Rafts, Raccons, & Revelations
$14.95
Title | Range | Discount |
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
- Description
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Description
Man recounts his boyhood in sparsely populated, near-wilderness area along the USA-Canada border, with an emphasis on encounters with wildlife and natural phenomena and conclusions/observations of human nature and the intersection of civilization as it meets the natural world. Pete Griffin was born in a two-room log cabin with no running water just southeast of Cedarville in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula–within a hundred yards of the Lake Huron shoreline. When his dad returned home from the Army in 1953, the small family moved from cabin to cabin in the Eastern U.P. as his Dad followed work opportunities. Young Pete spent a lot of time exploring in the woods and along the shores of the St. Mary’s River and Lake Huron inventing imaginary friends when he had no one to play with.
With few exceptions, Pete’s formative years through age 23 were spent in the immediate vicinity of that little corner of Lake Huron. Water formed an important aspect of his life, whether fishing for trout in the many small creeks that emptied into the big lake or fishing for perch and herring in the protected bays and channels of the Les Cheneaux Islands.
Pete says, “My family, my parents, aunts and uncles, and my grandparents did not seem out of the ordinary as I grew up. But I came to find they all had their own stories, unique stories that all too often I discovered all too late in life.”
An introvert, he felt most comfortable on his own out in the woods or on the water rather than with others. A career in the woods made sense to him, a job where he could be alone all day and never have to talk to another person. Griffin enrolled in a wildlife biology program at nearby Lake Superior State College in Sault Ste Marie. I was graduated in 1974 with a Bachelor of Science in Biology.
Following graduation in 1974, he was hired by the US Forest Service on the Huron-Manistee National Forest in Lower Michigan. In 1987Pete transferred to the Chippewa National Forest in Minnesota with his wife, Kathy, and thjeir two young children. In 1992, we left the Midwest for Ketchikan, Alaska. In 1999 Pete was selected as the Juneau District Ranger in Alaska's state capital.
Griffin began Tongass Trails, a weekly five-minute natural history essay on public radio that ran several years in Juneau. In these essays, Pete included his experiences and observations from younger years growing up on the shores of Lake Huron. It was that personal touch, the short anecdotes included in the recordings that captured the listeners’ imaginations and Griffin was awarded the D. Robert HakalaExcellence in Interpreter and Conservation Education Award by the Forest Service in 2006.
Griffin retired in June 2010, concluding a 35-year career as wildlife biologist and ranger.
"After Christmas that winter and shortly after I’d turned 17, Mom took me to Sault Ste Marie one evening.Dr. Ringer and his wife were hosting a party at his small home in on a quiet street not too far from the campus.We sat in the Ringer’s living room, filling the old sofa and two overstuffed chairs.Lacy ivory curtains hung over the windows.Several of his students seated themselves on the red oval braided wool rug that covered most of the floor space. I sat cross-legged on the floor at Mom’s feet.As the oldest student there, her fellow students had yielded one of the soft chairs to Mom. Dr. Ringer pulled a dining room chair into the living room, seated himself… and began.
“We are on the cusp of a new age,” he said. “The equinox is about to align with the constellation Aquarius, and a new age of human development will begin. In this new age, humanity,” he emphasized, “will finally take control of its own destiny.” Mom squeezed my shoulder and leaned forward to whisper in my ear. I could hear her smiling. “Listen to this,” she told me. “This new age,” Ringer continued, “is going to be one of revelation of truth and the advancement of consciousness.” The audience looked on, taking in every word, every truth. Nobody talked like this in Cedarville."
Adult and YA readers “This delightful read is filled with nature’s metaphors… …for growth, development, caring for each other, and caring for our beautiful natural world. Along the way, Pete shares real family challenges and some genuine hard times that helped shape him. You’ll enjoy ‘rafting’ Pete’s winding river of stories, as he achieves the life he aspired to—a wildlife biologist”.–Robin Nott, Shady Grove Storytelling, Kalamazoo, Michigan
Table of Contents
Foreword
Midnight Notes
Birthplace
Jerry’s Place
Gravy Boat
Lady
Rafting Flower Bay
A Home on the Water
Sailing Down the Channel of Life
Mayflies
Winter Sport
Fool’s Mate
The Year the Rats Invaded Town
Summer Work
The Trial of Stone Castle’s Yellow Jacket
Revelation
Little St. Martins Reef
A Real Outdoor Writer
The Reef Re-visited
Big Dog
You’ll Never Take Me Alive
He’s My Brother
Let’s Go Fishing
Additional information
Weight | 1 oz |
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Dimensions | 1 × 6 × 9 in |