April 2022- Natural Awakenings Lehigh Valley PA & Far West NJ

Page 24

Why We Need

WILD PLACES How to Invite Nature Back into Our Lives and Landscapes

danita delimont/AdobeStock.com

by Sheryl DeVore

O

n a blustery day, Julian Hoffman stood outdoors and watched wild bison grazing in the restored grassland of Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie, fewer than 50 miles from downtown Chicago. For him, it was a wild place, affording a glimpse of what North America looked like hundreds of years ago when bison roamed the continent by the millions. “We’re witnessing, in a way that’s both terrible and tragic, just what the profound cost is of continuing to destroy the natural world,” he writes. Saving wild places is critical for human health and well-being, 24

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say both scientists and environmentalists. But defining what a wild place is or what the word wilderness means can be difficult, says Hoffman, author of Irreplaceable: The Fight to Save Our Wild Places. “If wilderness means a place untouched by humans, then none is left,” he says. Even the set-aside wildernesses where no one may have ever stepped have been altered through climate change, acid rain and other human interventions. Humans are also losing the wilderness that is defined as land set aside solely for plants and creatures other than humans.


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April 2022- Natural Awakenings Lehigh Valley PA & Far West NJ by Natural Awakenings - Lehigh Valley and Pocono Editions - Issuu