New Book by Peter Schroeder

 He has lived out both traditional and divergent lifestyles. Armed with degrees from Princeton (BSE), University of New Mexico (MSE), and Stanford (MBA), Peter Schroeder achieved the pinnacles of success with careers in nuclear weapons testing and international business. Interspersed with his professional endeavors, he had stints of  hopping freight trains across America, hitchhiking around Europe, slacking as a surfer dude in Hawaii, receiving not one but two presidential critical skills deferments from the Viet Nam draft,  living in ashrams in India and Oregon, attaining the highest rank in the country in the Boy Scouts up to that time, and battling a fatal form of bone marrow cancer.

 A Seattle resident for nearly 40 years, Schroeder weaves together the contradictions of his life in The Rock Shall Dance (Richter Publishing, 2021). More than just a memoir, the book provides inside looks at crucial and often controversial events of the late 20th century: 1960s anti-war protests on the Stanford University campus, 1970s shadowy business dealings in Iran and Saudi Arabia, and 1980s spiritual quests with Rajneesh/Osho, the guru beloved by some and reviled by others.

 Schroeder’s exploits include:

·         Detonating underground nuclear weapons from the control room at the Nevada Test Site

·         Getting skiing tips from Ernie Blake, founder of Taos Ski Valley

·         Being accosted at gunpoint by the Yugoslavian navy while sailing near the Adriatic seaside home of then-president Josef Tito

 “I have sought to experience as much variety in life as possible,” writes Schroeder. “To an onlooker, such an unusual life seems illogical, disjointed, and chaotic. But to me, every step has been logical, connected, and true to ongoing personal forces.”

 Schroeder began writing his memoir in 1980, when he was diagnosed with multiple myeloma, a cancer of the plasma cells. Doctors said he had 24 months to live. He was 39 years old and had four children aged 9, 6, and twin sons aged six months. “I was going to die before my kids grew up. I wanted them to know about my life but held it back, because many activities I pursued were dangerous, and I didn’t want my children to risk trying these same crazy things themselves.”

 Schroeder first came to Seattle in the summer of 1962, working as a busboy at the Seattle World’s Fair. He fell in love with the Northwest’s outdoor lifestyle centered on lakes, ocean, and mountains, returning to live in Seattle with his family in 1982.

“Because we are on this earth so briefly, we should use our abilities to explore as much as possible in every dimension. This is what I have done,” says Schroeder.

A NOWA member more than 25 years, Schroeder has served several times on the NOWA board (twice voted Outstanding Board Member), been a speaker at numerous conferences, helped set up the Endowment Fund, and is a grateful recipient of the Enos Bradner Award.

The Rock Shall Dance (2021) is published by Richter Publishing. The book is available on Amazon.

CONTACT for review copies or further information:

Risa Wyatt / 415.828.7839 / words@risawyatt.com

Liere places in prominent outdoor writers competition

Outdoor Writers Association of America is pleased to announce that Matthew Liere of Spokane, Washington, was recognized as an award recipient for the 2019 OWAA Excellence in Craft Contests. This annual awards program recognizes and honors the best work of outdoor communicators who are members of OWAA. This year, 67 individuals took home over $11,000 in cash prizes.

His awards:

Second place in the outdoor fun and adventure category of the newspaper contest for “The ice whisperer,” published on February 15, 2018, in The Spokesman-Review. The outdoor fun & adventure category recognizes the best outdoor recreation work from the various non-consumptive sports. This includes, but is not limited to, outdoor sports such as camping/backpacking, boating, hiking, birding, snow skiing, orienteering, mountain biking and general outdoor activities. The prize money for this category was sponsored by Izaak Walton League of America.

Second place in the humor category of the newspaper contest for “Remembering the great Pat McManus,” published on April 14, 2018, in The Spokesman-Review. The humor category recognizes pieces that are funny and outdoor oriented.
Matthew Liere is a freelance columnist for The Spokesman-Review. His work highlights personal exploits based loosely on truth and heavy on nostalgic fiction. Liere had a 23-year career with the Coast Guard’s aviation division before picking up a pen and launching a new career as a writer.

About OWAA
The Outdoor Writers Association of America is the oldest and largest association of professional outdoor communicators in the United States. It was organized in 1927 by members of the Izaak Walton League of America and includes professional communicators dedicated to sharing the outdoor experience. OWAA’s professionals include writers, photographers, outdoors
radio and television show hosts, book authors, videographers, lecturers and artists. Visit http://www.owaa.org for more info.

NOWA’s Constitution and Bylaws Changes

NOWA’s Constitution and Bylaws are undergoing some changes.

If you’d like to be part of this process, please review the Constitution & Bylaws Changes document contained in the link below; the proposed changes are in red.

