{"id":3682,"date":"1976-08-01T01:00:00","date_gmt":"1976-08-01T01:00:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-57-no-8-august-1976-conserving-and-using-our-open-spaces\/"},"modified":"2022-11-28T00:16:07","modified_gmt":"2022-11-28T00:16:07","slug":"vol-57-no-8-august-1976-conserving-and-using-our-open-spaces","status":"publish","type":"rbc_letter","link":"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-57-no-8-august-1976-conserving-and-using-our-open-spaces\/","title":{"rendered":"Vol. 57, No. 8 &#8211; August 1976 &#8211; Conserving and Using Our Open Spaces"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"layout-column-main\">\n<p class=\"boldtext\"> Everyone has a life interest in conservation.                     For some, the stake is financial: farmers, commercial fishermen                     and trappers depend upon conservation of their resources for                     their livelihood. For others, the reward is health and recreation.                     Both sorts of people are concerned about preservation of our                     open spaces, our parks, our woodlands, our mountains and our                     streams.<\/p>\n<p> Preservation of these is preservation of the basic resources                     of the earth which men and animals must have in order to live.                     Our physical environment governs our lives to an extent that                     demands thinking about.<\/p>\n<p>It is time to think more earnestly than we have in the past.                     The tendency of our machine civilization is to wipe out every                     trace of what once was primitive wilderness. Joseph Wood Krutch,                     well known writer about nature, says in his book <em>The Great                     Chain of Life<\/em>: &#8220;If the earth is still livable and in                     many places still beautiful, that is chiefly because man&#8217;s                     power to lay it waste has been limited. Up until now nature                     has been too large, too abundant and too resistant to be conquered.&#8221;                     And there is more truth than poetry in the remark by Havelock                     Ellis: &#8220;The sun, moon and stars would have disappeared long                     ago if they had happened to be within reach of predatory human                     hands.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Though the history of exploiting natural resources on this                     Western Hemisphere has been relatively short, it contains                     many chapters of reckless waste and appalling destruction.                     Entire species of animals have been exterminated, or reduced                     to so small remnants that their survival is doubtful. Forests                     have been despoiled by uncontrolled cutting and by fire. Grasslands                     have been made desolate by over-grazing. Topsoil has been                     washed away.<\/p>\n<p>As recently as the time of John James Audubon, whose remarkable                     pictures of the birds of America were published in 1830, few                     birds or mammals were in danger of extinction; our land was                     still fertile and our streams ran clear. Then came what has                     been called the &#8220;terrible sixty years&#8221;. Land was torn up by                     the plough without regard for its stability under cropping.                     Buffalo were exploited for their hides and tongues. Eggs of                     wild birds became objects of commerce, and bright-plumed birds                     were shot for the millinery trade. Fish were destroyed by                     removal of shade trees and the pollution of their waters by                     silt and refuse.<\/p>\n<p>During recent years there has been a slight stirring toward                     good sense, but we are still full of inner contradictions.                     We set aside wild areas and then &#8220;improve&#8221; them out of all                     wildness. We spend in a profligate way to advance our comfort                     and convenience far more than people in other countries could                     ever afford, but we destroy in the process the very basis                     of comfort and life.<\/p>\n<h3>Point of no return<\/h3>\n<p>The wonders of the natural world, once destroyed, can never                     be replaced. It is our job as conservation-minded people looking                     to the future to maintain some sort of balance between nature                     and the appurtenances of our industrial age.<\/p>\n<p>Conservation is the planned management and wise use of nature&#8217;s                     resources. It aims, in co-operation with science and nature,                     to increase their quality, quantity and availability through                     the years. Conservation is not merely a subject for a school                     curriculum or for attention of game wardens and departments                     of the government: it is a way of life for all people.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, the wise use of our limited resources means restraint                     of the few persons who through ignorance, folly, or greed                     try to satisfy their desires at the expense of all the others.                     The protection of the basis of physical life should not require                     enforcement, but when enforcement is necessary we should have                     no compunction about applying it.