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Vermont, vermillion and the start of a deep map

At the writer's retreat in Vermont, yellow Adirondack chairs look up to the Green Mountains. Robert Frost's writing cabin is a two-mile walk from the inn. And each morning I walk down through dense woods towards the Middlebury River to sit on a log covered so thick with lichen that it feels like a low, damp chair.

I'm here to work with young writers, and, really how hard could it be in a setting like this? Send them outside. Ask them to open their eyes and sit still. Have them yell out loud in the woods and listen to what replies. Have them think about how all of this got here without them. Ask them what they've seen, heard, thought. Give them time to write it down. "No one exists nowhere," I tell them. "Your writing can become a deep map—a map going down rather than out."

Of course we won't be here long enough to get much mapping done. We each take three visits to the same spot on the grounds—one in our bodies, all the senses alive; one attending to what or who haunts the place; finally, one asking the questions, "What will remain when I leave?" The answer to that last one, in Vermont in May, is black flies—biting swarming black flies.

Back in Illinois a few days later, I can make no sense of my notes and photographs of Vermont. But I feel a trace of desire to be among trees for a few hours. So I head to the woods to walk deliberately. Yet east central Illinois forests do not prosper like beans and corn, so I can't walk to Walden. I have to start out in my car. I find my way to Kickapoo State Park, 45 minutes or so from C-U, outside of Danville and just a few trails from Indiana.

I hike through stands of haw, silver maple, cottonwood, oak, dogwood, sycamore and host of other species I can't identify without help. Wildflowers and poison ivy dominate the foliage; in Vermont it was mostly moss and ferns. I see almost no wildlife—only a pair of quite large dogs followed by a quite large owner. He is the only person I meet on the trail. All the other souls were in the parking lot, older men in ball caps putting boats into the water.

On one side of the trail runs the Middle Fork of the Vermillion River, the best name of a river in Illinois, though it is disappointingly caramel in color, not vermillion. On the other side of the trail are several of the 20 or so ponds and lakes in the park, a handful of fishing boats sputtering across them in the late morning sun.

The small hills are easy enough, and the trails are well cleared. I stop every hundred yards or so to photograph downed trees, a toad, views of the river. At one point, trying to take a photo I stumble down a steep, rooted slope towards the river rocks. Even in Illinois, I think, you could fall to your death.

Years earlier, men surely died here. For at least 20 years, United Electric Coal pulled more than 8 million tons of coal from these hills, mostly surface mining. The bluffs along the river bear scars, gouges and erosion made by workers who needed the work and survived (or didn't) the risks. Of course the Vermillion cut its share of earth away as well, exposing the shale that itself is like a map of coal seams.

In 1939, area residents raised funds to help the state of Illinois purchase around 1,200 of these acres from the mining company. With such a legacy, it is nearly unimaginable that in November 2008, Governor Blagojevich threatened to shut down this park as part of proposed budget cuts. As in so many things he tried, I'm happy he failed.

Those who bought the land and the Department of Natural Resources (among many others) both preserved this terrain and gave it a chance to transform. As with so many projects of the Abandoned Mines Lands Restoration Program, Kickapoo Park displays a version of nature reclaiming itself. Birds and fish flourish. Plants root themselves in the soil, rooting the soil itself against more erosion.

Yet some of the place's best features result from the very activities that nearly destroyed it. Wetlands animals and plants thrive in what were once mining pits. It's impossible to imagine, as I could in Vermont, that this is some untouched wilderness. People have, should, and will continue to be part of this landscape. It's just a question of how to do it.

I walk back to my car, memory card full of images, and I know at this point how little I know about this place, how long it would take to make a map down deep enough to understand. I also know that neither the Vermillion River, nor Ripton, Vermont exist just to be strip-mined-either for coal or for poetry. I'm trying to be present, but not to leave too many scars.

 


Most Recent Culture Comments

Michael Feltes avatar

The Alan Partridge lookalike on the right in the first small photo has nothing to condescend to anyone about. AH HA!

{username}

@Jason: You’re right about that. I get groceries at Schnucks (they carry what I buy, which I can’t say of any other single grocery store in town), and if they have a beer I’m in the market for it’s usually a quarter or two cheaper per 6-…

JPSherrill avatar

Best Neighborhood Bar (& Grill) : Urbana - My ‘hood-  the ‘Boom! http://www.boomerangbarandgrill.com Go on a Wing Wednesday or Fish Friday, or see a band play some night.  Local blue-collar Urbana terroir galore.  My only beer snobbish gripe is lack of a pale hopped ale, but you…

Jason Brown avatar

The one thing that’s bothered me for a while about the Friar is that, for most commonly purchased adult beverages, you can actually walk down the strip mall to Schnucks and get them cheaper. It makes no sense, but there it is. I suspect it’s because Schnucks…

Rob McColley avatar

Maybe I complained enough in person. One time I even explained to the (wholly uninterested) clerk how to navigate the Illinois Statutes web page, and Savoy’s Municipal Code database I wouldn’t know because I only go there when I want to pay 30% more for anything, which is never.