Next, either answer the poll or email your comment’s to Dennis Clay, Bob Mottram and Risa Wyatt by  September 9, 2019.  Their emails are:  dclay@atnet.net; bobmottram@msn.com; words@risawyatt.com

Thanks!

CONST BYLAWS 2019 Proposed Changes

PRADCO Outdoor Brands Seeks Content and Communications Specialist

PRADCO Outdoor Brands (POB), a division of EBSCO Industries Inc., is the largest company in the world that manufactures and markets major hunting and fishing brands and products under one parent organization is seeking a Content & Communications Specialist that will be responsible for all copy, content, and communications activities within POB Fishing Marketing.

See the link below for more detailed information:

https://careers.ebscoind.com/PRADCO/job/72901-Content-and-Communications-Specialist-1-AR-72901/571689400/

 

Bury Me With My Fly Rod by Dennis Dauble

Dennis Dauble announces that his new book, Bury Me With My Fly Rod, is out in time for Father’s Day. He’s offering a special price for NOWA members: autographed copies for $10 + $2 shipping (retails @ $13.95). BURY ME is a illustrated collection of 25 stories about the fly fishing experience. Whether you swing a fly for the elusive steelhead, soak flies for wild trout in small streams or chase after mountain whitefish, these stories are sure to entertain. Learn how not to teach your honey to cast, what makes a perfect fly rod and the secret of his mother’s huckleberry cream pie! Contact him at dennisdauble@icloud.com or order directly from Amazon via his website DennisDaubleBooks.com

New Book Release: Hidden War

NOWA member Lynda O’Connor of O’Connor Communications is working hard promoting the new book Hidden War

YouTube Video Link: http://bit.ly/hiddenwar

Author John Nores website: http://www.johnnores.com/

Hidden War: How Special Operations Game Wardens are Reclaiming America’s Wildlands from the Drug Cartels, exposes an astounding yet under-reported nationwide environmental emergency.

In Hidden War, author Lt. John Nores, Jr., recently retired after a 28-year career as a game warden with the California Department of Fish and Wildlife, recaps the state’s aggressive campaign to eliminate Mexican drug cartels’ black-market trespass marijuana grow operations. Nores co-developed his department’s Marijuana Enforcement Team (MET), made up of 12 elite wildlife officers and K9s dedicated to stopping the destruction of U.S. wildlands, wildlife and waterways.  

“There are thousands of these grow sites throughout America,” Nores explains. “They’re not only in our remote and pristine public lands, but also within a stone’s throw of homes and schools in urban communities like California’s Silicon Valley. What’s going on out there is surreal; it’s like the Wild West with gunfights, foot chases, and cartel gunmen arrests on a daily basis. And it’s all happening within our nation’s borders.”

Hidden War describes the challenges in developing the MET, highlighting the team’s successes throughout their first six years of operations, as described in vivid mission accounts. From 2013 through 2018, the team arrested 912 armed cartel felons, destroyed nearly 3 million toxically tainted marijuana plants, and removed 705 illegal dams that were diverting and stealing millions of gallons of water from streams and lakes during the peak of the worst drought in California history. The MET restored hundreds of grow complexes, removing tons of grower waste, fertilizer, pesticides, EPA-banned toxins and more than 400 miles of plastic irrigation pipe.

“Despite our efforts, new grow sites are added every year, and we can’t handle this problem alone,” Nores says.

By enlisting the help of conservation groups and the legitimate cannabis industry, Nores demonstrates how this non-partisan issue must be addressed nationwide. Cartel-run grow sites have been found in 21 other states, with these same cartel groups responsible for human trafficking, gun running, methamphetamine and synthetic heroin production, and other atrocious crimes.

The 256-page hardcover Hidden War (ISBN 9781946267610) is published by Caribou Media Group. The book is available through all major and specialty booksellers for $24.99.

Testimonials:

I truly enjoyed Mr. Nores’ book chronicling his Unique Tactical Unit and dogs working as a team against the Mexican Cartels in Northern California. The METs team are America’s newest heroes, and you will be thrilled with their escapades.” – Kenneth Kieser, Outdoor and Conservationist Journalist of 42 years  and member of the Waterfowlers Hall of Fame and National water Fishing Hall of Fame.

For those who care about the good earth and harbor deep respect for the legacy of icons such as Theodore Roosevelt and John Muir, this book is at once a clarion call for continued action and an eye-popping “must read.” – Jim Casada, Ph.D., Editor at Large, Sporting Classics

 “Hidden War” is a riveting expose of the egregious environmental catastrophe caused by the drug cartels producing black market marijuana. John Nores documents the unsung heroes who risk their lives to take on these well-armed vicious groups.” LtCol Oliver North USMC (Ret.)