The Great Divide is the spine of the Rocky Mountains, separating Alberta and British Columbia

Thursday, November 22, 2007

Adventurous Dreams an inspiration to dreamers

Rob Alexander – BOW VALLEY
Childhood is a time for dreams.

It’s a time to reach out and, for whatever reason, pluck something from the ether that propels us to want to do something extraordinary.

Even though the dreams we have as children can be tenuous – cut free by circumstances, timing, resources, or even an understanding of our own limitations – they can also be achieved, even the most audacious ones.

But how do you stay the course and live the dream?

According to Jason Schoonover in his new book Adventurous Dreams, Adventurous Lives, which documents the lives and dreams of 120 remarkable adventurer-explorers, the key is to never lose the enthusiasm for what inspires you.

“This book is about people... who dreamed far beyond the familiar – who dreamed of castles in the air and then built them,” Schoonover writes in the preamble.

He chose to document the dreams of adventurers, including former Canmore residents and writing and filmmaking duo Pat and Baiba Morrow, along with people like Buzz Aldrin, Meave Leakey and Jean-Michel Cousteau, as these people “live the most exciting, fascinating, remarkable lives on the planet... For those interested in following dreams, hopefully there’s a lesson therein.”

That lesson can be gained quickly in Schoonover’s 312-page book as there’s a lot of meat in the individual entries, even though each is only two to three pages long, along with a photograph, short biography and a significant quote summing up that person’s philosophy or definition of exploration.

Schoonover asked his subjects to share their A ha! Moment – that moment when they realized what they were meant to do and the obstacles they had to overcome.

As a result, the meat of this book is the inspiration found on practically every page and the realization that the 120 subjects, many of who are often seen as celebrities or even demi-gods, are really just ordinary people with one extraordinary ability: to never let go of what fired their passions at a young age. Their passion is strong enough to feed them throughout their lives.

These are the people who never gave up their childhood dreams and gave in to the fact that sometimes reality can be a downer.

“For most though, it’s the business of getting on with life itself that kills dreams. Nothing buries one under a granite headstone like the weight of having to pay rent and put food on the table,” Schnoover writes.

If you have a dream and you’re struggling to maintain it, the $29.95 spent on Adventurous Dreams, Adventurous Lives, published by Rocky Mountain Books, is money well spent. In fact, it could be the best money-for-value investment you’ve ever made. Dreams can be tough to hang onto, and sometimes a well-placed reminder that
it is not only possible to achieve a dream, but ordinary people can do something extraordinary.

After all, even Buzz Aldrin, who, along with Neil Armstrong, walked on the moon, started off with an epiphany while taking an early flight as wide-eyed youngster.

“I had no idea when I had my first youthful dream of flight that it would take me all the way to the moon – but that’s the power unleashed in following one’s dreams,” Aldrin states in a quote on the cover of the book.

Tuesday, November 6, 2007

Deep Alberta

Acorn delves into Deep Alberta

Rocky Mountain Outlook, March 29, 2007

Rob Alexander

In Alberta’s dinosaur world, at least outside of the palaeontological circle, it’s tough to make it into the mainstream imagination if you are small and hairy.

Instead, if you are a humungous reptile with massive teeth, horns or razor sharp claws, you’ll get all the attention in the world.

While the great dinosaurs — and the mega-fauna of the Ice Age as well — do have the imagination-grabbing charisma necessary to inspire legions of fans, it would be safe to say that many wonders of Alberta’s pre-history have been overshadowed.

And hidden in those shadows are incredible finds such as a little venomous mammal with snake-like fangs and a tiny primate, Saxonella crepaturae [italics], that lived 10 million years after the dinosaurs died out; both mammals were discovered along the Blindman River, near Blackfalds, Alberta.

Alberta is also home to the world’s oldest pike, which lived some 50 million years ago. But compared to the dinosaurs and giant mammals of the Ice Age, it can be hard to get excited about ancient fish and those ancient early mammals running around in the undergrowth.

But after reading Deep Alberta: Fossil Facts and Dinosaur Digs, written by John Acorn and published by The University of Alberta Press and the Royal Tyrell Museum, it’s hard not to come away with a new appreciation for the depth and complexity of Alberta’s buried or deep history.

Acorn, a biologist, naturalist, writer and dinosaur hunter, based Deep Alberta on his former radio series of the same name broadcast on CKUA radio. As a result, he uses a straightforward, easy-reading writing style, while providing lots of interesting facts without weighing his subject down with the heavy scientific gobbledegook that can make for some hard reading.

