Have you ever wondered what it’s like to live alone in the wild and become one with nature?
It must be incredibly challenging yet deeply relaxing, especially compared to our fast-paced, stress-filled, and sedentary modern lifestyles.
The story of Richard Proenneke, an amateur naturalist who lived alone in the Alaskan mountains for nearly three decades, has inspired many. Richard built a log cabin by hand near the shore of Twin Lakes, where he hunted, fished, and gathered his own food.
Born in Iowa in 1916, Richard served in the Navy during World War II. After contracting rheumatic fever, he spent half a year recuperating and began dreaming of a simpler life. His opportunity came in 1950 when he moved to Alaska. He worked as a cattle rancher, diesel mechanic, and salmon fisherman before retiring in 1967 to seek an ideal location for his new life.
Richard returned to Iowa to prepare and a year later began building his dream life in Alaska. He meticulously documented his daily activities in journals, recording valuable meteorological and natural data.
In the documentary “Alone in the Wilderness,” Richard reflects:
“It was good to be back in the wilderness again, where everything seems at peace. I was alone – just me and the animals. … I suppose I was here because this was something I had to do — not just dream about it but do it. I suppose too I was here to test myself — not that I had never done it before but this time it was to be a more thorough and lasting examination.
What was I capable of that I didn’t know yet? Could I truly enjoy my own company for an entire year? And was I equal to everything this wild land could throw at me?
I had seen its moods in late spring, summer, and early fall but what about the winter? Would I love the isolation then, with its bone-stabbing cold, its ghostly silence? At age 51, I intended to find out.”
According to Mother Nature Network:
“One of the most striking aspects of Proenneke’s life at Twin Lakes is his own transformation. Originally a sport hunter and then a subsistence hunter, he evolved to become a non-hunter and conservationist.
He stopped hunting in 1980 (though he would occasionally kill and eat porcupines that damaged his cabin). Proenneke lived alone until 1999, when he moved to California to live with his brother at age 82. He passed away four years later.
He bequeathed his cabin to the National Park Service, which maintains it as a popular tourist destination. Visitors can see his craftsmanship and the desk where he wrote the journals that became “One Man’s Wilderness.” The Park Service displays his homemade furniture as examples of his woodworking genius.”
Richard’s journals and films have been the basis for several books and documentaries about his time in the wilderness:
— His close friend, Sam Keith, wrote “One Man’s Wilderness: An Alaskan Odyssey.”
— In 1997, Bob Swerer and Bob Swerer Sr. visited Richard, and in 1998, Bob Swerer produced the video “Alaska Silence & Solitude.”
— In 2003, Bob Swerer produced “Alone in the Wilderness,” using more of Richard’s previously unseen footage.
— Bob Swerer also produced “The Frozen North” in 2006, editing 3,000 feet of 8mm film shot by Richard.
— In 2011, Bob Swerer produced “Alone in the Wilderness Part II” after Richard’s brother Raymond discovered additional unseen footage of Richard building, carving, canoeing, and capturing wildlife.