Sometime in the near future…
As I walk along, I think of this trail as I hiked it decades ago. The signs posted at the trailhead used to say “Mountain Lion Warning.” On some trails, the warning signs would provide advice like “Be Large. Shout. If attacked, fight back”. I even remember some trails, not in this particular area, which posted “Grizzly Bear Warning.” The advice differed: “Play dead. Wait 10-20 minutes before getting up.”
On one hike, a friend and I debated the best strategy if someone was attacked by both a mountain lion and grizzly bear at the same time. I think we ended up agreeing they would be having a bad day and wouldn’t have to ”play” dead.
I know it may be hard to believe that nature is so domesticated and we are so used to it being that way. There was a time when I used to hike trails alone in wilderness areas with creatures which could maim or kill me. In truth, I didn’t worry much about it. I never thought it necessary to arm myself. I once saw a Griz on a distant hill preoccupied with eating wild berries. I kept a safe distance. I’ve come across black bears, even a mom with her cubs. I wasn’t alone then. Other hikers had stopped on the trail including parents with young kids. (You don’t have to outrun the bear; you just have to outrun the person next to you). An idiot with a camera made loud noises to get the mother bear to look up for a picture. She obliged. The startled cubs ran up a dead tree stump. But then Mama went back to her business. The bear could have easily turned and attacked the young kids. I should of fucking punched the photographer.
Should I feel nostalgic for a time when nature meant wilderness? When there was a real risk on the trail, particularly alone? The wild in nature has succumbed—either eliminated outright or domesticated on a farm somewhere. I do feel nostalgic for a time when I didn’t have to pay the “Nature Development Company” money for every single hike I go on.
The “Nature Development Company” is the most arrogant company I’ve ever heard of and their CEO Dr. Sedgewick the brashest person in charge. They refer to themselves simply as “Nature,” with a logo of the largest company on Earth. His company’s motto “We Own Nature” sickens and saddens me. The largest company on earth statement should be an allegory or slogan for real nature. Not for Nature itself. Instead, it means a redesign of nature for profit. You can always spot the troublemakers right off. They usurp the language.
I remember when the question “Who Owns Nature?” was a philosophical discussion. I argued with my friends, telling them they were confused. “You can’t monetize nature because we don’t add any value, not because it doesn’t have any value.” They always countered with, “People need jobs and have to live.” And I, “But I don’t see how charging people for something they used to get for free helps them.” They then dismissed or trivialized me as an idealist or a liberal. I always thought nature was inherently democratic. Apparently, I am wrong.
I trudge up the mountain, gaining almost 1200 feet. The emaciated remains of a deer lie just off the trail. I walk over to take a closer look to see if I can figure out how it died. The smell is pretty bad. I look at some scarring in its fur on its hind leg. The scarring is a brand. It says “Property of Nature.” Perfect, I think.
I finally summit. The view from the top is amazing and makes the hike all worth it. From the highest rock, I take a 360 pan shot carefully turning to rotate the camera. I have my trophy pictures. I take a couple of sips of water and eat my snack then start back.
A bee flies by. I wonder if it is a “Nature” bee or a “nature” bee. Nature’s first big success was co-opting bees. They genetically engineered bees to be attracted to a certain scent that genetically engineered plants produced when they flowered. The genetically engineered plants also produced a pesticide that killed wild bees but they cleverly made the Nature bees immune. Controlling both crops and pollination made Nature a trillion dollar business. And when wild bees interbred with Nature bees diluting the effectiveness of the mutual pairing, the company would patent another “scent” and charge their customers more for the next round of product, claiming the insecticides no longer worked. Even the treadmill of evolution seems to serve “Nature.”
I continue downhill made complacent by exercise, sunshine, and scenery. I smell the scent of sage. Or is it the company scent I smell? My nose doesn’t know. I guess even nature lies when told to.
A removed excerpt from “Property of Nature” after edits rendered the passage obsolete. Reproduced here with permission from the author (me).









Up close, our guide drones on about the construction story. It took twenty-two years, a Persian designer, a board of architects, twenty thousand laborers, and a thousand elephants to build. Design and detail everywhere on the building. Up close, I can see the intricate patterns, the huge blocks of marble, and the attention to symmetry. But I don’t need to hear all the detail or even see it. The Taj is the forest and not the trees. The guide gets frustrated as our group drifts to appreciate and photograph rather than absorb useless facts and get suckered into a post-Taj shopping misadventure.
Indian tourists wait in a line that wraps completely around the building into a marble courtyard filled with a maze of twists and turns for the privilege of seeing the inside. I don’t know what it means to them to justify waiting for so long. We are rushed around the gravesite so that the throngs of visitors each has their chance at a viewing before closing time. Muslim law forbids the elaborate decoration of graves. The Shah followed the letter of Muslim law more so than its intent, judging by the excessively ornate and elaborate surroundings. Only the graves themselves are plain.




