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"Lines Across the Sand"

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Emilene Ostlind | Aug 24, 2010 12:00 AM

Edward Abbey's 1975 novel The Monkey Wrench Gang opened with a definition:

sabotage … n. [Fr. < sabot, wooden shoe + -age: from damage done to machinery by sabots]….

From this subtle introduction, the book grew beyond its covers, even beyond the reach of its cantankerous author, and led a whole generation of upset desert rats to replace sabots with a different tool, introducing a new definition into the vernacular of Western environmental activism:

monkey-wrench … v. [Am. < monkey wrench, adjustable wrench with large jaws] to prevent, delay, or sabotage industrialization or development, esp. through vandalism ….

While Glen Canyon Dam remains standing despite Abbey's blueprint for its destruction, many credit the book with inspiring other acts of civil disobedience: radical environmental group Earth First!'s tree sits, Earth Liberation Front's guerilla property destruction, and most recently Tim DeChristopher's sabotage of a Bureau of Land Management sale of oil and gas leases in Utah's backcountry. Now an in-the-works documentary – "Lines Across the Sand" – will bring these monkeywrenchers to the screen alongside Abbey's real life companions – including Doug Peacock, Ken Sleight, and Ingrid Eisenstadter – who inspired Monkey Wrench Gang characters George Washington Hayduke, Seldom Seen Smith, and Bonnie Abbzug.

Abbey once said, "Society is like a stew. If you don't stir it up every once in a while, a layer of scum floats to the top." This film doesn't monkeywrench per se, but, like Abbey's books, it does stir the stew in its own way, blending humor and outrage in the wild desert to make a "call to action -- the Earth needs defenders," says filmmaker M.L. Lincoln. Lincoln's 2007 award-winning short film "Drowning River" documented the flooding of Glen Canyon. "When they drowned that place, they drowned my whole guts,” protest songwriter Katie Lee, who appears in both films, has said of the canyon. “I will never forgive the bastards. Never. May they rot in hell."

Set for release later this year, "Lines Across the Sand" gives a voice to activists for wild lands protection.

Would Abbey watch this film if he were still alive? Perhaps, but he'd likely follow Seldom Seen's example afterward:

A tactful man, Smith withdrew when the movie was over, went out into the desert with his truck and bedroll, slept under the stars, on the sand with the tarantulas and sidewinders for company...

The fourth monkeywrencher
Emilene Ostlind
Emilene Ostlind
Aug 25, 2010 04:05 PM
Not mentioned in the post is another character of importance: Doc Sarvis who "is apparently an amalgamation of Edward Abbey himself and John De Puy" according to the documentary's marketing manager, Kristi Frazier. A video of John De Puy talking about Ed Abbey can be seen here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FW7eBcq39bk
Lines Across the Sand
Diane Rapaport
Diane Rapaport
Aug 25, 2010 07:18 PM
Let's not forget that Ed Abbey and Katie Lee were friends. He would love seeing how his torch continued to be carried by her and all the other 'monkey wrenchers' that he knew as well as those that have come after him.
songwriter credit
Kathleen Williamson
Kathleen Williamson
Aug 28, 2010 02:06 AM
the song you hear in this was written by "Billboards in the Sky" by the late Gerry Glombecki.
bulldozer pulling down trees with chain
Danny
Danny
Sep 03, 2010 10:39 AM
To bad the scene with the bulldozer looks an awful lot like juniper trees, one of the most invasive species in the west. Using bulldozers and chains is one cost effective method to remove these water suckers and try and restore the grassland and sagebrush that was here before fires started to be controlled.
junipers aren't considered 'invasive'
Doc
Doc
Sep 03, 2010 05:55 PM
They're native to the western US (well most of the Juniperus species outside of landscaping varietals) and we don't usually consider them invasive. Tamarisk, now those are invasives.

Plus chaining isn't really very selective, it pulls up sage as well as pinyons and junipers and creates disturbance that problem plants like cheatgrass and spotted knapweed really like.
junipers are invasive
Danny
Danny
Sep 03, 2010 08:47 PM
you are incorrect. http://www.bioone.org/[…]/WT-04-098R1.1?journalCode=wete
http://www.jstor.org/pss/3989470
http://www.ars.usda.gov/is/AR/archive/jul09/grass0709.htm
http://www.sciencedaily.com/[…]/100827112940.htm

and many more all call junipers "invasive" even as they are called native. I quote from the last link "Most ecologists and resource managers agree that juniper has become a deleterious native invasive plant that threatens other vegetation ecosystems" The juniper moves in, eventually killing native grasses and shrubs and helping cheatgrass invade. The bulldozing of junipers is one tool in managing them that can be used effectively or negatively, depending on the application. To use it in a video to show humans "attacking other species" isn't a very good example at all. But from a monkey wrench point of view it looks good, big bad bulldozer with giant chains pillaging the earth and burning diesel, BAD!
Thanks for the link but I still disagree
Doc
Doc
Sep 04, 2010 07:38 AM
I suppose it comes back to the ambiguous use of the term 'invasive' applied by range managers/ecologists in the links you supplied. I'm an ecologist and I disagree with using the term when it comes to native species which have increased local population densities because of changes in environmental factors (decreased fire in this case). I (and many other ecologists) believe the term should be restricted to non-native (aka exotic) species that were either accidentally or purposefully introduced into an area and are now quickly supplanting native species.

But that's probably just semantics to most folks. The outcome however is that when we label something "invasive" it becomes subjectively bad and we can justify doing whatever we can to reduce or remove it. In the case of juniper I believe we need to focus on restoring the fire component rather than simply saying junipers are 'bad' and need to be removed by chaining.

Thanks for the reply though.
 

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