BY TARA HENLEY
RACHEL IDZERDA
WHEN BERNADETTE MCDONALD was a young university student, she took a job as a camp attendant at Lake O’Hara in B.C.’s Yoho National Park. Her days consisted of patrolling trails and talking to campers. At dusk, McDonald would trek back to her cabin, fire up a wood stove, make dinner, a nd watch the sunset. She experienced a sense of wonder traversing remote valleys, ridges, and peaks, and felt as though something important was falling into place for her. “To be able to walk and hike and paddle, and see new places, and experience new things – and scare myself quite frequently – it all clicked,” she says. “It was what was missing in my life.”
Lisez l'article complet et bien d'autres dans ce numéro de
Quill & Quire
Options d'achat ci-dessous
Si le problème vous appartient,
Connexion pour lire l'article complet maintenant.
Numéro unique numérique
November 2017
 
Ce numéro et d'autres anciens numéros ne sont pas inclus dans une nouvelle version de l'article
abonnement. Les abonnements comprennent le dernier numéro régulier et les nouveaux numéros publiés pendant votre abonnement. Quill & Quire