{username}

@Rob: You seem to have the weirdest experiences. I’m in Friar Tuck every other week (don’t tell my mom that I’m a lush). They never fail to ask for my birth date but never my age, they never card afterwards, and they often allow me to use…

Rob McColley avatar

This column affords me a long-awaited opportunity. I’ve wanted to write my own column called Fuck You Friar Tuck Liquors. but I always thought it’d be too pithy. Here, I can say Fuck You Friar Tuck Liquors and not feel bothered to stretch it out to 750…

Tracy Nectoux avatar

Ha! Exactly. You, sir, are welcome at the bar in My House.

Rob McColley avatar

Why wait ‘til 3 pm?

Beth Dillman avatar

I’m excited to go tonight- should be very fun!

Most Recent Comments

Michael Feltes avatar

The Alan Partridge lookalike on the right in the first small photo has nothing to condescend to anyone about. AH HA!

{username}

Snell and the little Hitlers of the neighborhood association need to chill out. Legitimate businesses should have the freedom to exist without having to endure the slings and arrows of ignorant and misguided opposition.

isaac arms avatar

represent, Matt.

{username}

Yeah, I’d agree that Transporter Room 3 is the worst house venue I’ve ever seen.

{username}

Food trucks are the start-up, small businesses of the future for those unable to afford real estate. No surprise, that merchants who pay rent, utilities, and maintenance on a property would despise the traveling competition. Or developers who build more empty retail spaces would want to close…

{username}

Not so much far-right Tea Party as a balanced, moderate viewpoint between letting businesses succeed and protecting society with reasonable regulations. In spite of what the city reps are saying, the interpretation of policy on this issue certainly has changed. Letting a business start up under one…

Rob McColley avatar

I think it’s neat that SP has turned rightward, now espousing a Tea Party-style frustration with government regulations & taxes.

Annie Weisner avatar

This makes me so sad.  (Happy to live in Urbana, though!)  Crave Truck has been a GREAT addition to the food choices in C-U, and it’d be a travesty to chase them away.  This town should be supporting small businesses.  I’m glad to hear that they’ll still…

{username}

*slow. clap.* Still offering no threat of intelligence…. I know I said I thought you should just write this whole column yourself next year, Isaac, but now that you’ve gone and taken a “part deux” run at it, I’d like to modify my request: Best Music 2013,…

isaac arms avatar

Actually, it’s kind of nice, the quiet.  John Heoffleur’s engaging commentary/dialogue is sorely missed, however. In lieu of someone intelligent saying something, I’ve compiled a list of Honourable Mentions: BEST ROCK BAND: Take Care ::these gentlemen have four completely different sets at their disposal right now (which…

isaac arms avatar

What?  Echo! (Echo!) Where’s the dischord and dissent?

Mike Ingram avatar

This weekend will mark the first appearance of Kayla Brown’s Fire Doll Candle booth at the Market.  Check it:  http://www.facebook.com/firedollcandles

{username}

And without bloodshed. Sounds like the Savoy trustees aren’t as narrow-minded as some of their whiny pants constituents. Do you think quack Snell is already planning an asinine counterattack or is he still laying low after those “threats” against his person?

isaac arms avatar

hey, if hair ain’t gon’ be over your head, my jokes may as well be.

{username}

Okay, almost 24 hours later and I finally got Issac’s Summer joke. I’m an idiot.

isaac arms avatar

Excellent.  I am glad sometimes American dreams are encouraged, rather than stifled.

{username}

Swap the dog for a fire pit and it sounds like you’re writing about my back yard. Very nice.

isaac arms avatar

funny, as your summer begins, another Summer ends.

Jason Brown avatar

@Dan - Wow. Unfortunately, I have to refrain from further comment due to a previous employment relationship. But with that brief context you might be able to imagine possible comments or responses I could have.

Dan Schreiber avatar

Oh, by the way, the “Champaign County YMCA” no longer exists. The official name is now the “Stephens Family YMCA” (the website has not been updated, but check out the latest program guide).  And no, it’s not just the name of the building. It’s the name of the organization.

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