<\/p>\n<p>Ontario found this out at the turn of the century. As W.                     J. K. Harkness termed it in an article in the <em>Canadian                     Geographical Journal<\/em>, &#8220;some nick-of-time legislation&#8221;                     had been passed in 1821 to protect fish and wildlife, but                     it was not until 1890 that a Royal Commission was appointed                     to make a comprehensive survey.<\/p>\n<p>Atlantic salmon once abounded in Lake Ontario and its rivers,                     the Don, the Humber and the Credit; after 1897 the salmon                     was not seen. The passenger pigeons, once counted in the millions,                     and the wild turkeys, were already on their way out, and could                     not recover even under complete protection. The last passenger                     pigeon died in 1914.<\/p>\n<p>It is to our credit that during the past fifty years we                     have become increasingly aware of the threat to our welfare.                     Governments, industry and people have gained knowledge about                     the need for conservation. Associations on all levels &#8211; county,                     community, province and dominion &#8211; are dedicated to the protection                     and improvement of forest and soil; of water, animals, birds                     and fish; of natural areas ranging in extent from watersheds                     to road-side parks.<\/p>\n<p>The least we can do is to become informed about the problems                     and needs. We may go further by associating ourselves with                     organizations dedicated to one or another of the conservation                     efforts.<\/p>\n<h3>We need open spaces<\/h3>\n<p>What humans need for survival in a world containing powerful                     enemies, physical and mental, cannot be summed up in the food,                     shelter and clothing formula. They need to be linked together                     in society and to be able to break apart as individuals.<\/p>\n<p>Open spaces provide fresh air and health, but they also                     provide the restful inspiration that nature gives to most                     of us. When we are in her domain nature has a way of soothing                     our fretfulness and easing our worries.<\/p>\n<p>Hours in the woods or parks may write no exciting saga.                     They may be eventless. There is nothing to write home about                     except how the sunlight is green-filtered and cool with the                     breath of falling water; how the trail follows the stream                     up and up, over fallen logs, with the summons of the hidden                     waterfall luring you on. Or you may tell how, when you were                     thirsty, you drank from cupped hands at a spring bordered                     by trillium; and about the black bear that came begging as                     you ate your lunch at the broad rock table near the falls,                     and the chipmunks that gambolled in the pine needles at your                     feet. And yet such a letter home conveys the sense of a chain                     of life continuous and rich with the ages.<\/p>\n<p>If we confine ourselves to our buildings &#8211; our homes, theatres,                     shops and offices &#8211; we are losing more than we know. The late                     Professor E. J. Urwick, head of the Department of Political                     Economy at the University of Toronto for ten years, wrote                     a book which he called <em>The Values of Life<\/em>. He said                     in it: &#8220;We are losing the capacity for wonder, the power to                     see and feel the miracles of life and beauty around us, without                     which our souls are half-empty and real fullness of life is                     denied us.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Our oldest resource<\/h3>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s oldest natural resource is her wilderness. Some                     of it is being preserved; much more should be set aside before                     it becomes overrun.<\/p>\n<p>Visitors to older countries notice that people there have                     a greater respect for natural features than we have hitherto                     shown. Perhaps it is because wilderness places abroad are                     wisely protected by folk tales and beliefs. In Ireland, for                     example, people do not meddle with the &#8220;fairy rings&#8221; or &#8220;lone                     trees&#8221; that dot the landscape any more than they would break                     down the bounds of a fairy fort. Consequently, there is a                     haven on every good man&#8217;s land for small wild creatures and                     gay wild flowers.<\/p>\n<p>Perhaps it is not modern to believe in fairies and leprechauns,                     but if they and the little light elves that inhabit the grassy                     verges of fields and the marshy banks of streams persuade                     us by promise or threat to preserve their homes they are doing                     us and our children&#8217;s children a good turn.