12/1/10

LEGENDARY EXPLORER 'WALKIN' JIM' STOLTZ DIES


Press Release

Media Inquiries:


Chuck Whiting: Arts@WhitingPublicity.com Whiting Publicity & Promotions

Susan Grace Stoltz:
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:

Tags: Biography, Walkin Jim, Memorial, Stella, Mornin' in the Mountains, Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act,
Walking with the Wild Wind, MUSE
 


LEGENDARY EXPLORER 'WALKIN' JIM' STOLTZ DIES 

Award-Winning Songwriter, Photographer and Conservationist Hiked More Than 28,000 Miles of Rugged North American Wilderness 

HELENA, Montana (December 2010) – "Walkin' Jim" Stoltz, a world-renown American explorer honored by the Environmental Protection Agency for his efforts to help save endangered animal species, passed away recently after a long battle with cancer. 

The 57-year-old folk singer-songwriter, photographer, poet, storyteller, author and conservationist hiked more than 28,000 miles of rugged North American wilderness, crossing raging rivers, mountain ranges, vast deserts, dense forests and canyon lands from the Appalachians to the Olympics and from Mexico to Canada. When he wasn't exploring, he was using his rich baritone voice to share original heartfelt songs, poems and stories "from the wild places" to children of all ages. His love and concern for animals and the habitats where they thrived inspired founding of the organization Musicians United to Sustain the Environment. 

"Jim was one of those bigger-than-life men who literally 'walked his talk' -- traversing thousands of miles of backcountry and countless musical tours living out his 'Forever Wild' theme," said fellow folk artist and conservationist Craig Wagner, who co-founded MUSE with "Walkin' Jim" in 1998. "We at MUSE feel privileged to be the steward of his legacy of music, poetry, photography and vision -- a vision of sustaining those 'Wild' parts of our environment for generations to come." 

His love of the outdoors began early in life. He and his sister, Susan Grace Stoltz, spent their childhood summers at their grandparents' lakeside home in rural northern Michigan, swimming, reading books, hiking, and exploring through dense forests of maple, pine and bracken fern. A scoutmaster (Mr. Birch) planted the seed of adventure by teaching him how to hike in the wilderness, set up camp, build a campfire, and observe animals in the wild. 

"'Walkin' Jim' was not only a hero to me, but he was a true American folk hero -- right up there with Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger," said Susan, who lives in Fairbanks, Alaska. "He brought natural history to life by sharing stories and songs from his experiences. He spoke out and sang for all of those special places in North America, which have no voice. My brother, Jim, made a difference with his life." 

A chance meeting with a hiker on the Appalachian Trail in Virginia would forever change him. Deeply inspired by the hiker's stories, "Walkin' Jim" began planning a trip of his own. In 1974, the then 23-year-old hiked the Appalachian mountain range from Springer Mountain, Ga., to Mt. Khatadin, Maine. 
"This was the coming of age trip that shaped his life and started it all," Susan added.

The following year, he embarked on an even-more-adventurous trek, crossing America from the most eastern point (West Quoddy Head, Maine) to the most western point (Cape Alava, Wash.) In the ensuing years, he completed the Pacific Crest Trail; the Continental Divide Trail from Mexico to Canada; his own route through Arizona, Utah, Idaho and Montana; and the Rocky Mountain spine from Yellowstone National Park to the Yukon. He also took numerous long hikes in the Nevada wilderness. 

His explorations did not come without risk. During one alpine hike, Jim lost his footing while crossing a frozen snow patch and began sliding down the slippery ice toward a "huge drop-off". His old Stella guitar, which was always strapped to his backpack, saved his life. 

"His hands were bloody from trying to dig into the snow and stop sliding toward sure death", Susan recalled him telling her. "He finally rolled over on his back in an effort to see where he was going as he drew closer to the cliff edge. Jim often said he ‘wanted to see the view if he was going to fall to his death’. When he rolled over, the neck of his guitar dug into the snow, and he found himself dangling by his shoulder straps looking at the edge of the cliff. It was a close call." 

The artist's outdoor adventures and interactions with wild animals inspired him to write countless songs, poems and stories, which he shared with thousands of fans across North America. Children adored him, marveling at his stories and dreaming that they, too, would one day hike the rugged North American wilderness. To help pay the bills, he spent 30 winters driving horse-drawn sleighs and performing at Lone Mountain Ranch in Big Sky, Montana. He rarely turned down an invitation to perform for conservation organizations, sharing their passion for the protection of predatory animals such as wolves and grizzlies or halting the clear cutting of mountain forests. 

His song, "Mornin' in the Mountains", was inspired by a breathtaking sunrise in the mountains of Colorado in 1989. "Friends Along the Way" reflects his gratitude for the people who enriched his life. "Forever Wild" serves as his anthem for the wild places. Children enjoyed singing along to "The Web of Life", "Big Fat Fish" and "Pika Pika".
Jim was resting along a mountain trail when he wrote the classic "Forever Wild". His lyric reads: "There's a magic in the air, that I feel when I am there... It plays straight to the heart, and lays it all to bare... It's in the cry of the eagle, and the deer so meek and mild... It's in the rise of the mountain, let it stay forever wild." 

