A Real Man

Gonz

molṑn labé
Staff member
Sitting in a hotel room in Mt Pleasant Michigan in early March, since I'm not a gambler, is not the bastion of an excitable eve. Flipping channels I ran across a PBS gimme money break. I kept flipping, getting ready to read a book, I stumbled across PBS again.

This time, instead of some dork telling me for my donation of $25. or more I could get a $.99 coffee mug, I saw an old show. Since Mt Pleasant is in mid-state, there are a lot of nature shows on this particular PBS channel (not Marlin Perkins style nature shows, Ted Nugent style...guns, bows, knives, dead critters & happy hunters) I wonder why the hell they would have a show on that was so old.

So I stopped & watched. I ended up sitting thru three more we're broke breaks & wishing I was half the man in the program.

Dick Proenneke. The show, from the the early 70's was filmed in the early 60's, is called Alone in the Wilderness. (there is a companion book called One Mans Wilderness). Mr Proenneke decided he'd try to see if he could live with himself, alone & virtually unaided, for a year in Alaska. In the end, he stayed over 35 years. Leaving, finally, in 1996.

What was so amazing were his skills. He built a log cabin, singlehandedly & quite literally from scratch. He packed his tools in, most without handles, which he made. He felled the trees, moved them, shaped them, custom fit them, stacked & assembled them, by himself. The only "modern world" part of his abode was roofing paper & plastic to line the moss (which he cut & hauled) covered roof. I suppose you could say the mortar he used to build the fireplace is modern world. He used it with hand dug gravel & hand carried rocks. He put the cabin right next to a river, where he caught his daily fish & got his daily water. He even built his outhouse & fashioned a refrigerator & a meat locker.

The film, shot from a tripod, was a daily diary of his first year. I missed the very beginning. What I saw was from May - following summer. Some hunting, some fishing, a lot of carpentry (he carved a cooking spoon & a large bowl.) & game.

If you get a chance to see this film (on DVD & VHS) do it. Especially if you have kids. Show them what spoiled pansies we've become.

DickProennekeCabin.jpg


Alone in the Wilderness
 
I would LOVE to see this!

I've often fantasized about doing something very similar. I even wrote an essay about it several years ago entitled "Welcome to Camp Free-For-All". Never did get published, but it amused the hell out of me to write it. :lloyd:
 
Always dreamed of one day owning a log cabin off in the woods. Sure the boys would enjoy watching that movie.
 
I don't get it?

He lived in the woods...by himself, impressive. But how does it make the rest of us pansies?
 
Impressive.

Most of us today go apeshit if the electricity goes out for more than an hour.

I personally never experienced life before electricity and such, but my parents did. My grandparents mnost assuredly did. Electricity was not commonplace in this part of the country until the late 1940s, maybe later in some regions. I've read pundits who claim that the introduction of electricity in Appalachia rang the death knell for the traditional mountain customs. That is a mixed bag of blessings and curses from where I stand. I think a whole lot more of us (myself included on some things) would be a whole lot better off if things were less advanced. But then, some people consider me a Luddite already, so there ya go...

I remember my grandmother doing things the "old way", and as a young child I helped do many of them. Not a lot of my contemporaries even in this region can claim to have made their own soap, their own hominy, sausage, jellies, apple butter, and a hundred other things people used to have to do for themselves. I'm lucky that I at least got to experience it a little bit.

For those truly intrigued by stories such as this man's experiment, or curious about how to do some of the things he would have done for himself, I suggest the Foxfire books. Available at any online book retailer and (hopefully) most libraries. To my knowledge there are 11 numbered books (I have them all) and a handful of special interest books in the series. For any unfamiliar, Foxfire started in the late 1960s in rural north Georgia by a high school English teacher. It is 100% student/school run, and the articles and stories are all written, edited, photographed...everything done by students. It details life in Appalachia, but many of the topics would be useful anywhere. I highly recommend it.
 
There was "reality show" done up here, similar to that. Two couple had to "homestead" for a year in western canada. I'm sure I mentionned it. "Quest for the praires" or summat like that.

And for the record, this is why I bought a bow. Not that I'll want to go hunting, or need to go hunting, but to damn well be able to.
 
I finally got around to ordering the DVD, just to make myself feel small & subhuman on a regular basis. This guy makes ya wanna go :worship:
 
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