Winter in the Woods: A Paean-in-Gray to the Sierra Nevada Backcountry, and to Lives Excellently Lived

10/22/09  Print this post Print this post    3 Comments   Popular   Written by David Page
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THIS IS THE WAY OF OUR TIMES: A man falls asleep reading a fine account of the rise and fall of the American Newspaper (in words printed on paper, in a magazine), from Gold Rush San Francisco to an equally tenuous present. He wakes to another rosy-fingered dawn over the White Mountains, as in a fable, or not, his children crawling all over him, kneeing him in the groin, laughing, pouting, fighting for his attention, clamoring for juice.

Later he takes his coffee (and a pancake formed in the shape of a squirrel by his visiting mother-in-law) to the basement, where, surrounded by exposed insulation, and with the light coming up on the trees outside, he puts off the task at hand—that of writing the texts for a guide to winter adventure in Mammoth, as commissioned by the Ski Area.

He scrolls through the morning’s tweets, comes upon the following from (of all possible sources) the Comfort Inn in Bishop (@ComfortInn395):

Check this video out–Winter in the Woods-Backcountry Skiing in the Sierra Nevada.

And so he does, of course, and is immediately transported far beyond his cluttered desk, beyond the world of newspapers and social media and a too-sluggish computer, to an earlier time—a better time, he cannot help but think—and a time very soon to come:

And now he is ready for winter.

Thank you David Huebner. For more of his goods—writing, photography, video—check out backofbeyond.org.


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About the Author

Matador ID: davidtpage

David Page's guidebook to Yosemite, the Southern Sierra Nevada and Death Valley earned him a 2009 Lowell Thomas Travel Journalism Award, and was named "Best Guidebook of 2008" by the Outdoor Writers Association of California. He has written for the Los Angeles Times Magazine, Men's Journal and The New York Times, and is contributing editor-at-large for Matador. He lives on the edge of one of the largest calderas on earth, in Mammoth Lakes, California, with his wife, his two boys, and an illegal migrant canine representative of the Aztec god Xolotl.

3 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Julie replied on October 22, 2009

    David-

    First of all: a pancake in the shape of a squirrel? I can’t even make one in the shape of a circle. Your suegra is one talented woman.

    And second: you follow the Comfort Inn of Bishop on Twitter? I’m speechless. ;)

    ↵ Reply
  • David Page replied on October 22, 2009

    1) Right?
    2) Somebody there is coming from a good place.

    ↵ Reply
  • Joshywashington replied on October 22, 2009

    Thanks for the video love!
    Love the first paragraph…read it a couple times, smiling, ‘clamoring for juice’.

    I had pancakes this morning, last night, yesterday morning (i am on some sort of kick)… and everyone of them was the shape of a malignancy.

    ↵ Reply

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