"It was like lying in a great solemn cathedral, far vaster and more beautiful than any built by the hand of man," wrote Teddy Roosevelt, of camping in Yosemite Park.
At about 4 am, after hours of being unable to sleep; ofshivering(颤抖)in the cold mountain air – despite going to bed fully dressed and with a wool hat pulled down over my ears – and trying to silence my crying kids who kept waking up andwhimpering(幽咽)in the chill; of futilely attempting to find a position on the air mattress that didn't send my lower back intospasms(肌痉挛); of listening to sounds that might or might not have been a bear sniffing around outside our tent, I finally couldn't stand it any more.
I simply had to pee. Gritting my teeth, I turned on a flashlight, put on my shoes, unzipped the door of my tent, stumbled out into the night, and made a dash for the pit-toilet at the edge of the camp site.
There was no bear. But there were an impossibly large number of stars twinkling above.
I peed, ran back to my tent, and half-slept till dawn.
Hours later, as the sun crept up over the edge of the awesome Lassen peak – the jagged relic of a powerful volcanic explosion that strewed boulders over hundreds of square miles – in the remote northeast of California, I pulled my sleeping bag over my head andwhined(发牢骚)exhaustedly that "everything has gone wrong."
Like so many other grouchy early morning, pre-coffeeutterances(表达,说话)I make, this one was ludicrously off-key. Things weren't wrong; they were right.
My wife and I were in one tent with our two young kids; our friends Jessica and Michael, and their two children, were in another. A hundred yards away was Summit Lake, the glorious early morning mists shimmering off the water. A couple miles to the south-west was the base of the Lassen Peak Trail. The base was 8,000ft above sea level, huge snowbanks dotting the landscape even in mid August. The peak of the volcano soared 2,500ft above, its ragged tree line halfway up, marking the outer limits of ecological regeneration following a series of hundreds of "minor" eruptions in the early 20th century that were immortalised in the photographs of BF Loomis.
Above, lay a rocky,craggy(崎岖的)moonscape. Further west still was Bumpass Hell, an inferno of bubbling,sulphurous(含硫磺的)mud and water, with plumes of steam rising up through the delicate crust surrounding the cauldrons.
We fired up the camp stove, got out our cold boxes from the heavy metal bear-locker, fried up some bacon, cut open some bagels, and boiled up a thermos-full of coffee.
Half an hour later, my six-year-old daughter and I were in the parking lot of the Lassen peak trail, getting ready to hike as far as we could up the mountainside. We wouldn't make it all the way – young legs get pretty tired on a steep mountain trail in the thin air two miles above sea level – but it didn't matter. We would see nature at its extremes: grand vistas spread out below us, the volcanic ash that layered on the earth turning the melting snows an eerie pink as the sun struck it; the blues of the sky shading into the blues of distant lakes, which in turn shaded into the whites and pinks and grays of the snowpack.
My daughter grabbed my camera. She wanted to take a photo of "the composite" of colours. Looking out over that landscape, and seeing my daughter grappling with the immensity of nature, I felt stupid about my morningtirade(长篇大论).
Yes, camping is uncomfortable. And yes, there's a lot to be said for getting out a credit card, reserving a room in a nice hotel with a large TV in front of which to park the kids, and going out for a fancy meal and a good glass of wine. But there's also something infinitely wonderful about being so close to raw nature. And, as important, there's something vital about getting young children out of their increasingly technology-padded comfort zones and forcing them to encounter the non-cyber world around them.
We lose something when we spend all our timecocooned(紧紧包住)inside a carefully constructed modernity, when we read about daily affronts to the environment – yet, removed from the majesty of nature, don't fully realise what is at stake. It's a good thing to reconnect every so often with the Great Outdoors.
Lassen has no hotels. If you want to see the splendours of this landscape, you have no choice but to stay in one of thecampsites(露营营地)nestling on the edge of the lakes and against the sides of the mountains.
After camping in Yosemite, Teddy Roosevelt once declared that "It was like lying in a great solemn cathedral, far vaster and more beautiful than any built by the hand of man." That sentiment holds as true today as it did in Roosevelt's time. What a wondrous thing is nature. And what a joy to see a child grasp that simple truth.
高中英语语法-浅谈英语构词法(二)
高中英语语法-慧眼巧识“ pick up”
高中英语语法-would 与 used to
高中英语语法-“未曾实现的愿望、打算”表达法种种(一)
高中英语语法-浅谈none的用法
高中英语语法-As to 与 As for 用法小结
高中英语语法-抓住关键,巧思妙解冠词
高中英语语法-数学英语词汇
高中英语语法-浅谈英语构词法(三)之二
高中英语语法-词义猜测“十法”(二)
高中英语语法-时尚新语
高中英语语法-数学英语词汇之三
高中英语语法-worth 用法拾零
高中英语语法-put词组练习
高中英语语法-如何完美表达书信中的“谢谢”
高中英语语法-如何表达未曾实现的意图、安排和希望
高中英语语法-make词组练习
高中英语语法-had better, should, ought to学习四要素(一)
高中英语语法-含有国名的习语
高中英语语法-go词组练习
高中英语语法-考试心情碎碎念
高中英语语法-名词用法面面谈
高中英语语法-but 的用法之二
高中英语语法-before 译法种种
高中英语语法-“ up to ”用法小结
高中英语语法-but 的用法之一
高中英语语法-词义猜测“十法”(一)
高中英语语法-记牢单词的十种方法之二
高中英语语法-介词的活用
高中英语语法-浅谈英语构词法(一)
| 不限 |
| 英语教案 |
| 英语课件 |
| 英语试题 |
| 不限 |
| 不限 |
| 上册 |
| 下册 |
| 不限 |