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Walks with Tom

Explorations of nature, places, and policy

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Tag: forests

Winter Like it Used to Be

February 14, 2013June 23, 2019 ~ Tom Cook ~ 2 Comments

"In my day, the winters were so much more . . . snowy, or colder, or predictable" seems to be a frequent complaint I hear from mid-Michigan residents over the age of 30  (climate data shows that anyone under the age of 27 has never experienced a colder than average month, anytime of year).  I … Continue reading Winter Like it Used to Be

The UP: Use It, Don’t Lose It

May 11, 2012June 23, 2019 ~ Tom Cook ~ Leave a comment

In 2005, Michigan's Upper Peninsula (the UP) began a new relationship with the natural resources that so define it as a place.  Recently, I revisited the site that memorializes that moment, returned to a Lake Superior beach that shaped my relationship to the Great Lakes several decades ago, and thought a lot about the future … Continue reading The UP: Use It, Don’t Lose It

Two Superior Preserves

August 14, 2011June 23, 2019 ~ Tom Cook ~ Leave a comment

Michigan author Jim Harrison writes about places which "impart an uncommon sense of well-being," and tries, elusively, to define what characteristics they have which make them so. There is no particular scientific or historical definition, though we often search for one. Eventually, he decides that these uniquely personal places are "simply the soul's best habitat." … Continue reading Two Superior Preserves

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