Have you ever wondered why stone walls were built, or why pine trees dominate certain areas while maples flourish elsewhere? Tom Wessels offers a full and original portrait of the history of New England's forests. He's been teaching the process of "Reading the Landscape" as an approach to natural history since 1976, an approach that enables us to see the forest for the trees. By coming to a fuller understanding of our home ground, we're able to get a real sense of place. People living in hunting and gathering cultures may have had a physically challenging life, but their experience of life was profoundly rich. Through cultural transformation over the past 10,000 years, we have witnessed the erosion of our connection to place. "Reading the Forested Landscape" is a means of strengthening that connection. Tom brings alive the intricate, interwoven, and ever changing story of our region, offering a course comparable to tracking not animals, but forested landscapes. "This is a story of home, often fascinating, sometimes familiar, occasionally surprising, the place we know so well but know so little about." (Ann Zwinger) Unraveling forest mysteries can often be a perplexing challenge. Mysteries abound , and Tom is an excellent detective. He calls his process forest forensics, since it's very similar to going into a crime scene and gleaning evidence to figure out what happened in the past. He uses evidence such as the shapes of trees and the scarring on them, the decay of stumps, the construction of stone walls, and the lay of the land to unravel complex forest histories involving the abandonment of agriculture land, the impacts of hurricanes and other types of wind storms, past logging activity, as well as the impacts of blights and fire. This process demands only some new observational skills and the knowledge about the kinds of clues to look for. Tom Wessels literally wrote the book on understanding the stories that are etched into our landscapes. His expertise is widely respected. His work encapsulates Native American land use, early European agricultural practice, 19th century industrial impact in New England, history, geology, and biology. His interest is in noting changes in the forest composition and then looking for clues to explain the changes. No detail is too small. As good as Tom's book is, the experience of traipsing through a forest with him is much better. Once you spend a weekend in the woods with Tom, you won't look at a forest , any forest , the same way. A passionate and gifted explainer, Wessels can make you feel like you're discovering the secrets of the universe alongside him. That's what we are offering on this retreat, which is limited to 18 people.
Tom Wessels is a professor of Ecology at Antioch New England Graduate School and author of Reading the Forested Landscape: A Natural History of New England and The Granite Landscape: A Natural History of America's Mountain Domes, From Acadia to Yosemite. He chairs the Robert and Patricia Switzer Foundation, which fosters environmental leadership through graduate fellowships and organizational grants. "Wessels' fascinating book is equal parts Sherlock Holmes and Aldo Leopold, and it will help many thousands of New Englanders answer the questions that come to mind as they wander this landscape of stone walls, stunted apple trees, and towering hemlocks. Forget John le Carre it's Tom Wessels you want on your nightstand." Bill McKibben, author of The End of Nature