The flight landed behind schedule so my lasting memory of China is rushing to catch a connecting flight in the dashed lighting and
reflections of the hallway leading from one terminal to another. On the five hour flight from Guangzhou to New Delhi, I can’t see India, it is covered in a skin of haze and ozone as far as the eye can see, except for the Himalayas, which have the good sense to rise above to get a breath of fresh air. Even from hundred miles away, the snow covered mountains tower over the horizon.
On the return day of the voyage, I have a glass of wine in Mumbai at 2am, a glass of wine dumped in my lap inflight, a cup of coffee in London at 9am, aerial pictures of Greenland, and a safe arrival in San Diego at 5pm traveling over twelve time zones in twenty seven hours.
How many people can say they’ve had a day like that? How many can say they’ve circumnavigated the globe in two weeks time?

On this trip, I stay at the Mangy Moose, I mean, come on, if you are on a hunt to shoot moose, could you stay any place else? The Mangy Moose is a mom and pop run ten room motel. I know its a mom and pop operation because I meet the mom and pop. Somehow, we start on the topic of wreck diving on Isle Royale. Pop tells me why it is said that the lake never gives up her dead. The lake bottom is so cold, the bodies never decompose. I’m told a wreck diver reported that he could still see the expression on the captains face in the bridge of a ship, with his arms crossed, some two or three hundred years later. It seems a strange position to die in. I can only imagine the captain died freezing his ass off instinctively conserving his last ember of heat while drowning in the icy water that entombed him. My room is named the Fox Den. A Red Fox adorns my sheet. I hike to the Artist’s Point on one end of the peninsula and to the lighthouse on the other. I have dinner at the Gunflint Tavern, eating a Walleye patty with a beer sampler. Some loser guy makes a scene so he doesn’t have to pay his bill, either that or he is just a psychotic idiot. Either way, I don’t feel comfortable with him sitting next to me. The bartender finally yields chastising him for drinking a beer he couldn’t pay for.
ose per square mile by my reckoning. I take the trail from the Windigo campground out to Huginnin Cove on the North side of the island. The overgrown trail has a rain forest feel to it, with ferns, horsetails, mushrooms, large leafy plants crowding out the trail. Wooden planks cover muddy runs of the trail. I can see moose tracks in the black mud along side the boards, the moose apparently not as adept at hiking the planked trail as I.



smell the salt in the air. Fresh water is far more subtle, at least to this nose.
The night gets pretty cold but I’m comfortable. I sleep well. In the morning, I boil water for my freeze-dried spaghetti breakfast. When I tear open the pouch, I spill a couple spoonfuls of freeze dried noodles on the ground. A bold grey jay swoops down at my feet to pick up my mess. Of course, I grab my camera. The bold jay stays just at about arms length from me as he deftly picks up several noodles at once into his bill adding more without dropping the ones he already has. He loads up. Returns. After three trips, I think he decides his work is done. I have time for another hike before the ferry returns at noon. I take a four mile round trip hike to Grace Creek overlook. I don’t do much bokeh on this trip. I’ve timed it so that I get to the overlook and back to the pier at noon. I make it but I’m walking at a fast clip. The overlook doesn’t overlook much, just more woods with Lake Superior in the far background. I hit the pier just before noon. I turn in my trail tag so they know not to go looking for me.
I’m at the pier. I’m looking back towards the campsite and I see what looks like a rock at the mouth of the river by the campsites. It moves. It’s a moose. I have half an hour. I leave my backpack, I pick up my camera, run the half mile past the camp sites doubling back to the river mouth through underbrush. I don’t have the time to appreciate and observe. I only have time to shoot my quarry. I have a view of the pier. If the Voyager shows up I’ll make a run for it. I take about ten rushed minutes watching and taking pictures before heading back. I head back through the bush, back towards the campsites.
she somehow uses the chards to decorate her garden. With my mild roast organic Guatemalan coffee, I take the four hour trip back to the cabin stopping only to take pictures of rolled up hay.

didn’t want to destroy it, just to satisfy my curiosity, so I can’t for sure say whether it is bolette or brain. I suspect the former as I found a couple of more readily identifiable bolettes with red pores under the cap and a flesh that quickly stained from yellow to green to a deep blue. I posted the bolette for identification on iNaturalist.com but no identifications have been forthcoming.
If your not a big fan of mushrooms, maybe you like insects? You need a camera that captures detail: the lacy wings of a dragonfly as it clasps to a stem; the pollen clumps attached to the leg of a bee; the glossy black eye of a wasp; the hairs on the legs of a mayfly; a bee working its way through a flower; or the orange and black beetles that contrast nicely with the teardrop shaped, light green, pods.
Every flower is an opportunity for an in the face picture of the full spectrum of colors and intriguing shapes. If you miss the flowers, the fruit might provide you with something equally surprising from the tiny little parasols of the dandelions to the tan prickly seed pods of the Ohio buckeye. After the in the face shot, you might try stepping back to see if you can make a composition with something interesting in the background by getting down to the level of your subjects.
The woods is full of interesting textures and surprises. This last one I had some fun with. Any ideas what it is? I turned the picture on its side for the eye and the grin and added a grainy filter to give it more of a leathery texture. The creature is a bee hive turned on its side. The eye is the entrance and the eyelash is the leg of a bee entering its domicile. Nothing quite so prehistoric about it after all.