
panel of prestigious writers and scientists to discuss how to more
wisely use the area's natural resources. To most ecologically minded
city folks, the speakers that include Pulitzer Prize-winning Beat-era
poet Gary Snyder and maverick Berkeley book publisher Malcolm Margolin
would be positively exciting - as would the sessions such as
"Honoring the Land and the People On It," and "Western
Water Crisis."
Not to the muddy-booted, Stetson-wearing crowd, they're not.
"The days of lighting a longhair's hair on fire have passed, but
I'm not sure we need outsiders coming here and telling us how to change
things," said Ray Page, president of the Modoc County Cattlemen's
Association. "We're kind of a close-knit community out here.
"We have our own ways."
He said he doesn't mind anyone having a talk-fest in Modoc, where the
decline of the cattle and timber industry has made it a "tough
place to make a living." But if it's going to be relevant, he said,
it should spotlight locals, who know land preservation, cattle grazing
and water use better than anyone.
What's going on instead this week, Page wrote in a widely circulated
letter to the
county
Board
of Supervisors, is a
gathering of "out-of-town folks, zealous environmental types who
will pay big bucks to come and listen to ideas from other out-of-town,
disingenuous, environmentally oriented experts."
The supervisors responded by refusing to support the symposium - so
adamantly that one, Patricia Cantrall, likened the city-versus-country
ideological fight to the
Battle
of the
Alamo
.
Newspaperman Ray March, organizer of the symposium, says lecturing
country folks on how to change their ways is the furthest thing from his
mind.
He moved to Modoc from
Big Sur
five years ago to start the monthly Modoc Independent News.
Shortly after hitting town, he founded the Modoc Forum in an effort to
pitch in for the place he now calls home. The forum holds seminars to
discuss writing and Western life issues - and this "Common
Ground" symposium is the latest and biggest, with about 300
attendees expected.
"We're not saying the way they do things here is wrong, we're just
attempting to discuss ideas that might work for people in the
future," said March, who wrote golf books before lighting out for
the far-north-state country. "It's a dialogue we're after."
A lot of the spat, he reckons, is an outgrowth of the increasing clash
of local country folk in the Sierra and city folk lured to the sticks by
the serenity and cheaper real estate. He's enlisted moral backing from
several area leaders, including the federal Bureau of Land Management,
but the down-home crowd has been unswayed.
"The best way to kill a small town is to shut off its air supply
from outside ideas," March said. "We're just trying to
help."
He does acknowledge that the images of Snyder and Margolin, prestigious
as they and the other speakers are, might be a barrier for selling the
symposium.
For instance, Snyder first carved his notch in history as one of the
core San Francisco Beat writers of the 1950s. He not only lived with
Jack Kerouac, but inspired the Japhy Ryder character in Kerouac's novel
"The Dharma Bums." Many of his poems are ecological odes, and
on the symposium program, he writes, "Find your place on the
planet."
And then there is Margolin, a self-described "aging hippie." A
frizzy, gray beard spills to his chest, and he got his start by writing
1974's "The Earth Manual" about nature programs.
Not exactly the profiles of a couple of guys you'd hire to buck hay,
which is what a lot of locals will be doing this month, this being
hay-bucking season in Modoc. But there's more to these men - and to the
rest of the speakers.
UC Davis professor emeritus Snyder is a former logger, lives on a spread
of Sierra foothill forestland, and is considered one of the West's
leading experts on wildland use. Margolin's books so completely cover
the culture and character of the West, from tribal history to frontier
development, that retired State Librarian Kevin Starr once described him
as "a power larger than life, a savant."
UC Davis professor emeritus Eldridge Moores, another speaker, is one of
the top geologists in
America
. And speaker Darryl Babe
Wilson of San Jose is a California Pit River tribal member frequently
sought as an expert on Native American culture.
"Someone here googled Gary Snyder, saw he'd been in
Berkeley
, and assumed he must be a
radical," March said. "That's the way a lot of them made up
their minds. Wait till they see Malcolm."
The debate over outsiders chewing the grass with locals has filled the
coffee shops and saloons for months. Some thought Modoc Forum was
audacious for seeking funding - unsuccessfully - from the Sierra Nevada
Conservancy. Some thought locals should be charged the $429 fee like
everyone else. Others thought the forum's letting locals attend panels
for free was right neighborly.
Everyone gets a chuckle, even if it is rueful, at the concept of true
beatniks and hippies rolling into town. Even if they are ex-beatniks and
hippies. And that goes for the beatniks and hippies themselves.
"I don't think they know I'm more like them than they could
expect," Snyder said. "They don't like outsiders like me
coming in and suggesting things like how they can preserve their land,
and I can appreciate that. I figure I will just be having a good
discussion."
E-mail Kevin Fagan at kfagan@sfchronicle.com.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/06/02/BASS110MEV.DTL
|