"Put the cut pieces 
uphill. People walking down paths tend to look downhill," says the sage 
leader of more than approximately 75 Wilderness Volunteers service 
projects.
While we are brushing trail in the middle of a wilderness area,
Bill Sheppard makes it clear that we need to make sure it looks 
as natural as possible. That means carefully hiding our slash piles up 
the hill from the trail, not below the trail. Not in the line of sight 
of hikers and horse riders. Keep it as natural
 as possible.
Bill is meticulous about his placement of slash. Always uphill, always hidden from view.
And, he is someone whose advice should be followed.
 Bill has led an 
impressive 110 or so service trips between WV and the Sierra Club since 
1990 after having been a participant for six years. And then, in 1989 he
 was invited to the Sierra Club Midwest Subcommittee
 spring meeting, and was assigned to lead a second section of a full 
trip in late summer.  It was a canoe service trip in the Sylvania 
Wilderness, located in the Superior National Forest in Michigan.
Bill has led an 
impressive 110 or so service trips between WV and the Sierra Club since 
1990 after having been a participant for six years. And then, in 1989 he
 was invited to the Sierra Club Midwest Subcommittee
 spring meeting, and was assigned to lead a second section of a full 
trip in late summer.  It was a canoe service trip in the Sylvania 
Wilderness, located in the Superior National Forest in Michigan.
 In all his years 
traveling around the country and lending a hand to various national 
parks, forests and wilderness areas, Bill has seen a myriad of our 
public lands. However, Bill, who lives in Flagstaff,
 Arizona, finds himself returning to his local favorite, Grand Canyon 
National Park. He also prefers leading trips that are within a day to a 
day-and-a-half drive from Flagstaff. Most of his most recent trips have 
been located in California, Arizona and New
 Mexico.
In all his years 
traveling around the country and lending a hand to various national 
parks, forests and wilderness areas, Bill has seen a myriad of our 
public lands. However, Bill, who lives in Flagstaff,
 Arizona, finds himself returning to his local favorite, Grand Canyon 
National Park. He also prefers leading trips that are within a day to a 
day-and-a-half drive from Flagstaff. Most of his most recent trips have 
been located in California, Arizona and New
 Mexico. He has conducted 
nearly every type of trip imaginable, from building trails to 
eradicating invasive species, and most of them have been in the back 
country, where WV sometimes receives assistance from packers
 and their mules hauling in gear from the trailhead to the camp site. It
 lessens the weight on the packs for everyone, which makes an 11-mile 
hike into a site much more manageable.
He has conducted 
nearly every type of trip imaginable, from building trails to 
eradicating invasive species, and most of them have been in the back 
country, where WV sometimes receives assistance from packers
 and their mules hauling in gear from the trailhead to the camp site. It
 lessens the weight on the packs for everyone, which makes an 11-mile 
hike into a site much more manageable.
“The packers always 
amaze me,” Sheppard stated. “They’re usually volunteers, and they really
 know how to load their stock with our food, kitchen equipment and 
tools. They make our work possible, and I’m always
 grateful for their service.”
It’s not only our 
national public lands that are on the receiving end of Bill’s selfless 
service. He volunteers for the City of Flagstaff one day a week, working
 a seven-hour shift doing graffiti abatement.
 And, he also conducts “unofficial litter pick-up hikes on trails in the
 forest near home several days a week,” which should come to no surprise
 to anyone who has ever crossed paths with Bill.
 On his various 
service trips, Bill has enjoyed meeting and working with the volunteers 
who hail from across the country and sometimes from overseas. He says, 
“almost all the volunteers have been wonderful.
 They’re motivated, flexible, physically fit and good comrades.
On his various 
service trips, Bill has enjoyed meeting and working with the volunteers 
who hail from across the country and sometimes from overseas. He says, 
“almost all the volunteers have been wonderful.
 They’re motivated, flexible, physically fit and good comrades.
“The hardest part of
 each trip was at the end of the week,” he added. “Saying goodbye to all
 my hard-working friends who had generously spent a week of their 
vacation time giving back to the wilderness.  We
 always hope to keep in touch and maybe meet up again on another WV 
project.”
As for the details 
that go into getting ready to lead a trip, many leaders, especially new 
leaders, feel that putting together a menu is one of the most stressful 
parts of the trip planning. If people aren’t
 happy with the food, they might not have enough energy needed for the 
work to be done.
Bill is not one of those leaders.
After planning as 
many menus as he has, Bill has perfected the process. It is generally the 
same from trip to trip, although he still tweaks his lineup – adding one
 or two meals to change things up. For example, when leading his final Wilderness Volunteers trip in 2017, his menu featured a 
new dinner. He served up Thai food, which featured Tom Ka soup, 
Backpacker Pantry Pad Thai plus shrimp and spiked mandarins for dessert.
As he retires from leading service projects for Wilderness Volunteers, Bill has one last piece of advice.
“Be flexible, because our plans must sometimes change due to weather, wildfires, packer problems, etc.”
After all, there always is work to be done somewhere.
 





I was lucky to go on one of his last trips last year. A great leader and a great cook
ReplyDeleteGreat piece. Thanks for all your service and leadership, Bill - you’ll be missed!
ReplyDeleteBill taught me wilderness leadership skills on the leader training trip years ago, and I have learned so much more just by watching Bill in action. I carry a little bit of Bill with me on every outdoor adventure. Thanks Bill for your leadership, mentorship, and friendship over the years.
ReplyDeleteBill was the leader on my first trip to Superstition Mountains and he taught me so much. I was lucky enough to work another project with him in New Mexico last year. Bill, thank you so much for your good humor, delicious meals, and leadership. Best of luck on your next venture!
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed a memorable week of training with Bill in North Fork John Day in 2014. When I encounter a dilemma as a leader, I ask: "What calm thoughts would Bill bring to this situation on the way to a solution?"
ReplyDelete