Posts Tagged ‘wilderness training’
Latest News Headlines
- Adirondacks see spike in property values
- Adirondack Foundation celebrates 25 years of philanthropic impact
- Ask a Scientist: Climate research
- Small towns in St. Lawrence and Lewis counties are finally getting high-speed internet
- DEC releases draft plan to guide future Adirondack trail work
- Ticonderoga dreams big for downtown improvements
- Curling, explained*
- Frontier Town: New life for Adirondack landmark
- Hiking grandma logs 1,000 Adirondack miles in 2022
- What's next for free shuttles in the Adirondacks?
Latest News Headlines
- Adirondacks see spike in property values
- Adirondack Foundation celebrates 25 years of philanthropic impact
- Ask a Scientist: Climate research
- Small towns in St. Lawrence and Lewis counties are finally getting high-speed internet
- DEC releases draft plan to guide future Adirondack trail work
- Ticonderoga dreams big for downtown improvements
- Curling, explained*
- Frontier Town: New life for Adirondack landmark
- Hiking grandma logs 1,000 Adirondack miles in 2022
- What's next for free shuttles in the Adirondacks?
Recent Almanack Comments
- Phil Fitzpatrick on New diversity director; outgoing APA commissioner
- JT on Keep Standing Dead Trees or “Deadwood”
- Boreas on Girdling Roots Kill Trees
- Boreas on Keep Standing Dead Trees or “Deadwood”
- Boreas on Keep Standing Dead Trees or “Deadwood”

The Adirondack Almanack
The Adirondack Almanack is a public forum dedicated to promoting and discussing current events, history, arts, nature and outdoor recreation and other topics of interest to the Adirondacks and its communities
We publish commentary and opinion pieces from voluntary contributors, as well as news updates and event notices from area organizations. Contributors include veteran local writers, historians, naturalists, and outdoor enthusiasts from around the Adirondack region. The information, views and opinions expressed by these various authors are not necessarily those of the Adirondack Almanack or its publisher, the Adirondack Explorer.

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Wilderness Training to Match our Mountains
None of what gets debated weekly about the High Peaks is truly untethered from these historical roots. As Almanack contributor Ed Zahniser has written, “take courage for your own work for visitor use management in wilderness. It has a history, a history set in concern for the common good, a history stemming from the American people’s long-standing concern to protect some remnant of our public lands in their wild, natural state. “
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