Oregon Desert Guide: 70 Hikes

Amazon.com Price: $17.95 (as of 20/04/2019 06:51 PST- Details)

Description

* The only hiking guidebook to the Oregon desert

* Calls for the protection of 36 wild areas

* Extensive information about the natural history of the Oregon desert

* All royalties from the sale of this book go to desert conservation efforts

It is One of the most wildest and most remote land left in Oregon and the object of a 40-year love affair for conservationist Andy Kerr. In 70 hikes through snow-capped mountain ranges, deep river canyons, sagebrush-covered flats, dry lake playas, moonlike lava fields, and juniper-covered hillsides, Andy Kerr will seduce you too, with the spare and mysterious beauty of the Oregon desert. And he hopes, inspire you to action.

Each of these wild areas, vital to survival of native plants and animals is currently threatened. Kerr explains how you’ll fall in love with the Oregon desert, and then help protect these lands eternally.

The Oregon Desert Guide uncovers short and long hikes in One of the most most spectacular and little-known country in the lower 48. This is dry, difficult territory, much of it ignored by recreationists until recently. As befits a guide that highlights atypical landscapes, the trail information is presented in a relatively unique way that addresses local environmental concerns in addition to the many scenic splendors to be found. Writer Andy Kerr includes extensive notes (as well as a full chapter) on natural history, discusses the myriad ecological threats (livestock overgrazing, no surprise, is at the top of the list), and details the uncertain political future facing these mostly unprotected wildlands. One of the most gems here will be familiar to outdoors enthusiasts from the Northwest and beyond: Malheur, known to birdwatchers in all places as an important staging ground all over spring and fall migrations; Hart Mountain, a stronghold for North America’s swiftest mammal, the pronghorn antelope; and Steens Mountain, a massive whalebacked monolith rising a mile above the surrounding landscape. Other places will be new even to many Oregon residents: the many hidden canyonlands of the Owyhee River drainage, for instance, or the increasingly rare sagebrush-steppe grasslands of the Columbia Plateau. One area noted, a place of remarkable beauty and ecological diversity, is Soda Mountain, where the Cascade and Klamath mountains are linked by the Siskiyou ridge–“east meets west meets north meets south”; since publication, President Clinton, exercising his executive power, has invoked the Antiquities Act to designate this area a national monument. Most other areas covered in the guide, then again, have not received such protection, and the Writer does a public service by providing a conservation context for each hike; Northwesterners, in the end, are all too aware of what happens to favorite hiking destinations that don’t receive some form of legal protection.

Home » Shop » Books » Subjects » Arts and Photography » History and Criticism » History » Americas » United States » West » Pacific » Oregon Desert Guide: 70 Hikes

Recent Products