Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2009/09/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> OK, I get it now. Ken Burns' TV series on the National Parks is not about > the parks themselves. Rather it is a story about people who became so > obsessed with a feature of the natural environment that they spent a > lifetime trying to sway the public to accept their ideas. If you want to > see > pretty pictures of the parks tune in the PBS Nature programs or the > National > Geographic programs.The second episode of the series detailed the > relationship between John Muir, a naturalistic zealot, and Theodore > Roosevelt, an "outdoors" political dynamo who never saw an animal that he > didn't want to kill. Somehow their interaction produced the legislation > which resulted in the National Park system. Burns' barely hidden agenda was > that the rich cannot be trusted to care for the environment, nor can the > politicians. Experience in New York state indicates that this is probably > not true. New York is replete with large state parks endowed by the > affluent. The land comprising the Adirondack State Park, a forever wild > region of mountains and forests, three times the size of Yosemite, was > purchased and donated to the public by a consortium which included the > Rockefellers, the Vanderbilts, the Goulds, and the Roosevelts. The > Harrimans > donated a big swath of land along the Hudson River for the Bear Mountain > State Park. The Hudson Valley was cleaned up because the rich didn't want > an > industrially polluted river spoiling the view from their shoreside estates. > Of course other states might not be as environmentally enlightened. > Larry Z > I check the Park list to see which one was the most visited I recalled it being not far from NYC which might explain it. Proximity. What turns up this time I'm not recognizing. #1 is the The Blue Ridge in Virginia. Not that far from here really but that was not it. #3 is Gateway National Recreation Area. An odd one. It's in Brooklyn. And scattered around into other places like Staten Island. A kind of Endocrine system National park. Isolated seemingly unrelated areas. Mark William Rabiner