The Sespe Wild: Southern California'S Last Free River

The Sespe Wild: Southern California'S Last Free River

by Bradley John Monsma
The Sespe Wild: Southern California'S Last Free River

The Sespe Wild: Southern California'S Last Free River

by Bradley John Monsma

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

A hundred miles northwest of Los Angeles, Sespe Creek flows through some of the wildest territory in California. A mostly roadless expanse of chaparral and mixed forest, in many places nearly inaccessible even on foot, the Sespe is the untamed heart of Southern California, a wilderness on the edge of one of the world’s major metropolitan developments. To nature writer and outdoorsman John Bradley Monsma, the Sespe is both his place of escape and the place “that teaches me to be fully alive.” In The Sespe Wild, Monsma shares his exploration of this unique and fantastic region. His attention ranges from the physical Sespe, examined on foot or by kayak, to the subsurface geology that shaped it, the Chumash people who first occupied it, and the impact of Spanish and then American settlers. He also considers the Sespe through the eyes of some of its nonhuman populations—the nearly extinct condors, the vanished grizzlies, the mountain sheep, the steelhead trout, the red-legged frogs. Through the metaphor of the river, he ponders the tensions between preservation and overmanagement of wildlife and wilderness areas, the ecology of fire, the intricate connections between species, and the almost miraculous ways that the Sespe has escaped the fate of other Southern California streams, dammed or carved up into canals by development. “To consider this place,” Monsma says, “is to call up issues crucial wherever wilderness and cities meet: recreational impacts on wildlife habitat, the dynamics of accessibility and protection, the physical and psychological need for healthy ecosystems, threats of development and resource extraction.” Monsma’s engaging text addresses the Sespe’s losses and its ongoing pattern of creation and renewal, leading us through rich layers of natural and cultural history in a narrative as colorful and exciting as a day on a Sespe trail. The Sespe, existing at the intersection of ecological processes and human ideals of wilderness, reminds us that nature and culture have always intermingled, and that the past and present, animal and human, “natural” and “unnatural” are ultimately and irrevocably inseparable.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780874177046
Publisher: University of Nevada Press
Publication date: 02/05/2007
Series: Environmental Arts and Humanities Series
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 176
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.20(h) x 0.50(d)
Age Range: 3 Months to 18 Years

About the Author

Bradley John Monsma is professor of English and interdisciplinary studies at California State University, Channel Islands, where he teaches courses on natural history and nature writing. His essays and articles have appeared in several literary and scholarly journals. An ardent backpacker and whitewater kayaker, he has explored wild places and rivers throughout the western United States and Canada.

Table of Contents

Headwaters
Seeing the Sespe3
Tributaries
1In the Eye of a Condor: The Making of a Place13
2Escape Habitat: The Return of the Bighorns32
3Bear in Mind: Shadows of the California Grizzly47
4Seeing Through Stone: Visions of Chumash Rock Art64
5The River Flows: Dam Ideas and Double Crosses81
6Crude Visions: Oil in the Sespe93
7Forgive Us Our Trespasses: Steelhead Habitat107
8Scouting: To Boat or Not To Boat118
9Bringing It All Back Home: Frogs, Poison, and Stories132
Confluence
The Wildfire This Time143
Acknowledgments149
References151
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