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Outside magazine, May 2000
W. Hodding Carter

There's a thin line between loving a 2,000-pound florida manatee and doing it harm. So writer W. Hodding Carter discovers in "My Son, the Manatee," which begins on page 68. Carter recently ventured down to Florida from his home in

Rockport, Maine, with his wife and three daughters to meet the newest member of the Carter family, their adopted manatee Brutus. (It's a little hard to explain; you'll understand when you read the story.) Unfortunately, at first Brutus refused to show his corpulent face, and Carter had to contend with a near mutiny from the rest of the frustrated family. But then Carter's no stranger to fools' errands. You might even say he's made a career of them.

"The more outlandish the idea, the happier I am imagining doing it," says the Mississippi native. "I guess I crave getting in over my head, diving into something I know nothing about, only to come up smelling like, well, nothing too sweet."

Eight years ago, Carter quit his job as a staff writer for M magazine to retrace Lewis and Clark's journey from St. Louis to the mouth of the Columbia River by motorized raft and rental car, an adventure that became the subject of his 1994 travelogue, Westward Whoa. This month, Ballantine will publish A Viking Voyage, an account of his semi-successful 1,900-mile odyssey in a Viking ship along Leif Eriksson's 11th-century route from Greenland to Newfoundland. But no expedition he'd undertaken was quite as ridiculous as desperately seeking Brutus.

"Other marine mammals get enough attention because they are sleek or beautiful or powerful,"says Carter. "I like the idea of championing manatees because they're slow and dumb. Like humans, right?"

While in Florida, however, Carter witnessed the myriad ways that manatees are threatened, and discovered that even ardent affection can prove deadly. These loveable oafs, he says, are often chased into potentially fatal cold water by tourists eager to swim with them. "In 20 years, if Florida has its way, manatees will be lip-synching The Little Mermaid and not a single wild manatee will be left," Carter says. "Except maybe for Brutus."

"I pledge to not ride so hard," says cycling journalist Garrett Lai after his encounter with the fitness brain trust that helped produce Lance Armstrong's stunning victory in last year's Tour de France. It seems Armstrong and his coach, Chris Carmichael, decided to lay off the training throttle in the months leading up to the race—heresy among most professional cyclists. Lai, a resident of Newport Beach, California, outlines their counterintuitive breakthrough in "Steady Burn," page 84.


Writer Bryan Di Salvatore experienced food-service flashbacks when he visited Telluride, Colorado, home of the edgy snow 'zine Mountain-freak ("Bum's Rush," page 132). "You have to work ferociously hard to live a mellow lifestyle," says Di Salvatore, reflecting on his own years busing tables, delivering room service, and flipping his share of quesadillas in umpteen resort towns. He's now safely ensconced in a home office in Missoula, Montana.


She's an avid mountaineer, but Vancouver-based cartoonist Tami Knight has never climbed the world's highest peak. That didn't stop her, however, from making it the subject of her recent book-length lampoon, Everest: The Ultimate Hump, published by Menasha Ridge Press. Nor did it prevent her from accepting the challenge to illustrate the upcoming season in "Everest 2000: Because It's There!?" (page 48). Knight's work has also appeared in Climbing and Mountainfreak.
A lifelong Brooklyn resident, photographer Russell Kaye was delighted to join the search for W. Hodding Carter's adopted manatee, Brutus ("My Son, the Manatee," page 68). Alas, Brutus, the intended star of their story, remained elusive. "They all look alike," sighs Kaye. "But Hodding's an honest man. He wouldn't just let me say we'd found Brutus."


Outside senior editor Kevin Fedarko traveled to Utah's Great Basin five times over three years to report the saga of the Skull Valley band of the Goshute tribe, whose leaders want to lease a corner of their reservation as a for-profit nuclear waste dump—a proposal bitterly opposed by the state of Utah and some tribal members ("In the Valley of the Shadow," page 114). "The Goshutes deserve the income," says Fedarko, "but this may be the last spit of land that stands between them and cultural extinction."

How do you catch Lake Superior whitefish? Ask Montana's 26-year-old Steven Rinella. He'll tell you to go to college near a dam, skip classes, and ply local fishermen with beers to learn the best spots. As for the best in Sault Sainte Marie, Michigan, where "Dawn Patrol" (Field Notes, page 55) unfolds, the author says, "My friends would hang me if I told you."