ENTS,

If you look at the past centuries, many of the more memorable people kept 
personal journals and diaries.  You can read Julius Caesar's accounts of his 
military expeditions.  There are the Journals of Lewis and Clark as they 
explored the American west.  There are the accounts Charles Darwin and his 
voyage on the Beagle.  Many of the lights of literature have had their letters 
and correspondence published posthumously.  Some decry the loss of letter 
writing as an art form.  I personally do not feel this loss, much as I am not 
worried about the proper spacing for the pony express stations.  Our methods of 
communication have changed and evolved over time.  Perhaps some quality aspects 
of letter writing has been lost.  Each letter was written over a period of 
time.  More thought went into the words and the message the author wanted to 
convey.  Today with email words are dashed out in a few minutes and sent across 
the world in seconds.  There is a loss of thoughtfulness in these emails. Words 
are sent out that we may at times wish to take back.  But there is a sense of 
immediacy in emails that was not present in letters that took weeks to deliver. 
 There are trade-offs, some good, some bad.  The genie cannot be put back in 
the bottle so we must strive to make the most of our communications as they 
exist today.

On my trips and vacations in the past I would keep a scrapbook of the places I 
visited.  Rather than put it in a large format , I chose to make mine in a 
standard boo sized, hardback, blank journal that I could buy at a convenience 
store.  It gave the final product more of a feel of a real book, rather than a 
album of clippings.    I would include materials from the many free leaflets 
and pamphlets given out to tourists and visitors at rest stops and in every 
tourist trap around.  Occasionally I would include a purchased postcard.  I 
have maps that fold out, clippings that open, and hand written notes to fill 
the books in addition to the photographs I would take and the memories I would 
keep.

The source of these reflections was an article in North Star, January -June 
2009, the magazine of the North Country Trail Association.  The article is 
entitled "Keeping Digital Souvenirs" and is written by Tom Moberg  
http://www.northcountrytrail.org/  Unfortunately the article is not available 
online. The article looked at technologies that allowed you to keep digital 
souvenirs of your hikes.  These included: 1) GPS, 2) Audio recordings, 3) Video 
clips, and 4) Digital photographs. It also talked of the uploading the 
materials to various internet sites, and the creation of WebPages.  Some GPS 
models can e used to create and export tracks of the hikes that can be overlaid 
on maps, or if you desire on maps at Google Earth to create 3D views and 
flyovers of your hikes.   Audio recordings are not something I ever really 
thought about but comments can be recorded as you hike, bird calls and other 
sounds can be recorded.    I have a small digital recorder that will record 
continuously for over 8 hours that cost around $30 dollars.   It runs on AA 
batteries.  It could be used to record comments or thoughts as they occur.  (I 
will need to try it). The same can be done with video clips only with a video 
image to accompany the sound.  Many digital cameras have an option to record 
short video clips with sound, although their sound capability is sometimes 
awful.  We all know about digital cameras. A person could take hundreds of 
digital photos and keep only the ones they want.  I like to photograph 
informational signs that tell me information about the photo subject. At 
Yellowstone, for example, each of the geysers are named.  I would take a photo 
of the sign with some background, then try to get a good photo of the feature 
itself.  All we need to do is to carry extra batteries and digital cards.

The difference between centuries past and today is what we do with our 
memories.  When I visit a forest of measure trees I post to the ENTS discussion 
list to share with other members.  Of my other activities I have an account on 
Facebook http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=709156957&ref=name and MySpace. 
 Here I can post blogs about my activities unrelated to trees.   There are 
sites that simply host blogs for those interested.  These sites allow you to to 
post photos, text, video clips, and audio clips.  You can post your thoughts in 
the excitement of the moment.  You can include links and bits from other 
websites about the places you have visited. You can add maps from 
www.teraserver-usa.com  or other sources.  You can link to a myriad of other 
resources to augment your own experiences.  You can share more of your 
experience in more different mediums than ever could be shared via letter.  On 
the other hand, a letter allowed perspective on your adventures as it took time 
to write and in its very nature gave the writer a chance to pause for 
reflection.  This character is often lost in quick emails ad blogs.  Also lost 
is the feel of holding a letter or book in your hand.  There is a soothing 
tactile nature to holding a book or piece of paper that is absent from holding 
your keyboard and reading from a screen.  I don't think people will go back to 
letter writing with the immediacy of email and the internet so integrated into 
our everyday lives.    We can strive to give more thought to our posts, and 
more reflection in our blogs.  We need to take better advantage of these new 
mediums as we move forward.  I need, and we all need, to better organize out 
disparate postings in a more comprehensive manner, rather than the current 
hodgepodge of a little bit here, and a little bit there.  Instead of a paper 
trail to the future, we are now leaving an electronic one.



Ed Frank

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