Tuesday, December 09, 2014

A Brief History of American-made Outerwear: Ode to Buffalo Plaid


A brand is a promise. 

Buffalo plaid isn't a brand per se but, like a brand, is a promise. The deceptively simple red and black checkered pattern suggests rugged American wilderness and conjures images of everything from cowboys and lumberjacks to punks and hipsters. Like all classics, it has been derided as cliche, which is a measure of its success because its staying power is tremendous. Without question, the buffalo plaid is the definition of classic Americana, even though it's not.  

Buffalo plaid is really the Rob Roy tartan from the Scottish clan MacGregor but altered to fit the needs of subsequent places.  

Woolrich Woolen Mills, out of Pennsylvania made the pattern known to Americans sometime around 1850 and the buffalo plaid shirt since then has been a part of its catalog. According to Woolrich's history, the pattern designer owned a herd of buffalo, which is possibly the reason it has become known as buffalo plaid. 

Rob McCluskey brought the tartan to the West by outfitting Army outposts during the time of the Native American holocaust following Custer's last stand. Both soldiers and Sioux and the Cheyenne warriors were in awe of the the deep red of the plaid. That red was like the blood of their defeated foes and they traded for buffalo plaid blankets.

McCluskey was a friend of both white and Indian, a middle man in between two worlds torn apart. Neither the Indians nor the soldiers could pronounce the Gaelic word for blanket pladger, so the people at the trading posts called it plaid. And the buffalo plaid took off.

Though Woolrich made famous the buffalo plaid or the red and black checkered squares that have become synonymous with the West, when I think of buffalo plaid, I think of Pendleton, the wool company out of the Eastern Oregon town of the same name. A wild, woolly town, where the cowboys do whiskey shots for breakfast and one can see the greatest rodeo this side of the Rockies, I also love the wide variety of Pendleton blankets.

Regardless, what you get when you look at a buffalo plaid, despite its Scottish roots, is a promise of America. A rugged individualism. Powerful and warm, it's not surprise that other ruggedly American companies have embraced the red and black checker squares in other forms. 

My wife has become obsessed with Tradlands, a relatively new small San Francisco company that makes quality menswear-inspired button-up shirts that, in her words, fit women. Currently, all of their shirts are made in America with quality materials, careful craftmanship, and design that allows the wearer to feel like herself. 

Below is her Arapahoe shirt, with the red and black checkers, but depending on the day, you could find her in a Tradlands shirt for any occasion. 



While my wife leans Tradlands, I've been picking up quality goods from Filson, a Seattle company that since 1897 has been outfitting people who "refuse to stay indoors." Filson's flagship product is the cruiser, designed for timber cruisers, miners and explorers, with roots in the Yukon gold rush. This is my new work cape jacket designed by Nigel Cabourn for Filson. Inspired by a vintage 1930s Filson Cruiser that Nigel found while digging around in Japan, the work cape jacket features a corduroy collar for added comfort, snap clip buttons which are easier to maneuver with gloved hands, and the classic plaid-patterned wool from the mills of Pendelton. 











Here Marcos is wearing a Filson dog coat with the classic shelter cloth on the outside and mackinaw wool underneath. This was the first Filson product I purchased."Might as well have the best," which is especially true for a dog like Marcos, a retired therapy dog and hero of my book Pick-Up Dogs: How Two Rescue Dogs Save the West from Being Won. 


Thursday, December 04, 2014

#‎TBT‬: Alaska Sunrise-

This picture, taken back in 1996, was at the beginning of an extraordinary day of fishing in the Katmai Region. I see this picture and I can still remember how I felt as I watched the sun rise over the float plane in Southern Alaska: Exhilarated, blessed, in awe, grateful to be alive, overwhelmed with excitement.We were right by Gilbraltar Lake, near Lake Iliamna. 


Wednesday, December 03, 2014

Winter Wonderland. Forest Walk in the Olympics









Winter brings us an intricate web of geometric shapes. Like an MC Escher painting, each little ice crystal and snowflake is connected to another. The flowers, the trees, the water that forms the ice, everything flows together, essentially part of life regenerating and preparing to grow again in Spring.

