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Out Under Sky of Great Smokies: A Personal Journal [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x153x23 mm, kaal: 423 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Feb-2001
  • Kirjastus: University of Tennessee Press
  • ISBN-10: 1572331135
  • ISBN-13: 9781572331136
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 320 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 228x153x23 mm, kaal: 423 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Feb-2001
  • Kirjastus: University of Tennessee Press
  • ISBN-10: 1572331135
  • ISBN-13: 9781572331136
Teised raamatud teemal:
“Harvey Broome was an early, indefatigable friend of the Great Smokies whose book combines an eloquent interpretation of the seasons of life they nurture with the urgent message that their conservation remains perpetually relevant. At once poetic and practical, Harvey Broome takes us into his Great Smokies and shows us that they are also ours, a unique treasure of endless discovery.”—Wilma Dykeman, Tennessee State Historian

 “It is a seminal work and is ‘must reading’ for anyone seriously interested in the early interpretation of the Great Smoky Mountains.”—Arthur McDade, author of The Natural Arches of the Big South Fork

First published in a limited edition in 1975 by the author’s widow and now available in paperback for the first time, Out Under the Sky of the Great Smokies brings together the personal journals of a great environmentalist and nature writer.

The book combines descriptions of Broome’s innumerable hikes in the Great Smoky Mountains with extended meditations on the meaning of the mountains to the region as a whole. It is at once a historical document, preserving a perspective on the Smokies before full-scale development of the national park, and a work whose message about the importance of the environment is even more timely today than when it first appeared.

In a foreword written especially for this edition, the noted environmental writer Michael Frome describes the book as “a timeless work,” adding, “Here we find Harvey, the wilderness apostle on his home turf. He reveals himself exactly as I knew and loved him: a gentle spirit, sensitive to the needs of nature and humankind, always with tolerance and good humor.”

