Friends Wilderness Center

Area Attractions, Interesting Links & Books

Area Attractions

There are two independent nonprofit organizations who also use some of the land at Rolling Ridge. The For Love of Children (FLOC) Outdoor Education Center can be read about at www.flocoutdoors.org. The Retreat Study Community at Rolling Ridge can be read about at www.rollingridge.net. Contact each directly in advance if you should want to visit them when out here. A feature story on Rolling Foundation and the three groups here appeared in the March 30th issue of the Martinsburg Journal News. You can read this article at: http://www.journal-news.net/page/content.detail/id/505129.html
 
While visiting us, you might also take in some other Jefferson County, WV, sites:
 
Trails: Our map of Rolling Ridge shows miles of trails. You can get a copy in person from Sheila, our resident manager. The Appalachian Trail (AT) is nearby and easy to access from connecting FWC trails. Lots of information about the AT is available in numerous guidebooks or from the Appalachian Trail Conference www.appalachiantrail.org and the Potomac Appalachian Trail Club: www.patc.net. You will also find two hostels in the area. The C&O Canal is about 30 minutes drive from FWC, accessible in Harpers Ferry, WV, Boonesboro, MD, or elsewhere. It's great for hiking or bicycling --- and relatively flat! The National Park Service also has information about the C&O Canal Trail: www.nps.gov/hafe/index.htm. Note: Mountain biking at FWC is prohibited and we don't advise the use of regular bikes due to rough roads.
 
 
Historic towns: Shepherdstown, WV, is just 30 minutes away, a quaint and historic town with a wonderful bookstore --- Four Seasons Books (www.fourseasonsbooks.com) --- as well as arts and crafts boutiques, and numerous restaurants. Harpers Ferry, WV, is also just 30 minutes away from the Center, with a great historic village run by the National Park Service. Take a walk through time and learn about the history of this once-important town and its ties to John Brown! You can also cross the footbridge over to the C&O Canal Trail and take a steep hike up to the scenic Maryland Heights Overlook.
 
Outdoor adventure outfitter: River and Trails outfitters in Knoxville, MD near Harpers Ferry, WV offer guided trips on the rivers and creeks as well as hikes and bike trips. They also are our Premier Sponsor of the 2008 Open House. See them at www.rivertrail.com.
 

Brunswick is a small railroad town along the river & C&O Canal in Maryland that is home to the unique cafe, restaurant and performance space, Beans in the Belfry. Check it and their live music out at www.beansinthebelfry.com.

Interesting Links
 

Information on Quakers: www.quaker.org
 
Friends Committee on National Legislation: www.fcnl.org
 
Pendle Hill near Philadelphia, PA: www.pendlehill.org
 
Quaker summer camps in the region: www/bym-rsf.org

William Penn House on Capitol Hill in Washington, DC: www.williampennhouse.org
 

Suggested Books & Magazine
 
The Wisdom of the Wilderness: Experiencing the Healing Power of Nature, by Gerald May (HarperSanFrancisco)

Written while his body succumbed to fatal illness, May leaves us his legacy—the discovery of our soul through nature. In this book we see the power of wilderness, its place in our minds and souls, and an appreciation for improving our spirituality and mental health.

A Quaker Book of Wisdom: Life Lessons in Simplicity, Service and Common Sense, by Robert Lawrence Smith (Doubleday Direct)

Thought-provoking and inspiring, this little gem of a book offers wisdom about living in the Light for both Quakers and Quakers at heart.

Better Off, by Eric Brende (Harper Perennial)

This memoir explores the experiences of a newlywed couple’s summer living in a Mennonite-like community. Narrated with a great sense of humor and amazing insight, this story takes readers on a journey through community dynamics and basic living strategies, as the couple learns about marriage itself.

Plan B 2.0: Rescuing a Planet Under Stress and a Civilization in Trouble, by Lester R. Brown  (Norton)

Following detailed descriptions of pending disasters, such as worldwide oil shortages and clean water issues, the book offers road maps for using and distributing resources (including education and health care), thus restoring the planet’s own health, with the tall order of eliminating starvation and institutionalized poverty. The author is president of the Earth Policy Institute, a nonprofit, multidisciplinary, research organization based in Washington, D.C.

Power Down: Options and Actions for a Post-Carbon World, by Richard Heinberg (New Society Publishers)

Heinberg begins with a look at the world’s addiction to cheap oil then explores four potential scenarios for its response to rising energy demands. Cooperation, conservation, and sharing—at the community and wider level—appear to be more viable than cutthroat competition for remaining resources.

Cradle to Cradle: Remaking the Way We Make Things, by William McDonough and Michael Braungart (North Point Press)

A journey through the process of product design, this book discusses the efficacy of conceiving of products as “nourishment” for something else at the end of their useful lives. Products can easily be designed to re-entering the water or soil, able to be consumed by soil microorganisms or other animals. Or, they can provide “technical nutrients” by continually circulating within closed-loop industrial cycles, rather than being tossed out or recycled.

A Timbered Choir: The Sabbath Poems, 1979-1997, by Wendell Berry (Counterpoint)

Widely known professor, author, and farmer, Wendell Berry has restored a worn-out farm to a producer of abundant life, while keeping Sabbath by wailing in the nearby woods and writing in his hand-built cabin. His poetry, essays, and prose eloquently speak of reverence for the natural world and humanity’s place in it. One verse from a meditation on new trees growing in a cut-over, abandoned woodland:

Patient as stars, they build in air
Tier after tier a timbered choir,
Stout beams upholding weightless grace
Of song, a blessing on this place.

Wandering Home: A Long Walk Across America’s Most Hopeful Landscape: Vermont’s Champlain Valley and New York’s Adirondacks, by Bill McKibben (Crown Journeys)

McKibben’s journey introduces readers to various people in the region who each demonstrate a unique strategy for living with the earth. This short book is a treatise on land stewardship, featuring insights on preserving wilderness and practicing sustainable forestry and agriculture.
 
Orion is a beautiful magazine about nature, the environment, art and society. Photos, poems, and thoughtful articles and essays. See www.orionmagazine.org

What are Quakers?

The Quakers are also known as the Religious Society of Friends or just "Friends" (hence our name). Read about this unique faith practice, our commitment to peace, wonderful Quaker camps and schools, and more, at  www.bym-rsf.org or www.quaker.org.

Friends Wilderness Center     www.friendswilderness.org     Updated April 14, 2008

 
 
 
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