Wilderness Heroes

Dianne Erskine-Hellrigel -- Volunteer Extraordinaire

March 2008

Volunteering is second nature for Dianne Erskine-Hellrigel. In addition to leading The Community Hiking Club in Santa Clarita, California, she plants community gardens with native plants, organizes trash clean-ups in wild places, and helps map proposed wilderness areas in Angeles National Forest. Dianne is devoted to improving her community and the wild places she cherishes.

Harry Romberg: Climbing the Cascades, and the Capitol Steps

February 2008

Harry Romberg is a native of the Puget Sound area - a rarity these days among Washingtonians. His love for and enjoyment of the outdoors started at an early age, encouraged by his father who took Harry hiking and camping as a child and helped him get a job at Mt. Rainer when Harry was in college. "I always attribute my interest in the outdoors back to my father and I think it evolved more than he ever expected it to."

Roxanne Sterr – Making A Difference From the Beginning

January 2008

Roxanne Sterr's love for the desert and the eastern Sierra began as a teenager with the Explorer Scouts when she learned to rock climb with this co-ed mountaineering club. Roxanne grew up 5 blocks from the beach in southern California, but after discovering the Sierra and learning to rock climb she gave up the sand and waves and spent as much time as possible climbing and backpacking on the east side of the Sierra, in Joshua Tree National Monument (now a National Park), and many other magnificent places.

Dr. Sandy Schemnitz – On the Hunt for Wilderness Protection

December 2007

For over fifty-five years, Dr. Sanford "Sandy" Schemnitz has been a friend and champion of the wilderness. A lifelong hunter, Sandy has brought his love of outdoor recreation and his commitment to wild land preservation to his work as a professor of wildlife sciences.

Brandon Dennison: Called to Protect God's Gift of Wilderness

November 2007

Brandon Dennison, a senior at Shepherd University and youth group leader at Shepherds- town Presbyterian Church, has long been a hero to the young people of his church, with whom he has worked for the past three years as a counselor, mentor, and friend. This month, we are proud to recognize him for his commitment to engaging youth and furthering the cause of wilderness protection for the last wild places in West Virginia's Monongahela National Forest (a.k.a. the "Mon").

Bill Grant: a Lifelong Love Affair with the West

October 2007
Bill Grant in Dominguez Canyon, CO

Bill Grant of Grand Junction, CO has always been a westerner at heart. He grew up in the shadow of the Appalachian Mountains in western North Carolina, but subsequently lived in several parts of the country. Prior to moving to Colorado, he spent twenty-one years in Ohio where he was a professor of western history and culture at Bowling Green State University.

"I always had one foot in the West," says Bill. "I was ready to discover the Rocky Mountains long before I ever got there."

Doug Bland, Caring for God’s Gift of Wilderness

September 2007

As pastor of a congregation in Tempe, Doug Bland is naturally interested in the spiritual lives of our church members. He sometimes asks his congregation, "When have you felt closest to God?" Unfortunately, he says, "they don't say: ‘During your sermons.'"

Keeper of the King Range, Lynn Ryan

August 2007

Lynn Ryan has a secret-a powerful one. And for more than 30 years, it has been the key to her success in saving some of her favorite forests, beaches, mountains, and quiet wild places.

"It really comes down to grassroots organizing," says Lynn. "There's a joy in it."

Aldo Leopold: Architect of America's Wilderness System

July 2007

If you have not yet read A Sand County Alamanac by Aldo Leopold, do yourself a favor this summer: put away the beach novels and move this classic to the top of your reading list. This collection of deceptive simple essays is rightly held to be one of the seminal books of the 20th century, for in them Leopold distilled an idea that, in the year of its publication, 1949 (and the book has never been out-of-print since), was far ahead of its time: the idea of the land ethic.

Jim and Bess Murray – Virginia's Wilderness Lovers

June 2007

"We met at Oxford University in the zoology department," said Bess Murray. "He lent me a pencil and a card with his name on it. If I had ever known I would end up marrying the man with the pencil, I'm not sure what I would have done."

"Run," said Jim.