The Author: Harvey Broome (1902–1968) was born in Knoxville, Tennessee, and discovered the Great Smoky Mountain at an early age. An attorney, he helped found the Wilderness Society and served as president of the Smoky Mountains Hiking Club. He was the author of two other posthumously published books, Faces of the Wilderness and Harvey Broome: Earth Man.
Foreword xiii
Acknowledgments xxix
Introduction xxxiii
Formative Years
3(15)
Boyhood Days
First Camping Trip
First Hike to Mt. Le Conte
Grazing on Spence Field
Charlies Bunion and Porters Flat with Wiley Oakley
Ecology in Smokies
National Park Movement in Smokies
Appalachian Trail and Wilderness Society
Origins of Wilderness Movement
Nineteen Forty-One
18(7)
``Song of the Seasons''
Woolly Tops in Snow
Spring and Civilization
Buck Fork and Ramsay Branch
Camping at Stratton Meadow
Hiking in Linville Gorge
Nineteen Forty-Two
25(8)
Brushy Mountain
Plethora of Automobiles
Chapman Prong and Eagle Rocks Prong to Black Cliff
Vanishing Species
Cabin in Greenbrier
Eclipse of Moon
Bears
Nineteen Forty-Three
33(5)
Charlies Bunion in Winter Storm
Gregory Bald
John Tipton and Cades Cove
Mt. Guyot via Buck Fork, Ramsay Prong, Drinkwater Pool
Rattlesnake
Nineteen Forty-Four
38(3)
Greenbrier in Rain
Problem of Wilderness Protection
Brushy Mountain via Long Branch
Bear at Greenbrier Cabin
Blessings of Sweet Water
Nineteen Forty-Five
41(4)
Silders Bald after the War
Camping on Gregory Bald
Significance of United Nations Charter
Absolute Stillness
Nineteen Forty-Six
45(5)
Up Brushy Mountain from North Side
Roan Mountain
Extravagant Promise of Spring
Le Conte via Bear Pen Hollow
Autumn Camp at Smokemont
Wood Fires at Home
Nineteen Forty-Seven
50(9)
Winter Days
Ides of March at Greenbrier Cabin
Charlies Bunion in Snow from Greenbrier
Little River above Elkmont
Dwindling Resources
Vitality of Forests along Santeetlah Creek
Linville Gorge
Crowded Civilization
Nineteen Forty-Eight
59(4)
Walker Prong to Appalachian Trail
Boulevard Prong in Greenbrier
Is Downward Slope an Aid to Hiking?
Rich Mountain
Nineteen Forty-Nine
63(13)
Where is Maturity to Restrain Damaging Excesses?
Thunderstorm on Chimney Tops
Harmony in Landscape
Gregory Bald and Moore Spring ``Bubble''
Why Didn't I Dig Trench Around Tent on Hooper Bald?
``Soggy Mountain Hiking Club''
Unjostled Space and Sugarland Mountain
Nineteen Fifty
76(16)
Wild Turkeys in Greenbrier
Sierra Land of Smokies
Nostalgia on Sugarland Mountain
Half-Woods Speak
Porters Creek to Horseshoe Mountain
Maddron Bald
``Sun Determines''
Nostalgia on Hell Ridge
Phacelias on Biotic Pyramid
Hike Comparable to Subsiding Notes of Symphony
Trees versus Causes
Living Quality of Smokies
Indian Gap at 10°
Wizardry of Winter
Nineteen Fifty-One
92(16)
Woolly Tops in Diorama
Blanket Mountain via Blanket Creek
Poplars on Cove Mountain Antedate English at Fort Loudoun
Progressively Steep Slopes of Woolly Tops
Three Creek Crossings Lead to Russell Field
Four Inches of Rain in One Hour on Le Conte
Tomahawk Branch and Flash Flood
Long Branch in Greenbrier
Porters Creek Trail by Starlight
Nineteen Fifty-Two
108(15)
Flood Devastation on Alum Cave Prong Trail
Perfection of Unspoiled Nature
Raw Power of Flood on Trout Branch
Where Would Hikers go to Escape such a Flood?
Camp on Chapman Prong
Meeting of Parties in Wilderness Labyrinth
Wildernesses are Flexible
Emerts Cove Under Near-Full Moon
Long Branch in Snow
Imprints of Small Tracks
Krutch on Natural World
Faith in Life
Nineteen Fifty-Three
123(16)
A Room Without Walls on Winnesoka
Expectancy of Spring
Appalachian Trail East from Newfound Gap
Finding Rusty Bear Trap on Silers Bald
Focus of Wilderness Experiences
Our Mountain Cabin
Heed Thinking of Selfless, Disciplined Men
Mossy Spillway Route to Charlies Bunion
Bear Droppings
Nineteen Fifty-Four
139(13)
Essary Route to Chimneys
Treachery of Flood-Swollen Road Prong
Chesapeake and Ohio Canal Hike
Few Conservationists are Born
Appalachian Trail and Hughes Ridge Shelter
W. O. Douglas's First Hike in Smokies
Nineteen Fifty-Five
152(19)
New Year's Days in Mountains
Elemental Violence at Jumpoff
Greenbrier Pinnacle via Cat Stairs
Russell Field Via Sugar Cove
Going Behind ``Green Curtain'' to Mt. Guyot
Growth of Conservation Concepts
Airy Travels of Red Squirrels on Mt. Mingus
Nineteen Fifty-Six
171(9)
Of Man and Mountains on White Rock
Brushy Mountain via Rip Shirt Hollow
Characteristics of Wilderness Communities
``The Loitering Section'' on Big Laurel Branch
Wildness, Wintriness, Aloofness of Grotto Falls
Nineteen Fifty-Seven
180(14)
Forest Health
Kincaid and Bakeless on Appearance of Early Wilderness
Wrong Turn off Winnesoka
Photography on Charlies Bunion
Drinkwater Pool Versus ``Swimming Pool'' Reactor
Danger and Excitement on Slick Rock Creek
Six Matches Light Six Campfires
Nineteen Fifty-Eight
194(13)
The A-Bomb and Wilderness
Breaking Trail in Snow on Alum Cave Trail
Snow Fleas on Ice Cone at Rainbow Falls
Speculation on Origin of Grassy Balds
Reliving American History by Counting Tree Growth Rings
Gregory Bald Ecology
Evidence of 1951 Cloudburst on Walker Prong
Nineteen Fifty-Nine
207(9)
Green-Tinted Ice on Road Prong
Reminiscences of 1922 Trip to Le Conte
Autumn Outpost on Spence Field
Nineteen Sixty
216(9)
The Boon of Life is Ours
Austerities of Andrews Bald
Primeval Enclave in Cherokee Forest
``I Have Never Wanted to Leave Le Conte''
Winnesoka Frustrates Us Again
Nineteen Sixty-One
225(13)
Chimney Tops in January
Overnight Trip to Le Conte in Snow at 5°
Water Supply is Melted Snow
``They Buried Better Than They Lived'' in Cades Cove
Chimney Tops in July
Which World Will Win?
Nineteen Sixty-Two
238(11)
On Not Naming Mountains, Places, Ideas
Forest Influences
Devil's Hole Gorge in Cumberland Mountains
Knoxville News-Sentinel Sponsors Hike to Andrews Bald
Wedding Anniversary Climb to Le Conte
Natural World and Wonder of Life
Nineteen Sixty-Three
249(12)
Time Scales
Indian Gap to Fighting Creek Gap
Whittling of Natural Environment
Drought Brings Foreboding
Landmarks and Changes on Hike to Silers Bald
Rainbow Falls via Old Trail and Lily Field
Nineteen Sixty-Four
261(7)
Winter Trip to Le Conte in Clear Weather
Green Loveliness of Cades Cove
Flood Ravages of Trout Branch Healing
Reading History of Man's Doings from Silers Bald
Nineteen Sixty-Five
268(6)
Adventure in and Beyond Honey Cove Creek
Autumn in Emerts Cove with Choice Friends
Ecological Disruption if Transmountain Road were Built
Nineteen Sixty-Six
274
Overnight in Rain from Clingmans Dome to Buckeye Gap
``No-see-ums'' at Trillium Gap
Descent of Brushy Mountain by Faint Trail
Discovery of Spruce Disjunct on Miry Ridge
Save-Our-Smokies Hike