Instead, Acorn keeps it fresh and interesting as he turns over 80 significant stones, creating a broad picture in Alberta’s palaeontogical history in the process, that includes extinct mammals such as mammoths, living fossil fish, insects entombed in amber and fossil frogs — and the list goes on, including two Bow Valley references.

As Acorn turns over these stones, the reader also gets new and interesting tidbits about the well-known and well-loved creatures, like T. rex, and sites such as Drumheller.

Overall, Deep Alberta does a great job of entertaining, enlightening and educating, but it falls down in one aspect.
Some of the more intriguing topics, such as the one about the primate Saxonella crepaturae [italics], are only illustrated with photographs of fossil fragments.

As a reader, I was left wanting an illustration of this early mammal itself, even if it simply represents a theory of how it may have looked, especially given that Acorn makes the point that Saxonella is recognized around the world as an important discovery.

But overall, the lack of illustrations in those cases is a minor complaint towards what is an attractive, informative and fun book, and one which dinosaur fanatics of all ages can easily devour like their favourite raptor.

Monday, November 5, 2007

Dark Storm Moving West

Dark Storm offers unique insights into history of fur-trade, exploration

When Hudson's Bay Company explorer Peter Fidler saw the Rocky Mountains in November, 1792, he remarked that the line of mountains stretching out along the horizon looked like "dark rain Like clouds rising up above the Horizon on a fine Summers evening."

In her newest book, Dark Storm Moving West, Barbara Belyea uses Fidler's words and the image of a storm as a metaphor for exploration of Northwestern North America.

She compares the fur trade to a prairie storm and how it seems to linger on the horizon before bringing its heavy rain. The fur trade, she writes, had a similar delayed effect, at first bringing a benefit in the way of valuable trade goods, before becoming destructive.

She uses this metaphor to explore through the six essays in the 202-page book how westward expansion of the fur trade brought increasing levels of change to Western Canada and to the lives of the region's Native people.

The book traces three phases of exploration in western North America, beginning with the search along the West Coast for the Northwest Passage, the progress of fur traders route finding along lakes and rivers and finally, the Lewis and Clarke expedition, which relied on those early fur-trade route-finding explorations.

Overall, Dark Storm Moving West is not linked by a single unifying theme or thesis. Exploration, the fur trade and Peter Fidler, who wanders in and out of the archival record and each essay as a result, do provide a loose theme, but Belyea, a professor of English at the University of Calgary, approached each one as an opportunity to take risks and ponder problems that she writes may have no answers at all.

Belyea describes the overall shape of the book as a "series of tentative responses that overlap like fish scales, or like shingles on a roof." The essays appear in the order she wrote them, with each one seeking answers for questions raised in the previous piece.

Creating these "tentative responses", Belyea's depth of research and understanding of her subject allows a number of rich and fascinating ideas and details to pop into each essay, such as the spatial difference between European and Native maps and illustrations of how Native cartography influenced the explorer's own maps, the role of women in the trade frontier or how ethnographers are forced to sit outside the circle of Native knowledge.

While that same depth of research allows readers insight into numerous unique aspects of fur trade exploration, that level of detail can also make Dark Storm Moving West a challenge to read.

Even though Belyea's writing is quite readable, each essay demands the reader's careful attention given the academic nature of her work. But once accustomed to the flow of language - much like watching an Irish film and requiring 10 minutes or so to become used to the accents - Dark Storm Moving West offers many unique insights in the history of the fur trade.

This book will appeal to those with a broad interest in the history of Western Canada; but more specifically, those with a love of cartography, historic maps and the interpretation of Native ledger book drawings, will find Dark Storm Moving West a worthwhile read.

The author begins the book with a broader view as she investigates how the myth of the Northwest Passage became scientific hypothesis. From there, Belyea tightens the scope with each essay as she moves through the essays, including the reasons David Thompson left the Hudson's Bay Company and the clues that provide insight into business practices of the time; followed by Decision at the Marias (Lewis and Clark and their confusion over the map they relied on for their journey), Mapping West of the Bay (the change in mapping techniques based on the influence of Native maps), The Silent Past is Made to Speak (using Peter Fidler's journals to paint a picture of life at a HBC fort) and Outside the Circle (how ethnographers, while perhaps included in cultural activities, are not included in the meaning).

At the end of The Silent Past is Made to Speak, Belyea reminds the reader that "the job of historians is to guide us to the bounds of a foreign country, and to let us wonder at its strangeness and variety."

Belyea has done her job well in Dark Storm Moving West. She guides readers into this foreign country and succeeds in finding the threads that allow us to wonder at its strangeness and variety.

Dark Storm Moving West, published by the University of Calgary Press, sells for $44.95.