This is a follow-up on wildWoman's post, "Why do you go out into the woods?"
I've read many articles about the wilderness and these words are as good as I've ever read. Psychologically it explains better than anything to this backwoodsman (me) what the wilderness does to people.
"In September of 1938, American Forests magazine published its first feature article in twelve years that explored the concept of wilderness preservation. Its earlier article, a response to Aldo Leopold's classic "The Last Stand of the Wilderness," had been decidedly negative.1 But not this time. The 1938 article began with these words:
In some men, the need of unbroken country, primitive conditions and intimate contact with the earth is a deeply rooted cancer gnawing forever at the illusion of contentment with things as they are. For months or years this hidden longing may go unnoticed and then, without warning, flare forth in an all consuming passion that will not bear denial. Perhaps it is the passing of a flock of wild geese in the spring, perhaps the sound of running water, or the smell of thawing earth that brings the transformation. Whatever it is, the need is more than can be borne with fortitude, and for the good of their families and friends, and their own particular restless souls, they head toward the last frontiers and escape.
The article, called "Why Wilderness?" was written by a thirty-nine-year-old junior college dean and canoe trip outfitter named Sigurd Olson ."

