I have always been a fan of (the lone)
explorers. As a teenager, I read a book about the Scandinavian (Swedish)
explorer Sven Hedin. As an adult, I have been and are still fascinated by
the likes of Sir Richard Burton, Charles Darwin, John Wesley Powell, Everett
Ruess, and John Muir. Actually, when working in Yemen I became interested
in Peter Forsskal, one of those explorers that not many people have heard of,
but more about him in a little bit.
All explorers I mentioned here were
cartographers and/or naturalists in one way or another. They were
all ahead of their time and maybe with the exception of Ruess somewhat
prophetic; although Ruess disappeared and presumably died at a very young age.
Forsskal died very young as well.
At the time that I liked Hedin and his accounts
of travel through the desert of Inner Mongolia, his discovery of a solution for the existence of the lake known as Lop Nor and
his travels to Tibet, there was no Internet and Wikipedia, otherwise I would have learned that in his later years Hedin was a huge fan of Hitler and
the Third Reich. Hedin would have been an unwelcome
visitor on our bookshelves if we had known that since one of my uncles died in a concentration camp and our father spent time in one. However, I loved Hedin’s
account of his travels and writing about it and now, I wonder if this is where
I got my interest and love of the desert; I was fascinated by his tales of the
Gobi desert and how in his mind a whole civilization disappeared because a
river and lake dried up. It seems that Hedin was
initially motivated by the lust for fame and secondly by curiosity.
If there is any person I admire a lot, it is Sir
Richard Burton. A true renaissance man, he traveled India, Afghanistan,
and was one of the few Europeans to enter Mecca. He spoke a multitude of
languages (29); he was the ultimate spy for the English empire. I want to be like him when I grow up!
I will not say much about Darwin except that we
named our sailboat “the Beagle.” I will leave it to you to guess why, but
as a hint, I will tell you that Darwin traveled the world on a ship named “the
Beagle.” It was on this ship that parts of his theory of evolution were
developed.
Powell explored the west, and one of my favorite
books is an account of his exploration of the Colorado River. He starts
in the Green River and trouble starts almost instantly in the Flaming
Gorge. Powell had a great career as a
geologist and predicted amongst others the water shortage experienced during
the dust bowl, 50 years later.
Muir has occurred in many of my writings and I
will leave it at that. Just look through the labels. What amazes me is that he not only traveled
the Sierra, but he first actually walked from Kentucky to the Florida Keys.
Which brings me to the two enigmas: Forsskal and
Ruess.
Peter Forsskal was a Swedish/Finnish botanist
philosopher. He was a student of the famous Linnaeus; however, he also
studied oriental languages and philosophy. Interestingly, in 1759, he
published a pamphlet entitled (loosely translated): “Thoughts on civil liberty.“
In this pamphlet he pushed for the freedom of print (freedom of
expression?), which did not endear him with the powers of the time. In
other words, he was also way ahead of his time, freedom of the expression
showed up in the U.S. Constitution that was first proposed 30 years later (I
think) around 1789. I read the pamphlet and it is darn revolutionary. However, what initially interested me in
Forsskal was the fact that he died in Yemen, approximately 20 miles from where
we lived. In Yemen, I ran into a plant that was named for him by Linnaeus
(Forsskaolea tenacissima) and I started wondering who the heck this guy
was and what he was doing in Yemen in the mid 1700s. Linnaeus recruited a
number of his students to swarm out over the world and collect biological
specimens for him. This was a big thing at the time; it seems that your
status in the world went up with the number of species in your collection.
Linnaeus was one of the most ambitious of them all. Moreover, he was the inventor of a completely
new classification system of life; a system that we still use today.
Linnaeus sent Forsskal to the Middle East, first Egypt and then Yemen to
collect plants. It seems he contracted
malaria and died in Yemen at the age of 31.
There was a time I was hoping to write an article about Forsskal, if not
a book. Maybe one day, but there is very little information on Peter, at
least in English.
Finally Ruess; he was somewhat of an enigma.
He was a poet, artist and can be considered an explorer in his own right.
Since he was only 20 years old when he died in in 1934, we can never
really say much about what he achieved either metaphysically, philosophically
or scientifically. However, I think he played on a lot of people’s
fascination. In 1931, at the age of 17,
right after high school graduation, Ruess left home and started traveling alone
through California and later on through the Four Corners Region on a horse and
borough. He made linoleum and wood blocks, did drawings and wrote home to
his parents or brother Waldo on almost a daily basis. These letters form a daily diary of his
travels. Ruess disappeared in 1934 and
is thought to have been killed by two Ute Indians who stole his animals.
The mystery of his disappearance is still a subject to speculations. In his writings home Ruess appears much wiser
and knowledgeable than hi young age would give him credit for. He even interacted with Edward Weston, Ansel
Adams and Dorothea Lange, three famous photographers.
So what fascinates me about these explorers,
what is the common thread? The fact that they roughed it, survived rough
conditions to a point, discovered things: new cultures, new plants, animals,
not only for themselves but also for society. Ruess appears to have been
murdered; I hope it was swift and as painless as possible. Forsskal most likely suffered. It somehow reminds me a bit of some of the
situations we endured in Uganda, from being held at gunpoint a few times to
having very little food to eat and two matches per night during the civil war
when Idi Amin was being removed from power. It also reminds me of the
hikes through Nepal and our stays in villages in areas where few had ever seen
white folks; or where we were in danger of being flooded (see this post); my
stay at a home where they had a funeral for an important Buddhist lama; or that
one time we slept in a home at an elevation above 12,000 feet. It reminds me of sitting between these two
heavily armed Yemenis driving through the Empty Quarter up and down sand dunes
looking for a Land Rover mechanic. In a way, I miss it.
Reaching back to the past. While working in Nepal I had to hike into the back country and get into villages where some of the folks (especially kids) had never seen Europeans. |
One of my favorite pictures and I suspect I showed this one before, but when traveling on the Tibetan plateau, we ran into this guy and had a great talk with him. |