This is my first entry, which explains who I am and what I do. It sets the stage for the essays that follow, all of which are accessible at the HOME page. Naturalists are home bodies, at home in nature and eager to invite guests in. We keep in touch with home, since everywhere we go, we connect with landscape and life. My second blog entry (Cuckoo!) introduces where I live most of the time–in the spectacular Granite Dells in Prescott, Arizona. My third blog entry (Borderlands Musings) begins my connection with the Sky Islands of the US/Mexico borderlands. Check Categories and Tags if you wish to follow the stories in particular places. Please come visit–often.
7/23/11. Friday.
I am a Naturalist
It’s perfectly natural to jump to conclusions when you see that title. No, I do not run around outdoors in the buff (that’s “naturist”). If that disappoints you, then head off to some other blog. I may at times strip away pretensions and speak the naked truth, but that’s as far as it can go here. Well, since evolution’s bottom line is differential reproduction, much of life really is about sex, so I may not be able to resist some titillating tidbits of nature in the raw. Far more worrisome, perhaps, is the fact that I adore word play, so brace yourself for occasional verbal twists and turns, sometimes subtle enough that only the sophisticated will appreciate it and sometimes downright blatant and silly. Without levity, we are left with gravity, and that’s a downer, for sure.
My first book was titled The Sutter Buttes: A Naturalist’s View, and that was a way of expressing in print what I do in the field with people all the time—interpret nature. I now also wear the title of Professor Emeritus of Environmental Studies, but I certainly do more than simply profess about the environment. I live and breathe natural history.
Darwin considered himself a naturalist. E.O. Wilson, one of the finest scientists and writers on the natural world alive today, entitled his autobiography, Naturalist. John Muir was a naturalist. Ann Zwinger’s fine collection of essays is The Nearsighted Naturalist. Robert Michael Pyle, whose eclectic interests range from butterflies to Bigfoot, easily qualifies, as does Harry Greene (author of what I refer to as the “Harry Greene Snake Book,” a delightful image).
I make no claim of filling those famous shoes (despite having extraordinarily large feet), but I am honored to be in that company of like-minded souls. If I had met them, we would have gotten along famously, for our passions for nature and for teaching about how the world works would be our common ground.
David Cavagnaro—extraordinary writer, teacher, photographer, and gardener—wrote the foreword to that first book of mine, and I would like to repeat his words here (Anderson 1983:ix; 2004:xi):
A naturalist, I think, is first a person of the Earth, a shaman really, one who feels as well as sees, one who simply knows with greater breadth and depth than intellect alone can muster. Second, a naturalist is an interpreter, one who can translate the complex language of nature into the vocabulary of the common man, who can reach out to us from the heart of the natural world and lead us in.
Wow, it’s no wonder that I have big feet! They give me an unusual grounding to the Earth. “The language of nature”—that pretty well hits the nail on the head. In some sense, a naturalist is a linguist, using his or her tongue to express apparent truths about nature with the hope that the message will come through loud and clear. For a naturalist is not content simply to mutter to mosses or warble to warblers (those are worthy but insufficient goals). We are compelled in our passion for nature to reach out, as David said, to help others establish connections to and appreciation for nature (and ultimately, to defend the natural world in which we are embedded).
Toward that end, I have developed a personal mission to foster the use of what I call “informed imagination,” a way of seeing that uses all one’s senses.
In the technology-infatuated world that envelopes those of us in “developed” nations, the few naturalists out there might be relegated to being voices “crying in the wilderness” (getting harder to do that all the time). There is genuine concern that children deprived of what used to be commonplace—direct connection with nature—might suffer “nature-deficit disorder” (Louv 2006).
The study of natural history, the practice of a naturalist, is a proven antidote to nature-deficit disorder, and anyone can practice it. As I reach out to those of you who follow my words as a naturalist, I challenge you to take steps in that direction. You don’t have to have fancy degrees to be a naturalist (you do not have to be E. O. Wilson or even Walt Anderson, for that matter). You just have to be attentive to nature and willing to learn.
Is this respectable? I’ll let you decide as you work into this. You should be aware that the recent revival of natural history is a positive counterpoint to some decades of decline in the practice. I wrote a few years ago (Anderson 2006):
There are those who see natural history as an antiquated pursuit by eccentric generalists encumbered with a multitude of fairly unsophisticated tools: a hand lens, pair of binoculars, plant press, butterfly net, and the like. It is often seen as the poor cousin of the science of ecology, which is a quantitative, analytical approach that adheres to the scientific method, that replaces subjectivity with objectivity. Hard science, according to this viewpoint, provides the ecologist with detachment from human biases, hence credibility as a resource for those making management decisions. Though natural history may be recognized as the foundation of the science of ecology, more and more institutions of higher learning are relegating it to the footnotes of history, giving conservation biologists like Reed Noss plenty of reason for concern about the future of the field.
I followed that with a much more positive and uplifting message about the growing recognition of natural history as important, not only to science and conservation, but also to our psyches. One of the reasons that I loved teaching at Prescott College (“For the liberal arts, the environment, and social justice”), apart from the amazing, curious and caring students, is the fact that natural history is embraced and supported. I’ll tell you more about this in future entries, I suspect.
If you’ve read this far, you have the patience to be a naturalist. I hope that my occasional musings in this blog will inform and/or inspire—and encourage you to get out there.
I’ll quote myself once more in this introduction (I promise that won’t become a habit):
A naturalist is motivated by joy and by love: joy in the search for understanding, love for the living world within which he or she is connected. Those kinds of personal connections deny the myth of objective detachment, but they also increase the responsibility of the naturalist to be true to nature, to interpret with the greatest possible fidelity to the way that things actually work. That is at the heart of ecological literacy.