<\/p>\n<p>On a larger scale, we need the spirit of conservation in                     our forests and parks. This may mean that we cannot gratify                     all demands for their use. Many of the things we go to the                     open spaces to enjoy are endangered because the facilities                     we demand for our comfort are crowding out the scenery.<\/p>\n<p>In too many instances a big job of landscape destruction                     is undertaken to make the place more accessible, or to change                     its character. Take the pond that Thoreau made famous through                     his book <em>Walden, or Life in the Woods<\/em>. The four families                     which once owned the surrounding property gave it to Massachusetts                     to preserve for posterity. Today, instead of the peaceful                     pool about which Thoreau wrote, there is a bathing beach,                     and across the road there are trailer camps and hot dog stands.                     It takes an effort of the imagination to picture the tranquil                     solitude of Thoreau&#8217;s Walden.<\/p>\n<p>Even in national parks, the pressures are great for roads                     and tourist developments. To the south of us, Yellowstone                     Park is an example. The original stipulation that the area                     should be kept in its &#8220;natural condition&#8221; has not prevented                     the construction of more and more roads, the building of more                     lodges, the provision of more parking space. Says a writer                     in <em>Vital Issues<\/em>: &#8220;There are places in Yellowstone                     that look as if they were trying to compete with an amusement                     park.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>By contrast, <em>Canada Year Book <\/em>said of Algonquin                     Park, one of Ontario&#8217;s provincial parks: &#8220;the present administrative                     policy is to encourage the establishment of commercial recreation                     facilities on the park fringes and to return the park itself                     to its natural condition.&#8221;<\/p>\n<h3>Choosing a vacation spot<\/h3>\n<p>The more complicated our lives become, and the more elaborate                     the machinery of living is made, the more necessary it is                     to create the temporary retreat from reality which we call                     play. Recreation is a major need for old as well as young.                     As the German philosopher Nietzsche wrote: &#8220;In every man there                     is a child who wants to play.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>Part of the standard of living in North America is the wilds                     of Canada. Gregory Clark went so far as to say in his booklet                     <em>With Rod and Reel in Canada<\/em>: &#8220;Canada is fortunate                     in having considerable areas unfit for anything forever save                     recreation.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>There is no ready-made vacation pattern into which people                     of all sizes and shapes must fit. Some may like the thrill                     of digging in the ages-old badlands of the Red Deer River                     Valley, where dinosaurs disported themselves in the shallow                     sea of the Mesozoic Age. Others prefer the Annapolis Valley,                     where Champlain raised his habitation and founded the Order                     of the Good Time in 1606.<\/p>\n<p>Snowy slopes, mineral springs, trout-filled streams, woods                     and hills peopled with game animals, mountain trails, sun-swept                     beaches: all these are to be found in Canada.<\/p>\n<p>There is little difference, really, between the recreation                     needs of the business man who gets away from his office to                     fish a Quebec stream and the housewife who, in sentimental                     mood, sits in Beacon Hill Park in Victoria when the moon is                     on the wane and sees a ghostly company of Druids walking in                     solemn procession beneath the giant oaks. Both accumulate                     cherished memories of pleasant surroundings, the mental tonic                     of peaceful hours. For the time being they have escaped into                     another room of life.<\/p>\n<h3>Learning about nature<\/h3>\n<p>Out of a vacation spent in one of Canada&#8217;s parks or open                     spaces one may carry away, besides pleasant memories, an intellectual                     increment. One may have absorbed some knowledge of the ways                     of squirrels or men.<\/p>\n<p>One does not need to study, but merely to take in. Even                     the greatest biologists stammer in the presence of nature.                     They do not know all the properties of living matter or all                     of its astonishing possibilities. To lesser people it is enough                     to see the beauty in the simplicity of natural things; to                     note how the myriad colours of moss on a rock show to their                     best advantage after a rainfall; to detect the grace of movement                     in a bounding deer; to envy, perhaps, the charming poise of                     a listening bird.