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A collection of intensely personal stories of climbing, rock climbing and alpinism, around the world, by one of Americas best mountain writers. Dorworth also includes portraits and profiles of some of the most important American climbers of recent times, a series of meditations and reflections on the climbing life. And finally, the book concludes with two imaginative works of mountaineering fiction.
Native Americans did not write down or record their history, so we have to find out about their past in other ways. They used games, myths, dance, and impersonation to teach the children of their history and ways of life. Their storytelling was filled with family, heritage and stories of the earth. It is through storytelling, that the rich history of the Native American tribes is alive and well today. It has been shared and preserved and still pays tribute to fallen heroes of the past. It is through these glimpses into the past, and these stories much like the ones that are contained in this book, that you can see what a proud heritage they possess and how in tune with the Earth Native Americans really are. Included in this collection are: The Story of the Land of Northern Lights, The Legend of the Bear Family, The Origin of Summer and Winter, The Story of the Buffalo-painted Lodges, The Story of the Camp of the Ghosts, Creation of the First Indians, The Story of the Little Burnt Face, Origin of the Sweat Lodge, Rabbit and the Moon Man, Ghost of the White Deer, Unktomi and the Arrowheads, The Story of the First Pine Trees, Raven and His Grandmother, The Story of the Snow Man, The Origin of Medicine, and many more.
The fun, hands-on exercises in this motivating, easy-to-use workbook are designed for boys of all ages and will encourage great exploration into universal awareness.
Mustang Fever: Run Free with Wild Mustangs. Sequel to Moonlights, Missiles and Moana. While stationed at the Nevada Nuclear Test Site, Sixth Weather Squadron Airman Chance Chisholm becomes a protector of an endangered band of wild mustangs. He meets Cheyenne Autumn, a local Paiute woman and part of a family of long-time mustangers. This sets up a page-turning adventure full of surprising twists and turns, fraught with peril and high-stakes rescues, blessed with budding romance and filled with personal revelation?and a shocking visit from Moana, Chance?s love interest from Moonlight, Missiles and Moana, the first book in the ongoing series. From high desert to the Rocking K Ranch, from the Autumn family?s deep Native American traditions to Chance?s growing feelings for Cheyenne, Mustang Fever paints a stunning portrait of the American West and the last remaining examples of its wildness?the mustangs.
No one knows how old the charming legends in this unusual book really are. By word of mouth they have been handed down from generation to generation among the Pahute Indians, one of the most ancient and primitive tribes on this continent, who settled centuries ago in what is now the state of Utah. In the main, the legends tell of the origin of all living things—which to the Indian includes the trees, the flowers and grass, the wind, the water, the moving clouds that suddenly darken into storm over the mountains, as well as man and the animals of this earth. They also tell why living things behave as they do. Here, for example, is the Pahute version of why the sun rises cautiously, why the coyote looks up when he howls, how the beaver lost the hair on his tail, how the flowers got their colors, and of many more interesting phenomena. In language of great beauty and simplicity the stories explain how the Pahute gods, Tobats and his younger brother Shinob, created the earth and ruled all its inhabitants. The author, William R. Palmer, who was taken into the tribe as a token of gratitude for his work in securing better living conditions for the dwindling number of Pahutes in Utah today, listened to the legends as they are still related around Pahute campfires. At last (and only after his Indian brothers were certain he would not misinterpret them) he obtained their permission to translate the stories into English and so to make a book of them. Here then is a rare collection in which young and old alike are sure to find hours of enjoyment. This book makes a significant contribution to that all-too-scant segment of our literature—the folk tales of the first Americans. For this and other historical contributions Dr. Palmer was given the highest recognition of an honorary doctorate degree by Utah State University.
What was to be the start of their lives together, turned Josh and Jennas lives into something so unexpected? As the handful of passengers boarded a vintage 1957 school bus they had no idea what they were getti ng themselves into. They stopped at diner in a small town called Gila Bend to get a bite to eat, it wasnt unti l they were about to leave when they realized that someone had tampered with the bus or was it that the bus was just old? The strangers now had to stay together as they didnt know who they could trust. A waitress in the diner off ered to put them up at her rooming house unti l Monday when the bus should be fi xed, not knowing, it would be the worst mistake they could have made. It would change their lives forever.
The Devil’s Hole. Four men who went through college together go on hunting and fishing trip to the wilds of Wyoming. They are taken to a mountain lake ten thousand feet in the mountains called the Devil’s Hole by the local residents. A helicopter takes them up and will return to bring them down. The men experience wild animals—grizzlies, cougars, and wolves; one is killed by a wild animal. One man finds out another in the party was having an affair with his wife, which create animosity between the two. The helicopter returns, but the pilot is mauled and killed by a grizzly bear, so the men must trek down the mountain and hike ninety miles to civilization. They encounter wild animals, thick forests, raging waters, starvation, and dehydration. Not all of them make it.
Boys' Life is the official youth magazine for the Boy Scouts of America. Published since 1911, it contains a proven mix of news, nature, sports, history, fiction, science, comics, and Scouting.