Readers… please, please let
me hear your opinions... I want to
send them to Rob and other editors.
To
everything there is a season, and in my life, winter has arrived. But heck, I like winter too. The ducks and geese I
once followed south are soon to make their trip without me. The yeller suckers I waited for below flowing
river shoals each spring will soon come there not knowing I ever watched the
clear cold water for their arrival with such enthusiasm. I hope so anyway, but there are far
fewer of them each year.
I
have written an outdoor column since I was 18 years old for some newspaper or
another. Over the years my columns
on the outdoors have appeared in more than 220 newspapers in five different
states. I don’t think I have
missed a single week since then, sending a column to someone, sometimes two per
week. There have been, since I
started to college, about 4,600 of them. Maybe that is enough!
It
is easy for me to write a newspaper column, I likely could do two or three a
week, columns about what I have seen in the woods or on the river, or columns
to make readers laugh. But I have also done it because I felt I had a message
of conservation to get out. However, now journalism has changed so much I
cannot be a part of it and a message of conservation is of no value. Almost all of today’s outdoor writers
live inside the city limits somewhere and there are tons of them. They
consistently write what has been done to death…’take a kid fishing’ and what
the new technology is in bows, or fishing reels, or what new shotgun Remington
is putting out. They tell you how to filet a crappie, how to train your dog!
I
never did live inside city limits anywhere, even in college. I got my degree in wildlife management
from the University of Missouri, but I learned about the outdoors IN THE
OUTDOORS. I was naturalist for two
state agencies in Arkansas, paid not to sit behind a desk but to explore the
wilder places in Arkansas, and make reports on the areas I felt should be
protected. I was also a paid
naturalist for the National Park Service on the Buffalo River.
No
newspaper I have ever written for ever questioned whether or not I knew what I
was writing about. But now, most
all of them question if it has any importance or not, whether or not anyone
cares any more. “Sure, you had a
great time on the Big Piney when you were a kid fishing and hunting with your
grandfather and dad," one editor told me, “and you could drink the water
and catch 40-pound catfish on trotlines.
But your grandpa and dad and uncles are all dead, and soon your
generation will all be gone too.”
He
went on to say that readers today couldn’t care less if the holes in the
Buffalo or Current or Big Piney are filling in with silt and gravel. If there is coliform bacteria from
cattle in the water, they don’t see it, and if slime covers the rocks in the
river and the lakes it is of no importance to a thirty year old that never saw
it like I did. There’s a lot of
truth in that. Today’s river
floaters don’t seem to mind toilet paper or a few beer cans on gravel bars, if
the water is flowing fast and they get a good ride. A hellbender or flathead cat doesn’t mean a thing to 90
percent of them, because they don’t know what they are, never saw one. “In 20
years,” he said, “no one will care about what you are trying to save.”
He
was brutally telling me that my life trying to save something of the wild
Ozarks through my writing was wasted.
If the concept of conservation isn’t dead, it has turned 180 degrees. I
have tried to be voice for the ordinary common Ozark folks who have been
unjustly targeted and prosecuted by a corrupt Conservation Department. I have tried to point out that public
owned areas which the department owns are being stripped of timber by contract
private loggers, and that public owned upland game tracts are being destroyed
by contracted farm interest… all for a percentage of the money. It mattered once, but most of those
readers are dead now.
Am
I wrong to believe there is something in such places more valuable to a future time
than the money derived from ruining them? It might be that I am. Will any 13-year old kids grow to
manhood wishing there were coveys of quail to hunt? Will there be any of them wanting to hunt squirrel and
rabbits in the Ozarks, or catch a goggle-eye?
So
it all comes down to this… I am not going to stop what I am doing to write
fluffy articles about what to put in your bird feeder or how to filet a
crappie. So maybe, as a writer who
points out what the Conservation Department is doing that they do not want you
to know, I am not what today’s newspaper readers want to read. Certainly I am not writing what newspaper
editors want. From many of them
you will not see this column again.
One
of the old-time editors I respect very much is Rob Viehman with the Cuba and
Steelville Mo. newspapers and he told me that his readers tell him they are not
interested in my views about the Conservation Commission or what they are doing
wrong so he only uses what that group does not object to. For many years the MDC has been asking
people who are oblivious to what they do, to complain about what I write.
Rob
Viehman has not seen the two-foot high stack of letters and hundreds of emails
I have from readers who have asked me to do more to expose what is going
on. I am going to see to it that
my friend Rob sees them. Right now
I would like for those who read this to send their opinions to me so I can send
them to editors all over the Ozarks.
If you dislike what I write about the corruption and disdain for human
rights I have seen over the years, tell me that, and tell me why. If you think otherwise, tell me so..
I
will use letters from both sides in my next magazine.
On
April 13 I will spend most of a day with the director of the MDC and I will
write about that day and what she says about what I am going to show her. But I want to hear from readers, and I
will continue this column until October, when I will likely fade off into the
sunset, having outlived my purpose as an outdoor writer.
Many
if not most, of this regions newspapers won’t use anything they feel the MDC
doesn’t want known. Some
newspapers would rather use something the MDC sends them free, and that is the
problem. This department controls
so much of the news media, you will not much longer be able to read anything
they disapprove of.
My
address is Box 22, Bolivar, Mo. 65613 and the email address is lightninridge47@gmail.com. Readers…
please, please let me hear your opinions... I want to send them to Rob and other editors.
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