ACES Annual Report 2020

Page 14

Living a Year at the Catto Center at Toklat

REFLECTIONS

FROM AN ACES

ACES staff share a meal with visiting environmental experts outside of the Catto Center at Toklat.

NATURALIST

Olivia Niosi, ACES Naturalist

Was this going to be something like Leopold’s Shack, Thoreau’s Walden Pond cabin, or the Murie Ranch? New to town, I wasn’t sure. But the moment I arrived at the Catto Center at Toklat I knew I had made the right choice. The beauty. The history. The plea to help protect the place.

My first few weeks at Toklat were spent learning how to get warm water in the shower (derived from the magic of the pilot-lighted stoves), listening to Trevor’s stories of the place, and somehow answering the ooohs and ahhs from guests who walked in the door. Every week, I met someone who was a respected artist, ecologist,

I shyly opened the doors through a leather shop that stung my nose

philosopher, or outdoors person. I lived with Nika, an avid trail runner

and into a cold, large living room. I was greeted by a hurried Trevor, the

and thru–hiker. I attended a drum–making workshop Trevor hosted in

caretaker, who showed me my room, told me to get unpacked, then

memory of his late mentor. I sat around a fire with people who helped

we’d get to work. We needed to carry some wood and pipes up to the

start ACES and had deep roots with both Toklat and Aspen. I met Eddie

intake of Devaney Creek – the source of both our water and electricity.

Running Wolf, a talented Native American wood carver. Stuart and

Trevor explained that the big snow year’s peak water was approaching,

Isabel Mace mentored so many people in the art and conservation

possibly the next day, and might overwhelm our micro–hydroelectric

world in their family home, Toklat, and here I was decades later hearing

generation system. Not even five minutes up I felt my heart racing, my

their voices, their stories. Meeting these inspiring people made me

lungs burning, and my forehead sweating. I realized maybe I wasn’t

realize that by living here, I was joining their unique community that

invincible to this whole altitude thing. We fixed the flow gate, walked

celebrates a connection to nature through many forms. I also shared

back down, and shared some beers around the pond. This was going to

a love for this place and grew tremendously over the summer. I was

be an alright place.

gaining so–called “Stuartship” for the Castle Creek Valley.

Page 12 – ACES Annual Report 2020


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