at
and tips? Outside the National Park wardens and National Forest Rangers,
there isn't anyone.
* * * * *
How, then, are you to manage? Frankly, I never knew of either monkeys or
men accomplishing anything except in one way--just going out and doing
it. Choose what you want to see; and go there! The local railroad agent,
the local Forest Ranger, the local ranch house, will tell you the rest;
and naturally, when you go into the wilderness, don't leave all your
courtesy and circumspection and common-sense back in town. Equipped with
those three, you can "See America First," and see it cheaply.
CHAPTER I
THE NATIONAL FORESTS, A SUMMER PLAYGROUND FOR THE PEOPLE
If a health resort and national playground were discovered guaranteed to
kill care, to stab apathy into new life, to enlarge littleness and slay
listlessness and set the human spirit free from the nagging worries and
toil-wear that make you feel like a washed-out rag at the end of a
humdrum year--imagine the stampede of the lame and the halt in body and
spirit; the railroad excursions and reduced fares; the disputations of
the physicians and the rage of the thought-ologists at present coining
money rejuvenating neurotic humanity!
Yet such a national playground has been discovered; and it isn't in
Europe, where statisticians compute that Americans yearly spend from a
quarter to half a billion dollars; and it isn't the Coast-to-Coast trip
which the president of a transcontinental told me at least a hundred
thousand people a year traverse. A health resort guaranteed to banish
care, to stab apathy, to enlarge littleness, to slay listlessness, would
pretty nearly put the thought-ologists out of commission. Yet such a
summer resort exists at the very doors of every American capable of
scraping together a few hundred dollars--$200 at the least, $400 at the
most. It exists in that "twilight zone" of dispute and strong language
and peanut politics known as the National Forests.
In America, we have foolishly come to regard National Forests as solely
allied with conservation and politics. That is too narrow. National
Forests stand for much more. They stand for a national playground and
all that means for national health and sanity and joy in the exuberant
life of the clean out-of-doors. In Germany, the forests are not only a
source of great revenue in cash; they are a source of greater revenue in
health. They are a holiday p
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