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He arrives at the courthouse just in time "to make his final stand." But Conway's true nemesis is not "the courts" or some heartless "tax man." It's a 28-year-old woman who was injured during a visit to Turtle Island. In August 2005, Kimberly Baker of Wilmington came to the preserve on a retreat as part of the North Carolina Teaching Fellows program. She and the others were taking part in an orientation at Turtle Island's entrance when one of Conway's people pulled out a sling and began demonstrating how to hurl stones. A rock flew backward, blinding Baker's right eye. She sued. Baker settled with two of Conway's staff for a combined $400,000. In September 2009, Conway agreed to pay Baker $75,000 and to mortgage some of his land within a year to cover the amount. When the deadline passed without payment, Baker filed a lawsuit for breach of contract. Finally, in April 2012
-- around the time those episodes were filmed -- Conway paid up. Conway says his contract with the History Channel prevents him from commenting "about the correctness of that" depiction of events. But he avers that reality shows are about building suspense and drama, "And a lot of the life out here is not as dramatic as they want it or need it to be." He expressed much the same sentiment when he spoke with writer Elizabeth Gilbert for her 2002 Conway biography, "The Last American Man." "When I go out in public, I deliberately try to present myself as this
wild guy who just came down off the mountain, and I'm aware that it's
largely an act," Gilbert, who also wrote the best-seller "Eat, Pray, Love,"
quoted him as saying. "I know I'm a showman. I know I present people with an image of how I wish I were living. But what else can I do? I have to put on that act for the benefit of the people." ___ As word of Conway's bureaucratic problems spread, hate mail inundated Furman's office. In a petition posted on
http://northcarolinaconservative.net/ , author Vicky Kaseorg made allusions to Nazi Germany and Stalinist Russia. "Are government officials upset that someone can survive without them?" she asked. Meanwhile, North Carolina's Republican-dominated legislature passed a bill exempting "primitive" camps and farms
-- including "sheds, barns, outhouses, doghouses" and other structures
-- from the building codes. GOP Gov. Pat McCrory signed the bill into law on June 12. By month's end, Conway was back in business. On a recent sultry day, a dozen or so campers and interns listened intently as Conway held court in the breezeway of the main horse barn. The smell of wood smoke, stewing cabbage, manure and sweat mingle in the steamy air as speckled chickens scratch for food in the dirt around the teacher's feet. Conway points to the rounded rafter just above their heads, explaining how this "puncheon" construction, common during the 17th and 18th centuries, allows the flat surface of a split log to act as the floor above. The barn is one of the buildings singled out as potentially unsafe, and Conway can't resist a jab.
"My problem with the government is they see that I'm teaching people about simple, natural living, and that doesn't jive with their corporate sponsors, you know?" Conway says. "So it's real important to realize that the model is something that we need to keep alive. And what I want you guys to do is go out and teach the rest of the world how to do it. Because it's our birthright as a human being." If Conway was a folk hero before, this incident has only increased his stock. Nick Rosen, who runs the site http://www.off-grid.net and included a chapter about Conway in a book about the movement, says what happened at Turtle Island "is part of a national trend to create obstacles in the way of people wanting to carve out their own freedom." But while many feel the government went too far, some think Conway is trying to have it both ways. He promotes a lifestyle, but he also runs a business -- albeit a nonprofit one. Available records don't disclose how much the "Mountain Men" deal is worth, and Conway isn't saying. Fees he charges at Turtle Island vary. Those who just want to come and look around can pay $75 for a horse-drawn buggy tour. Paying campers can learn everything from basic blacksmithing to how to build a log cabin. Tuition for one of Conway's "Chainsaw Work-Studies" is $20 to $60 a day, "depending on how helpful you are." Conway also offers an unpaid, 14-month internship called "Work-Camp," a regimen of "4 or more days a week of full-on, focused work." Food and shelter are provided. Boone contractor Douglas McGuire grew up in these hills. Standing beside a stone fireplace in the modern log home that serves as his office, he says he understands the traditions of rugged independence and mistrust of government interference. But McGuire says this was a question of public safety, not private property rights. "What he is doing, 50 years ago, was a way of life," he says. "And people need to be taught to fend for themselves
-- to raise their gardens, to raise their crops. But I don't know that going back in time to accomplish that is the answer." A former intern expresses a different reservation about Turtle Island. Calling the buildings solid and the planning department's criticisms "off base," Justin McGuire (no relation to the contractor) says it's the camp's facade that's a bit shaky. The 31-year-old from Newnan, Ga., had hoped to learn how to live off the land, to live simply. He says that's not what he got. When the cameras were off, McGuire says, campers were using nail guns, bulldozers and backhoes. They ate mostly donated food, including condiments. "There wasn't a whole lot of agriculture going on," he said in a recent telephone interview. Although he quit his internship after six months and the show portrays their relationship as rocky, the young man says he still has a great deal of respect for Conway. He just feels that Conway has "kind of gotten away from what he originally was and what he originally stood for." Former Turtle Island apprentice Christian Kaltreider is now an engineer specializing in energy efficiency and renewables, He's dismayed
-- if not exactly mystified -- by Conway's decision to take part in a reality show. "I think it's ego and a drive to teach the world," the Asheville man says. Conway once told Kaltreider that his dream was that those he touched would go home and create "hundreds of little Turtle Islands everywhere." Most have fallen far short of Conway's goals, Kaltreider says. But, he adds, "We're still trying to save the world."
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