"He used his distinctive baritone vocals to convey the essence of the natural world, something that only a few people ever experience in real life," said close friend and former wife Leslie Stoltz. "His words spoke loud and clear. Listeners were taken by his passion. There were a lot of tears at his shows." 

Jim used his ballads to share vivid images from the past. He sang about blueberry pickers in northern Michigan, famous bank robber Silver Jack, and mountain men from the West. Miners, conservationists and diverse people from all walks of life loved his "Ballad of Willie and Millie", a song about an older couple remembering how they fell in love at Columbia Gardens amusement park near Butte, Montana. A mining company tore it down in 1973. 

Many of the songs "Walkin' Jim" wrote while on his long-distance treks can be heard on his eight albums: "Spirit Is Still On The Run”, "Forever Wild", "Listen to the Earth", “The Vision", “Little Piece of Time", "The Long Trails?", "Oh What a Life", "A Kid for the Wild" (for children), "The Web of Life" (for children), and "Come Walk With Me" (a Children’s DVD). Individuals can hear and/or order his recordings at http://www.walkinjim.com
In 2003, the artist wrote a book about "his long walk" across rugged southwest Montana titled "Walking with the Wild Wind". The book also reflects on other experiences in his life. 

After hiking thousands of miles of wilderness, Jim set his sights on helping protect the mountains, glaciers, trees and animals that he loved. He helped in the planning and design of several trails throughout the Southwest, including a short segment in northern Arizona the U.S. Forest Service named the "Walkin' Jim Trail". He lobbied the U.S. Congress to pass the Northern Rockies Ecosystem Protection Act, later receiving an award from the EPA for his efforts to protect endangered animal species. 

"Seriously, this is a beautiful Earth we live upon", Jim wrote in one of his journal entries. "I have spent my life trying to share that beauty. But a large part of that beauty is unseen. It is the intertwined strands that tie us all together, from the tiniest microbes in the soil to the biggest tree in the forest. We all belong. We all depend on each living thing. We all depend on each other!" 

Several years before he died, he embarked on a 50-state tour to share his "Forever Wild" message. He later contributed songs for three MUSE-sponsored CDs, with 100 percent of the proceeds supporting grass roots environmental organizations. The albums also feature cuts by contemporaries such as Pete Seeger, Libby Roderick, Dakota Sid Clifford, Joyce Rouse (Earth Mama) and Craig Wagner

"He could shift from a solo walk of hundreds of miles to an East or West Coast tour that engaged thousands of people with his articulate defense of natural landscape and threatened species," said MUSE board member Joyce Rouse

"His perfectly crafted songs inspired by the experience of long solo hikes, and the spectacular backcountry slides accompanying the songs, often rendered audiences speechless, then inspired them to work for a healthy eco-system. Jim was a friend, a mentor, and an inspiration for so many people." 

In 2008, "Walkin' Jim" emerged after recovering from winter-long chemotherapy to take a six-week hike along 460 miles of the Idaho/Montana state line. It would be one of his last long-distance hikes. 

"I regained the 30 pounds I lost, but then I went on a long walk and lost 20 again," he reported in his newsletter, Wild Wind. "It was mostly ridge-walking through some incredible mountain ranges and was such a perfect route for a long trek.... The last day found me walking the ridge north from Northwestern Peak to the Canadian border. There isn't a trail, but the ridge is easy to walk up to Burke Mountain. 

I traversed a rocky section and then entered broad open meadows hung over the crest of the mountain. They were full of lupine, and the sun started to break through the clouds, setting them all aglow. My steps became light as I realized that this was the place I'd seen myself all those months ago during the radiation treatments. I felt such joy. Such hope. Such gratitude. Tears filled my eyes, and I just sobbed in thankfulness as my legs carried me up to that last rock-covered peak. It was an unforgettable moment that I'll carry with me forever." 

"Walkin' Jim" Stoltz is survived by his friend and former wife Leslie Stoltz of Big Sky, Montana; brother Mark Stoltz of Honor, Mich.; and sisters Susan Grace Stoltz of Fairbanks, Alaska, and Lisa Mohr of Wixom, Mich. 

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1/1/10

Index Of Photos

Tags: Index Of Photos

01000 Jim On Ridge Just South Of NW Peak
01001

Quote - Photo List

Here are the quote titles with the photo the quote is placed on.

This is updated as photos are entered.

