Stewardship — caring for the land and restoring it — gives us the chance to reconnect with ourselves and our place in the world

 

 

 
Editor's Note

Winter 2001

Debra Shore, Editor

Looking in Both Directions

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Photo of Sonia Pollock with snowman

Photo by Mike MacDonald.


o be human is to want to make things, to construct and build, to shape and mold. We do this with sand and snow for play. "Look, Mom," says young Sonia Pollock in the photo here, "look what I’ve made." We do this with homes and schools, churches and entire landscapes for human society. The history of our efforts is writ large upon the land, how we have sculpted from wild places the shape of our hopes and dreams, our farms and cities.

But equally human with our passion to build is a yearning for knowledge, beauty, and excellence. We are a curious and imaginative species, endlessly inventive, sometimes irresponsible, sometimes even wise. The humbling lessons we have learned in the century just ended are that we do not, despite our cleverness, know all. We have learned that changing the land is not always right, or good. We have learned that changing the land can mean losing our selves and our place in the world.

This issue is full of good news, small and large. The story of the born-again river in McHenry County shows that we, as groups of people working together, can make amends, can re-shape the landscape to provide better habitat for scores of species — and better places for humans to enjoy. The poem by Mona van Duyn illustrates the transforming power of the world outside our windows. And Ed Collins’s search for Dr. Vasey demonstrates in moving fashion the transforming power of curiosity.

Ed’s search for Dr. Vasey, a 19th century physician and botanist who arrived in McHenry County in 1848 and settled at Ringwood, spanned two continents and took him to the archives of numerous universities. Ed found a plant species list for McHenry County in the Asa Gray herbarium at Harvard. He also tried the Internet. Typing in "Vasey" to conduct a search, Ed found a "very famous George Vasey who was an Australian general in World War II." Ha. Wrong turn.

Gradually Ed found the real Dr. Vasey. "There’s a very poignant letter written in 1863 before Vasey learned that his younger brother, who was in the Union Army, had been killed in the battle of Fredericksburg," Ed recalls. "It’s like looking through a lace curtain, or a shade on a window — it’s misty and veiled but you can see the shapes of the past. Vasey arrived in Ringwood eight years after the invention of the plow, so there was very little ground that had been plowed then. The prairies and barrens were still original. He lived in the twilight of the prairie wilderness. To read his letters is to see that world through the eyes of a 28 year-old botanist who’s in love with plants."

To read the story of Ed’s search for Dr. Vasey is to see the world through the eyes of a passionate and hungry sleuth, to celebrate with him the joys of discovery. But Ed is also the kind of historian who’s looking for the future, here in the Middle West, by shuffling mussels, ungirdling rivers, planting the seeds of ancient plants along the sides of modern streams. "We’ve learned how to take things apart and reduce them to the smallest piece, but when we do, we lose how they’re connected and it leaves us, in the end, empty," Ed says. Stewardship — caring for the land and restoring it — gives us that chance, he says, to be re-connected. To be a part, not apart.

Chicago Wilderness offers all of us this priceless opportunity to re-connect our semi-urban selves with wild nature, to shape the land wisely and well, to build a meaningful future. I am so proud to be a part of this.


Debra Shore may be reached at editor@chicagowildernessmag.org.