Fighting Nature Deficiency Syndrome in Central Colorado
Column by Hal Walter
Nature - June 2007 - Colorado Central Magazine - No. 160 - Page 46
Copyright © 2007 by Hal Walter and Central Colorado Publishing Co. All rights reserved.
Return to June 2007 table of contents.
MRS. HAVEY GAVE THE WORD and the children poured out of the
classroom onto the playground and charged toward Spike. I feared the
worst, as Spike has not been known for his predictability, despite
winning four World Championship Pack-Burro Races.
But the burro scarcely seemed to notice as several preschoolers ran
up to and surrounded him. He steadily munched the green grass and
dandelions at the playground's edge as they reached out to touch him
and feel his fuzzy ears. They pulled grass and fed him by hand. The
children were clearly thrilled to be this close to the big animal. They
asked questions. They said they liked Spike. And after Mrs. Havey told
them it was time to wash their hands and move on to snack time, one by
one they followed her back inside, much more slowly than they had
emerged. Two of the youngsters trailed as I led Spike back to the
gate.
"Where are you going?" they asked.
It's time for Spike to go home, I replied.
"Why?" they asked.
Because it's that time. I told them. We have to go.
Later, after I had packed up Spike and one of their classmates, my
son Harrison, and was driving home, I thought how surprised I was that
the chance to see a burro at school seemed to be such a big deal to
Custer County kids. How could that be? I thought. They must see animals
all the time, if only from a car window.
Then it occurred to me that this was probably the first time that
some of these youngsters had been close to a big critter. Had watched
it eat grass. Had touched it. Fed it by hand. Times are changing and
this is not a community of farm kids anymore. Most of their parents
ranch the view instead of cows. Despite the rural existence, Nature
Deficiency Syndrome, it appears, is alive and well here in Custer
County.
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I was drawn to the outdoors at an early age, I believe partly by
instinct and partly because I could not be caged. By the time I was
eight I had a fishing rod and prowled the banks of the Truckee River in
Reno, Nevada, quite alone. It's a wonder I lived. By the time I was
nine I had a BB gun and was "hunting" in the foothills north
of Sparks. This was probably safer than hanging out around the river,
but it's true I wandered miles and miles through the sagebrush at that
young age, mostly alone and sometimes arriving back home after dark. I
don't recall ever actually killing anything, but I sure tried hard to
bag a jackrabbit or the elusive quail that sparsely inhabited the
cheatgrass hillsides of the area.
My mother remarried and we moved to Las Vegas. My new father, Dave,
was a range manager for the Bureau of Land Management. On various
hunting, fishing and camping trips his influence began to take hold and
I developed a larger vocabulary of nature terminology: names of plant,
insect, fish, bird and animal species. The bookshelf was lined with his
college texts and I started to leaf through some of them and develop a
better working knowledge of the natural world. Geology, geography,
biology. Much of this I kept to myself, but my knowledge was gaining.
Often when I saw something for the first time I knew what it was
because I'd read about it or seen a picture of it. I watched desert
pupfish play in Devil's Hole in the Mojave Desert. I caught bass from a
canoe in Ruby Marsh near Elko, and brook, rainbow and brown trout from
Snake Creek in what is now the Great Basin National Park. For my 12th
birthday I got a .22 rifle. I killed my first gamebird, a chukar
partridge, that same year with a .410 shotgun somewhere west of Beatty.
At that point I could also name numerous plant and animal species.