I teach fizix and other things. Once a professor of the year. Wrote a book about Yellowstone. Beekeeper. Tezos. I enjoy long walks through the American west.
“On October 16, 1870, two mountain men were dispatched into the wilderness that would soon become Yellowstone National Park to find a missing and presumed dead man. They found who they were looking for, but to their surprise he was still alive.”
Excerpt From
The Rocinante in Wonderland
Jeff Groff
Keep reading ⬇️
https://t.co/jNYj8we3Ik
@bandy1803 ❤️ I know this view. One of my favorites. From calcite springs overlook. The new Yellowstone River bridge is now visible from this perspective 🙁
The American environmental ethos is the never ending Hegelian struggle between the Gifford Pinchot and Teddy Rosevelt traditions of utilitarian conservation and the John Muir and Aldo Leopold traditions of biological preservation.
@RodeoProfessor The strength of the American environmental conservation and preservation ethos is forged in the struggle between the utilitarian ethos and ecological “land ethic” ethos that feed it. May the struggle continue.
@RodeoProfessor The strength of the American environmental conservation and preservation ethos is forged in the struggle between the utilitarian ethos and ecological “land ethic” ethos that feed it. May the struggle continue.
“On October 16, 1870, two mountain men were dispatched into the wilderness that would soon become Yellowstone National Park to find a missing and presumed dead man. They found who they were looking for, but to their surprise he was still alive.”
Excerpt From
The Rocinante in Wonderland
Jeff Groff
Keep reading ⬇️
https://t.co/jNYj8we3Ik
“I feel like there is a well in my soul, and this place [Yellowstone] is a spring that fills it. Leaving is like separating from something essential.”
Excerpt From
The Rocinante in Wonderland
https://t.co/f9sdaEh1dZ