References:
It may be unusual to list citations in a blog, but I do hope that you do not strictly limit yourself to staring at a computer screen. There is something sensuous and real about a book that you can throw into your pack and take out on the trail (OK, I guess you can do that with Kindle or other reading devices now). Still, a book has paper, which is just one step (albeit industrial) away from trees, and if you are out on the trail, you can give personal thanks to our woody friends for their literary sacrifices. In any case, no matter where or how you find the words from the references I cite, you should recognize the authors who take the trouble to write for your benefit (there is rarely much or any monetary benefit to the author, with JK Rowling and Stephen King being enormous exceptions). That’s particularly true of naturalists who write, for they could just as well be immersed in keying out plants, stalking rare birds, sniffing flowers, hugging trees, and tasting chokecherries. All right, I’m hitting the trail now.
Anderson, Walt. 1983. The Sutter Buttes: a Naturalist’s View. Chico (CA): The Natural Selection.
Anderson, Walt. 2004. Inland Island: the Sutter Buttes. Prescott (AZ): The Natural Selection and Live Oak (CA): Middle Mountain Foundation.
Anderson, Walt. 2006. Informed imagination: A naturalist’s way of seeing. Pp. 1-10 in R. Dean Johnson, ed. Teachable Moments: Essays on Experiential Education. University Press of America.
Louv, Richard. 2006. Last Child in the Woods: Saving our Children from Nature-deficit Disorder. Chapel Hill (NC): Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill.
Wilson, Edward O.1994. Naturalist. Washington (DC): Island Press.
Zwinger, Ann Haymond. 1998. The Nearsighted Naturalist. Tucson: University of Arizona Press.
© Walt Anderson and Geolobo, 2011. Minor revisions May 2024.
Hi Walt! It was so nice to meet you at the colloquium last week. Thanks for passing along your blog link…these essays are wonderfully written and funny too!
Thanks, Laura. I too enjoyed meeting you, and I hope your studies go splendidly. I hope you’ll check in on the blog now & then, as I have some more essays about ready to post.
Walt with all of the letters after your name. I was a Kindergarten teacher for 16 years and I lived. I may teach you something. While on “vaction” in Mercury, NV at the test site. I found a rock that had a circle around it. A Native man told me I must keep it. I asked him why and he said the circle means the next time I go to that place I will have come full circle. I now collect rocks from places I go to with circles around them. I wsh I could have gone to the places you have been. Next time you go someplace really cool find a rock with a circle around it and see if your better the next time you go there. You never stop learning.
That’s fascinating, Catherine. The Sutter Buttes, of course, is a circular mountain range that resembles a medieval castle with a moat and rampart concentric around the interior “castles.” It is indeed a place that I will keep returning to. I now live in Granite Dells in Prescott, Arizona. The rocks in the Dells often have Liesegang Rings, circular or oval patterns. I tried to inset an image here, but it wouldn’t take. Anyway, these rings now call me home, and I feel like I have found the prefect place for me to spend the rest of my life.
Walt, my husband wants to talk with about the Butes and the people who came from there. He had a good old friend called Calvertt McPhairrin. I nice Irish name I know I have mispelled. He still buys his firewood from Jim Tarke. He rides motorcylcles with the Steimeyers. I’m a Moran and I have messed up all the Irish names. I’m sleepy.
Hi, again. I know the McPherrins, Tarkes, and Steidlmayers from my days in the Buttes.
Good report and commentary on the Granite fires, Walt, as with your earlier coverage of the fires in the Chiricahua.
Question: Are the hawks that fly around Willow Lake with a white stripe on top of the tail Marsh Hawks? Do they have similar markings underneath or are their tails mostly brown (or am I describing two different hawks from the area)?
Hi, Fred. What used to be called the Marsh Hawk is now referred to as the Northern Harrier to put it in line with names of related species worldwide. Yes, they are common around the lake and do have white rumps. The males are mostly silver-gray, and the females are brown. The white patch is above the tail, but the Cooper’s Hawk, which flies with faster wingbeats and has a different shape, can show some fluffy white feathers below the rump. Check out those two species in a good bird field guide, such as by Sibley.
Hi Walt
You probably don’t remember me but I went to East Africa with you back in 1988. A trip I will always remember well for your fascinating knowledge and teachings of the natural world we were visiting. First, thank you for that extraordinary experience. Second, do you continue to take small groups on ecotours, if so can I be on your email list. I would love to travel with you again.
Renee Aufort
Hi, Renee. Yes, I do still lead trips occasionally, most recently last year to Tanzania in July. Have had other trips in recent years to as far away as Antarctica (including the Falklands Islands, So. Georgia Island, etc.). I have to have an Africa fix every few years, so please stay in touch, as I am sure I will line up something when I have time to think about it. Would be great to have you along!
Hello, Walt, it’s been awhile since we last chatted. I finally finished my novel to be published next year at Stormbird Press. You’d like Stormbird, which publishes nature, wildlife, environment and everything in-between. My book uses eco-epigraphs for each chapter and I’m hoping to use one from you and one from your buddy Craig Childs near the end of my story. Please reply and I’ll provide more detail off-line. Many thanks! Robert
I believe it was Woody Guthrie who said & sang THIS LAND WAS MADE FOR YOU & ME.
It clearly was made for you, Walt. What you know & impart to others on your trek is beyond most people’s comprehension -for land is intricate & intimate if you step in or* on it. You blog is fascinating, your photos seem so real…how about
A REEL, a book, a blog,
YOURS – THANK YOU FOR SHARING. 7/22/20
Thanks, Ruth. I had fun writing these essays. Perhaps they will fit into a book sometime along with new material, perhaps even paintings and drawings.