"Recreational development is a job not of building roads into the lovely country, but of building receptivity into the still unlovely human mind"
About this Quote
The sting sits in “still unlovely human mind.” Leopold isn’t romanticizing people as innate nature-lovers; he’s accusing modern consciousness of being aesthetically dull and ethically undertrained. Nature can be “lovely,” but our default mode is instrumental: What can I extract, consume, or experience quickly? Roads deliver bodies; they don’t deliver reverence. In fact, they often teach the opposite lesson: that landscapes exist to be entered, conquered, and optimized for convenience.
Written in the era when national parks were increasingly popular and the automobile was remaking leisure, the line reads like an early diagnosis of mass recreation’s unintended consequences. Leopold anticipates the paradox that remains with us: the more we engineer access to “nature,” the more we risk flattening it into scenery and the visitor into a customer. His deeper wager is that conservation is less a technical problem than a pedagogical one - a fight over the mental habits that determine what we are capable of valuing before we ever touch a trailhead.
Quote Details
| Topic | Nature |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: Conservation Esthetic (Aldo Leopold, 1938)
Evidence: Recreational development is a job, not of building roads into lovely country, but of building receptivity into the still unlovely human mind.. This sentence appears as the concluding line of Aldo Leopold’s essay “Conservation Esthetic.” Audubon’s archival republication includes an editor’s note stating the essay “first ran in the March-April 1938 issue of Bird-Lore” and reproduces the quote verbatim (with a comma after “job” and without “the” before “lovely country”). This is strong evidence for the original/first publication venue and year, but I did not locate a scan of the 1938 Bird-Lore issue in this search session to extract the original page number. The quote also later appeared in Leopold’s book A Sand County Almanac (published posthumously in 1949) as part of the essay “Conservation Esthetic,” but that would not be the first publication. Other candidates (1) Uncle John's Bathroom Reader: History's Lists (Bathroom Readers' Institute, 2012) compilation97.0% Bathroom Readers' Institute. 3. ALDO LEOPOLD Quote : " We abuse land because we regard it ... Recreational developmen... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Leopold, Aldo. (2026, February 17). Recreational development is a job not of building roads into the lovely country, but of building receptivity into the still unlovely human mind. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/recreational-development-is-a-job-not-of-building-8200/
Chicago Style
Leopold, Aldo. "Recreational development is a job not of building roads into the lovely country, but of building receptivity into the still unlovely human mind." FixQuotes. February 17, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/recreational-development-is-a-job-not-of-building-8200/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Recreational development is a job not of building roads into the lovely country, but of building receptivity into the still unlovely human mind." FixQuotes, 17 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/recreational-development-is-a-job-not-of-building-8200/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.