Tuesday, November 18, 2014

Blood Root Blades

If you are obsessed with quality and enjoy superior knives, check out Blood Root Blades.
This blade was made from an old Chevy spring. The handle is spalted pecan and walnut sawyer.

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Larches: A Deciduous Conifer

A deciduous conifer, “People who see western larch for the first time are immediately impressed by its tall, ramrod-straight form and narrow, pyramidal crown made up of fine, bright-green needles that contrast with the somber dark green of most conifers. In autumn, larch foliage transforms to a stunning gold yellow that seems to light whole mountainsides. Then a few weeks later the needles fall, making newcomers think these barren conifers are dead.” --From Stephen Amo's canonical Northwest Trees: Identifying and Understanding the Region's Native Trees





Friday, November 14, 2014

Autumn in the North Country: The Wilderness Experience

“The wilderness experience positions the great questions we face in life within the context of our utter smallness. Only our acceptance, our willingness to go where we are small and where we need to respect the power and objectivity of nature makes it possible for us to experience a hero’s journey.” Ann Bancroft, Arctic and Antarctic explorer and co-author of No Horizon is So Far


The Deep Crevasses on the Cougar Divide leading to Mount Baker.

Table Mountain in the foreground and Mt. Shuksan in clouds behind it.

Glaciers and Crevasses


Rocks along the walk to Cougar Divide











“There is a cleanliness, a breadth and sweep and strength in the north, a purifying realization that one is living close to the fundamental elements of life. Yes, the north has a spell.” Canoeing with the Cree



Tuesday, October 07, 2014

Filson is about doers doing things


Filson is about doers doing things. It’s about quality. It's about durability. It's about classic style. It's about lasting generations. It’s about being Made in the USA. 

This is my new work cape jacket designed by Nigel Cabourn for Filson. Inspired by a vintage 1930s Filson Cruiser that Nigel found while digging around in Japan, the work cape jacket features a corduroy collar for added comfort, snap clip buttons which are easier to maneuver with gloved hands, just in case you're on an Arctic expedition, and the classic plaid-patterned wool from the mills of Pendelton, an American heritage company older than Filson. 

Filson's heritage is the cruiser, the work shirt that timber cruisers wear. When Filson hits the mark with a product, it starts with the cruiser as the inspiration. Cruisers were meant for timber cruising—gauging, observing, recording a forest’s characteristics. I’m not a professional timber cruiser, but a recreational forest cruiser, a writer and storyteller. The writer sees, he walks, travels, taking down notes.He cruises. A cruiser could be cruising a few weeks at a time seeing country few other humans have and then he might pull back a branch and stand face to face with a moose. Not fear but a tranquil calm engulfs the cruiser.

The cruiser, scoping the land is like the fisherman reading the waters. There is no deeper connection to the land or water. That's how I aim to be when I walk with my dogs through the forest. Here Marcos is wearing a Filson dog coat with the classic shelter cloth on the outside and mackinaw wool underneath. This was the first Filson product I purchased."Might as well have the best," which is especially true for a dog like Marcos, a retired therapy dog and hero of my book Pick-Up Dogs: How Two Rescue Dogs Save the West from Being Won

Underneath my work cape jacket, I'm wearing a Filson Jac shirt, which I have coined the "Brown Bear Hug." Brown Bear is one of Marcos's many nicknames and wearing the shirt is comfortable. Like hugging Marcos. All in all, I'm very pleased with my Filson gear and will do stories on other Filson items. Though known for their cruisers, I really love my Filson pants, which unfortunately I'm not wearing in these pictures.  

Filson Work Cape Jacket designed by Nigel Cabourn



"Might As Well Have the Best." C.C. Filson

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Sitka Spruce Forest in Southeast Alaska

 


Teeming with life, Indian River running right through the town of Sitka is full of salmon returning to their birthplaces to spawn. 






 


 Lots more info on ecological implications of the forest, salmon, and Sitka spruce here.