Tags: Quote - Photo List

Adventure

Life Is A Daring Adventure  - Shade Of Greens Of Pine Community Along Ridge

Events Can Be Planned, Shared And Discovered - Mountain Side Bathed By Golden Evening Light

 

Art & Creativity

 

Index To Walkin Jim's Works

Here is an ever growing index to Walkin Jim's vast works of a life time.
Tags: Index


Songs

CD Albums
1999 The Long Trails




Song - Films
A Divine Key
Canyon Country
Circle Of Life
Come Walk With Me

Forever Wild Concert

Forever Wild

Heart Of This Wild Land

Last Wild Places
Oh What A Life
There You Are 
Turn Around

Where I'm Bound


Recorded Stories


Art - Paintings



Treks 

27,107 miles from 1974 to 2009
See Lifetime Long -Distance Tally for additional details


Year         Miles   Lifetime
Trek
1974 2,100 2,100       AT - Appalachian Trail
1975 and '76 5,100 7,200
Coast to Coast - Ocean to Ocean Trail
1977 and '78 140 7,340
Short weekend overnights
1979 2,900 10,240
Continental Divide Trail (Mexico to Canada)
1980 120 10,360
Shorter trips in Glacier & Bob Marshall
1981 1,000 11,360
Arizona (Grand West Trail) Border to Bryce  Great West Trail (A route Jim designed pre great West Trail he would have called the "Rainbow Trail") took him through AZ, Utah, NV,  Idaho and many other states  1981-1983
1982 700 12,060
Utah (Grand West Trail) Jacob Lake to Malad   Great West Trail (Rainbow Trail)
1983 1,000 13,060
Idaho (Grand West Trail) (Malad to Canada)  Great West Trail (Rainbow Trail)
1984 550 13,610
Arizona (Grand West Trail) Border to Cherry
1984 50 13,660
Shorter multiday trips in Montana
1985 100 13,760
Shorter trips on GWT and Montana
1986 1,700 15,460
Grand Canyon back to Montana thru Nevada and Idaho    Grand Canyon back to home in Big Sky (sent maps home in Idaho)
1987 500 15,960
Great Bob Trek (around Bob Marshall ecosystem)
1988 260 16,220
Northern side of Grand Canyon from West to East    Honeymoon Trek in Grand Canyon
1988 180 16,400
Length of Lemhi Range in Idaho
1988 30 16,430
Shorter overnights
1989 700 17,130
Colorado Continental Divide  Northern side of Grand Canyon from West to East
1989 135 17,265
High Unita Range
1990 500 17,765
SW Montana - Madison, Gravellys,Centenials, Divide
1991 100 17,865
Canyon trip
1991 150 18,015
Beartooth Plateau
1991 20 18,035
Shorter overnights
1992 250 18,285
Blue Range in Arizona and then across the Gila Wilderness in the Black Range
1992 450 18,735
SW Montana - Pioneers, Pintlars, Saphires, Flint Creek, Highland, Tobacco Roots, Madison
1993 450 19,185
Long circuits in Utah and Idaho several years
New Mexico- Arizona 1993 Wallowa Range in Oregon, thru Hells Canyon, and across Idaho to Montana
1994 250 19,435
Utah Canyon Country loophike  Long circuits in Montana several years 1994,1995,2004,2005,2007,2008
1994 300 19,735
Bitterroot Range
1995 105 19,840
Utah Canyons   Long circuits in Montana
1995 393 20,233
Nevada Basin & Range trek - Shoshone, Toiyabie, Toquima, and Monitor Ranges  Long circuit in Nevada 1995, again in 2009
1996 2,763 22,996
PCT - Pacific Crest Trail - Mexico to Canada
1997 601 23,597
Y2Y - Yellowstone to the Yukon 1997-2002, 600 Miles, July 5, 1997 - August 22nd - Part 1 - Yellowstone to Waterton
1998 567 24,164
Y2Y - Yellowstone to the Yukon 1997-2002, 600 Miles, July 1, 1998 - ? - Part 2 - Waterton to Jasper
1999 100 24,264
Y2Y - Yellowstone to the Yukon 1997-2002, 100 Miles, Yellowstone to Yukon - Part 3 - Jasper to Upper Holmes
2000 105 24,369
Utah Canyons
2001 25 24,394
Cheesebox Canyon - 6 day trip
2001 433 24,827
Y2Y - Yellowstone to the Yukon 1997-2002, 600 Miles, July 9, 2002 - August 25th - Part 4 - Mount Robson to Hudson Hope
2002 65 24,892
Utah Canyon country 
2002 394 25,286
Y2Y - Yellowstone to the Yukon 1997-2002, ? Miles, dates - Part 5 - Williston Lake to Yukon
2003 115 25,401
Utah Canyons - Long, Gravel, Cheesebox
2003


Arctic River trips 2003 and again in 2006
2004 40 25,441
Long circuits in Montana - Beartooth Plateau
2004 25 25,466
Scapegoat Wilderness
2005 191 25,657
Long circuits in Montana - Dirty Devil River and side canyons
2005 75 25,732
Arctic River - Madison Range High Route
2007 400 26,132
Long circuits in Montana - Redrock Pass to Marysville
2008 460 26,592
Nez Perce Pass ID-MT To Canada along the Idaho/Montana State Line, 250+? Miles, July 5th, 2008 - August 11th, 2008
2009 515 27,107
Long circuit in Nevada 1995, 2009 - Eastern Nevada Trek - Schell Creek Range, Egan Range, White Pine Range, Ruby Mountains