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![]() Since the recent James Kim tragedy, I've received numerous e-mails from newsgroup posters, asking for advice about cold weather survival, one of my specialties. I've replied to all of these individuals personally, but I've decided to post my answer to their questions about why I seldom visit newsgroups. Basically, I'm thoroughly disgusted with the anonymous crap I've gotten while trying to help posters who legitimately ask for advice. One poster on rec.backcountry, a group notorious for being infested by liars and pretenders, claimed he saw a mother porcupine with a litter of several young. When he was checked by someone who actually knew that E. dorsatum females in fact give birth to one kit a year, several newsgroupies began a long, inane argument over whether generations of scientists might be wrong about the species' reproductive characteristics. That thread was as retarded as it was representative of rec.backcountry, but the real crime was that it caused confusion among people who might believe what they read there. More serious, the same type of fabricated, erroneous, and potentially hurtful "advice" is routinely presented to people who ask about orienteering, water purification, and other topics where acting on misinformation could have serious consequences. Because I have a moral obligation to late tribal elders like Amos Wasgeshik and Albert Colby to pass on the wisdom they gave me, I once embraced internet forums as a way to perhaps save others from coming to the same tragic end of James Kim, Chris Hallaxs, and the many who have died unnecessarily in the woods. Yet, because I make my living from writing and working (hard) as a wilderness guide/survival instructor, I've been viciously attacked as a "spammer." When someone asks how to make snowshoes, sharpen a knife, or set a snare, I cannot write a chapter explaining the finer points of accomplishing those tasks, so I refer them to my books and magazine articles, because they do - that's why I wrote them. In fact, I've often suggested that readers check out mine and other books from a public library, because the objective is to get useful information into their heads. Believe me, no one who wants to make a decent living would ever become an outdoor writer, because there just isn't much money in this occupation. There is, however, tremendous satisfaction from having a former survival student tell me that what I taught him saved his life, and that has happened to me numerous times. For years I put up with unmitigated insults from the minority of newsgroupies who found it hard to be an expert when I was in the room, then someone finally got the idea that they could get a free shot at me by posting fallacious reviews of my books on Amazon.com. Anyone who has actually read the books that were slammed knows that they were quoted incorrectly, and were not read by the so-called reviewer. One especially malicious "review" of the university-level Encyclopedia of Tracks & Scats flames it for having too many drawings of tracks - she obviously didn't read the section on photography that explains why a two-dimensional camera cannot adequately capture a three-dimensional track imprint; that's why we plaster-cast them, and that's why I used drawings to precisely identify pertinent characteristics. Personally, I think the book just had too many scientific terms for her to comprehend - she'd be better off with a copy of The Complete Tracker, or maybe my newest pocket tracking guide (still under construction). Amazon.com has since taken steps to prevent such phony reviews from being published. Even that libelous crap didn't deter me from trying to offer experienced advice to the majority of decent people who frequent newsgroups. But when a few slimeballs began attacking my fellow wilderness guide (Timberwolf Wilderness Adventures, Paradise, MI), Cheanne Chellis, because she'd posted a couple of positive reviews of my books, that was the last straw. Cheanne is a licensed paramedic of nineteen years, and she makes her full-time living by saving lives - she has doubtless saved the life of someone who is reading this - and she's a better human being than all of us. I can say that because I've known her for a decade - we met while conducting wolf research with the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians (I was their tracker). She can say what she said in the reviews because she's had as many years seeing me at work in the wildest country in the Lower 48. Any respect she has for my skill as a woodsman derives from having personally seen me at work in forests where some missing people have never been found. To have some neurotic waste of skin who has never met either of us badmouth the integrity of such an outstanding and professional individual is shameful, and intolerable to me. FYI, Cheanne is also an excellent tracker, a professional dogsledder, a wolf-handler, she shoots less than 1 MOA with a rifle, and she can butcher a deer nearly as fast as I can. All of that in a beautiful, blonde-haired, blue-eyed package. Because a few despicable concrete cowboys can only feel good about themselves by maligning anyone who makes them feel inadequate, I lost interest in putting up with internet assholes. I still make my living as a writer ( http://www.modernsurvival.net/preview.cfm ), and, in fact, my writing sells better than it ever did. Only now, if someone wants an informed opinion about a wilderness skill, or a product from one of the 115 outdoor manufacturers I field test for, they'll have to buy a magazine or one of my books. From my end, that's more profitable anyway, and I don't have to endure the offal of cowardly miscreants who transfer their self-loathing to others while hiding in shadows like a cockroach. I don't hide from anyone. I live 5 miles north of Paradise (pop. 35), on Lake Superior's Whitefish Bay, where the giant SS Edmund Fitzgerald was running for when the Gales of November sent her to the bottom with all hands. My home is bordered on two sides by 1,000,020 acres of Lake Superior State Forest, which is bordered to the east by 900,000 acres of Hiawatha National Forest, to the west by 800,000 acres of Ottawa National Forest. Occupying the 10.5-million acres of MI's Upper Peninsula are only 328,000 residents. Winters here on Whitefish Point average 20+ feet of snowfall, and I've personally seen ambient temps as low as -37 F, windchills to -65 F. We aren't on the electrical grid, but on a single leg that extends from it, and power goes down here with annoying frequency, sometimes for days at a time. We keep a pack of gray wolves - legally - for the purpose of public education, at no charge to visitors, and the "boys" have been featured in numerous magazines, my last book, and on Country Music Television. The woods surrounding our house is home to moose, cougars, wolves, bald and golden eagles, and we've occasionally had to go outside with a flashlight to chase off black bears that were tring to get into our barn, where our wolves' venison is kept. In summer, the blackflies, mosquitoes, horseflies, deerflies, and stable flies have literally driven some to a nervous breakdown. In a single winter, I've spent as many as 110 nights sleeping on snow. So much for those clown shoes who spew lies about Len McDougall not spending much time in the woods. Len McDougall, author of the books: The Encyclopedia of Tracks & Scats * The Log Cabin: An Adventure in Self Reliance, Individualism, and Cabin Building * The Field & Stream Wilderness Survival Handbook * The Complete Tracker * Practical Outdoor Projects * Practical Outdoor Survival * The Snowshoe Handbook * The Outdoors Almanac * Made for the Outdoors Wilderness Guide/Survival Instructor for Timberwolf Wilderness Adventures, Paradise, Michigan USA |
#2
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![]() Len McDougall, Outdoor Writer wrote: Since the recent James Kim tragedy, I've received numerous e-mails snip self promotion from the attention whore You seldom post because you gave very bad advice in the backcountry newsgroup, got called out on it and got your ego bruised. After that you went away to lick your wounds. |
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