WLM Spring and Early Summer 2017 | Page 35

There is something to be said about the routes I choose to fly and how they relate to the original pathways that Native Americans, French fur trappers, settlers, cowboys of yore riding horses, and cowboys of today riding their BMWs use: terrain has an unsurprising way of shaping transportation and culture. The same holds true with an old airplane: it’s just plain easier and safer to take the same pathways of those before me, albeit one thousand feet above the ground with an excess of wind and cold in my face. Jackson Hole was a major transit area for countless adventures through all points in and around Yellowstone, the mountains of Wyoming, and into Montana as I set off for seemingly greater adventures and destinations. Like anywhere that I have lived or visited, it becomes surprising to uncover the magnitude of beauty and intrigue in a location, as terrestrial living has a way of dampening comprehensive access to the world around us. It is almost depressing to add up the surface of the earth that the average person has access to and traverses with any regularity, though to some extent, ignorance is bliss. When roads lead around something, few waste thought energy on what may lie in a certain area, instead focusing on the road ahead and a desired destination. An aircraft, and particularly a slow one, makes it possible to see and savor an immense amount of information about the world around us. More than just an accelerated www.wyolifestyle.com 33