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Praise for The Weekender Effect "What happens to paradise when you
carve it up into lots and sell it? Bob Sandford writes about it
with clarity and a deep love of the places he knows so well.
Sandford's story of one town's mutation from a quiet mountain haven
to an overcrowded, generic 'outpost of globalization' is essential
reading for those who care about community and our last few
glorious spaces. " --Thomas Wharton, author of "Icefields,"
"Salamander" and "The Logogryph" "Equal parts manifesto,
meditation, and love song to mountain communities everywhere, this
calmly passionate book belongs in every house, condo, tent and
backpack in the mountain West and on university courses on nature
writing, the environment, community, citizenship, sense of place,
human geography and many more. This is essential reading for anyone
who lives in, lusts after or loves the mountains. " --Pamela
Banting, President, Association for Literature, the Environment and
Culture in Canada As cities continue to grow at unprecedented
rates, more and more people are looking for peaceful, weekend
retreats in mountain or rural communities. More often than not,
these retreats are found in and around resorts or places of natural
beauty. As a result, what once were small towns are fast becoming
mini cities, complete with expensive housing, fast food, traffic
snarls and environmental damage, all with little or no thought for
the importance of local history, local people and local culture.
"The Weekender Effect" is a passionate plea for considered
development in these bedroom communities and for the necessary
preservation of local values, cultures and landscapes.
"I believe that it is up to people like us to find the language,
create the images and imagine the solutions that will allow us to
break out of the vicious circle that threatens public health by
threatening our landscapes and water sources . . . Together we can
work toward this end. And, we can do it with humour. We can do it
with style. And we can do it with grace. " Try as we might, parts
of North America may not escape the impacts of the global water
crisis. The same kinds of water supply and quality issues that have
appeared around our crowded planet are already beginning to present
themselves here. Unfortunately, this is occurring at a time when,
as a direct result of declining global food production, the world
is beginning to rely more heavily than ever on agricultural
communities in North America to help meet increasingly unattainable
food-production goals. Instead of waiting for a water crisis of our
own, North Americans may well wish to put the lessons learned
elsewhere in the world into active practice. By using the example
of others to put our own water-management house in order, North
America can possibly avoid the same kinds of problems other
countries are facing with respect to the protection of water
resources. At the same time, we can employ enlightened attitudes
toward the management of water resources to advance many of our own
ecological and economic sustainability goals. Passionately
conceived, clearly written and citing concrete examples from all
over the world, "Restoring the Flow" is an approachable yet
authoritative source, one of the many implements concerned
citizens, government officials, businesspeople and policymakers can
use and reuse in understanding and addressing this ever-growing
global crisis.
""This then is a book of mountaineering, not presenting the
Canadian Rockies in their entirety -- no single volume will ever do
that -- but including many of the finest things. It is also a book
of mountain travel, under conditions such as perhaps the European
traveller experienced in the Alps during the Eighteenth Century.
Finally, it is a book of mountain history; for here is Geography in
the making, and with a tradition behind it -- a story that has
never been properly gathered together, and whose details, in part
at least, are gone forever."" -- from the Preface by J. Monroe
Thorington Completely re-edited, re-designed and containing with an
impressive collection of archival photos and maps, "The Glittering
Mountains of Canada" is a must-read for anyone interested in
mountain literature. The book's position in the pantheon of outdoor
writing as a "classic" is only further enhanced and supported by
the passionate Foreword by well-known mountain historian and
environmental writer Robert William Sandford, who urges the
contemporary reader to embrace Thorington's belief in the
importance of landscape and the poetry of place. This is a book
that deserves to be read and appreciated alongside the work of
Wallace Stegner, Henry David Thoreau and Sid Marty.
"Cold Matters" is a vital and approachable work that distills the
scientific complexities of snow, ice, water and climate and
presents the global implications of research put forth and funded
by the Canadian Foundation for Climate and Atmospheric Sciences.
This timely book gives the concerned reader an opportunity to take
part in the conversation about our global environment in a way that
transcends traditional scientific journals, textbooks, public talks
or newspaper articles that are so often ignored or forgotten. In
the end, "Cold Matters" will change the way you think about ice and
snow. The impassioned narrative and sophisticated illustrations
found within the pages of Robert Sandford's latest work offer
ecologically and globally minded citizens an understanding of the
behaviour of our ever-changing climate system and its effect on
cold environments in western Canada over the past 400 years. Using
revolutionary prediction scenarios to model glaciers and glacier
meltwater in British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Ontario,
Yukon, NWT and throughout the world, "Cold Matters" presents a
clear snapshot of how altered ecosystems will impact future
climates, urban centres and agricultural landscapes.
Fresh water is essential to both the ever-expanding human
population and the ever-threatened natural landscapes that surround
us. And yet, society seems to continually ignore the need for a
common-sense approach to -- and appreciation of -- our freshwater
resources and our consumption of this remarkable, life-giving
substance that now exceeds its future availability.This
ground-breaking and approachable work, by two of Canada's most
authoritative experts on water issues, redefines our relationship
with fresh water and outlines the steps we as a society will have
to take if we wish to ensure the sustainability of our water supply
for future generations.
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