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There is a large group of loggers here in Pemberton that have worked closely with DFO for years building and maintaining hatcheries and other stream work as volunteersI'm trying to figure out if the first post was made out of ignorance,arrogance or wide eyed wonderment.
I missed tonights episode so I really do not know where you are coming from with that "guys so burned out from cutting trees" comment....But maybe I do not know what a "nice" or "protected" or "natural" forest truly is. Could you define that for me?
On the other hand, since I have grown up in this half of Oregon, it's not ignorance to say that I've never met a logger while hiking or camping.
It's not like they need to share tree-hugging, but somehow I get the feeling that their daily work influences their off-time activity and how they view forests.
But for all the time they spend leveling the forest, crushing the shrubs and mucking on the logging roads, how many of these loggers are hikers? Outdoorsmen that enjoy a nice forest?
Perhaps you should consider that loggers do not get "burned out" because they enjoy what they do and if they feel a need to relax, they can just shut off the saw or machine and just sit and enjoy for the moment all the beauty of the forest around. No need to take a walk, they are already where you long to be. But then again, I should not be telling everyone this because it may get to DanG crowded out there.
Jeff you sure nailed it with your comment of being offensive with the way the statement was worded with all the adjectives. Maybe it was not meant that way?? However, that's exactly how I took it whether it was meant that way or not. Before I even read to the bottom of the post.
i guess you missed the part where one of those ax men was talking about losing a good friend in a logging accident..maybe,because that tough guy was crying you missed it where he said he and his son took off for a couple of days and spend time in the woods just relaxing to try and get over the lose of a good friend.
For anyone who understands and has been around loggers, in general, do you find that they enjoy the outdoors and hiking as much as other folks in the general populace - do they like camping at Nehalem Bay, hiking Eagle Creek trail, walking around the Olympic National Forest?
I did not mean to rile you or offend you if I have. I'm just in agreement with Jeff's comment that maybe your statment could have been worded differently as it seems to infer that loggers have a very negative impact on the forest. That's literally how I took it whether it was intended or not. That's it!!
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