<\/p>\n<p>Some knowledge of the natural world should be part of every                     child&#8217;s education: not the knowledge that is gained from textbooks                     or through class-room microscopes or by dissection of dead                     beasts, but knowledge of acquaintance. By giving children                     the opportunity to absorb nature we acquaint them with the                     sense that life exists even in the lowliest form of animal                     and the smallest sort of plant.<\/p>\n<p>Living in the open spaces will acquaint us, and our children,                     with the biological problems of human survival in a world                     where Nature will always have the last word. It will encourage                     us to overcome unwarranted fears, because we fear mostly what                     we do not know. It will give us the broad view that develops                     mental fitness and emotional stability.<\/p>\n<p>Alas! nature education in our schools often finds that it                     has arrived at a completely paved play yard. There are no                     ants for biology, no grasshoppers for arithmetic problems,                     no crickets for music, no weeds for pressing into albums,                     no pools with living drops for microscopic wondering.<\/p>\n<h3>What sort of open spaces?<\/h3>\n<p>The open spaces we need range from tracts that are thousands                     of square miles in area to little road-side picnic places                     with room for a couple of tables. The desirable feature is                     to have enough of them, preserved from invasion by predators                     of every sort, and located so that some of them are within                     reach of every Canadian.<\/p>\n<p>Canada&#8217;s national parks are areas set aside by the federal                     government &#8220;to preserve for all time the most outstanding                     and unique natural features of Canada for the benefit, education                     and enjoyment of Canadians as part of their natural heritage.                     They are dedicated forever to one use &#8211; to serve as sanctuaries                     of nature for rest, relaxation and enjoyment.&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>It was the discovery of mineral hot springs on Sulphur Mountain,                     near Banff, that led to the establishment of Canada&#8217;s first                     national park. From this small area of ten square miles, set                     apart in 1885, the parks system has been extended until it                     embraces thirty separate areas totalling 50,000 square miles.<\/p>\n<p>Every park has its special features, from fishing to romance.                     For the romantic interest we may go to Prince Edward Island,                     where Green Gables, the farmhouse immortalized by Lucy Maud                     Montgomery in Anne of Green Gables is preserved amid beautiful                     surroundings: the Lake of Shining Waters, the Haunted Wood                     and Lovers&#8217; Lane.<\/p>\n<p>Provincial parks, set aside and maintained by the provincial                     governments, total 100,000 square miles, and provincial forest                     reserves add up to 265,000 square miles. One of the best known                     is Algonquin Provincial Park in Ontario, only 175 miles from                     Toronto. In its 2,900 square miles there are countless wild                     birds and animals of many species living undisturbed by man,                     and anglers haunt its well-stocked lakes and streams.<\/p>\n<p>Not everyone has an automobile or the time and money required                     to reach these national and provincial parks, so it is necessary                     to have municipal parks.<\/p>\n<p>Much of the difference between towns in their general goodness                     of life for good people depends upon their intelligent provision                     of open spaces.<\/p>\n<p>Absurd it may be, but every new generation seems to come                     face to face with the problem of open spaces and parks as                     if it were something new; but we know of town planning with                     an eye to beauty and space in the Old World from very early                     times. Today, many Canadian communities are growing up without                     direction, one &#8220;development&#8221; jostling another without regard                     for anything beyond using the land for houses and apartments.<\/p>\n<p>What, specifically, should be sought? Ideally, every family                     should have access to a park big enough for all-day excursions;                     a wooded area; a protected place where wild flowers grow;                     a clear stream and a pool. These are to be our contact with                     nature, and are quite apart from school and other athletic                     grounds, tot lots and swimming places.<\/p>\n<p>Some device of law should be found whereby these areas shall                     be kept for the people for all time. As things are now, by-laws                     of a few years ago can be removed from the books to allow                     use of park land for electric substations, filtration plants,                     parking lots or other accessories of our mechanization. Our                     plans need to be realistic and practical, yet we must make                     them with vision, knowledge and imagination if we are not                     to barter future health and happiness for an easy solution                     of some present problem.<\/p>\n<p>As an example of planning of this sort, consider the programme                     of the Royal Botanical Gardens at Hamilton, Ontario. It includes                     science, recreation and education. It has a dozen areas, each                     with its own planned purpose: a picnic place, an autumn garden,                     a spring garden, a children&#8217;s garden, a nature trail and wild-flower                     sanctuary, a sunken garden, a marsh waterfowl sanctuary, an                     arboretum, and a rock garden.<\/p>\n<h3>Why bother?<\/h3>\n<p>Why should we go to the expense and trouble of preserving                     open spaces and providing parks? Because life depends upon                     it.<\/p>\n<p>The scampering of a squirrel, the ploughing of a worm, the                     flight of a bird, the honey-gathering of a bee &#8211; all these                     play their part in regulating the natural machinery of fertility                     and growth.<\/p>\n<p>The protection of trees on our watersheds is essential to                     the collection, storage and distribution of water, without                     which we could not live.<\/p>\n<p>We admire the wild flower for its beauty, painted by myriad                     artists, each with his own special skill, but the plant has                     a usefulness far more substantial than its aesthetic appeal.                     &#8220;When,&#8221; said C. F. Kettering, Vice-President of General Motors,                     &#8220;a man comes to me and says, &#8216;All of the major problems of                     science have been solved&#8217; &#8211; I like to ask him the simple question,                     &#8216;Why is grass green?'&#8221;<\/p>\n<p>The green leaf is the fundamental link between life on earth                     and the energy of the sun. By means of their green stuff &#8211;                     chlorophyll &#8211; plants are able to manufacture their own food                     from raw materials they gather from the air and soil. Animals                     lack this ability and could not exist without the food-producing                     plants.<\/p>\n<p>Everything that has life, from the bird song that wakes                     us at dawn to the philosophy that stirs our minds as we linger                     by moonlight on a beach or a hill-top, is built of the product                     of green plants.<\/p>\n<p>How close is the affinity between human beings and the trees,                     grass, shrubs, and flowers we wish to preserve in our open                     spaces? It is closer than most people realize. We may, as                     Donald Culross Peattie put it in his book <em>Flowering Earth<\/em>,                     lay our hand upon the smooth flank of a beech and say: &#8220;We                     be of one blood, brother, thou and I.&#8221; Because the one significant                     difference in the two structural formulas is this: the hub                     of every haemoglobin molecule in man is one atom of iron,                     while in chlorophyll, the green stuff of the plant leaves,                     it is one atom of magnesium.<\/p>\n<p>In earth&#8217;s long history one species after another of animal                     and plant has disappeared, and one culture after another has                     passed to oblivion, because of its inability to adjust to                     environmental change.<\/p>\n<p>Today it is necessary for mankind to regulate his use of                     resources and to manage earth&#8217;s remaining capital more creatively                     if he is to survive.<\/p>\n<p>We can adapt ourselves understandingly if we go into our                     open places, to learn by personal experience in field and                     forest, on mountains and beside the streams, that mankind                     is dependent upon the living resources of the earth and must                     do his part to conserve them.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"author":79,"featured_media":0,"template":"","categories":[1],"rbc_letter_theme":[],"rbc_letter_year":[56],"class_list":["post-3682","rbc_letter","type-rbc_letter","status-publish","hentry","category-uncategorized","rbc_letter_year-56"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v27.4 (Yoast SEO v27.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/product\/yoast-seo-premium-wordpress\/ -->\n<title>Vol. 57, No. 8 - August 1976 - Conserving and Using Our Open Spaces - RBC<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.rbc.com\/en\/about-us\/history\/letter\/vol-57-no-8-august-1976-conserving-and-using-our-open-spaces\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Vol. 57, No. 8 - August 1976 - Conserving and Using Our Open Spaces - RBC\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"Everyone has a life interest in conservation. For some, the stake is financial: farmers, commercial fishermen and trappers depend upon conservation of their resources for their livelihood. For others, the reward is health and recreation. 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For some, the stake is financial: farmers, commercial fishermen and trappers depend upon conservation of their resources for their livelihood. For others, the reward is health and recreation. 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