Climate Movement Monday: mutual aid after Hurricane Helene

EDITED WITH UPDATE: Please see my 10.1.24 post with easy-to-navigate lists of mutual aid groups!

Welcome back to another Movement Monday in which we discuss all things climate with a focus on frontline communities. In order to protect my health, I’ve been on a  self-imposed media break from the many horrors of our current reality (and I acknowledge my privilege in being able to avoid those horrors!), so don’t have any new insights into the aftermath of Hurricane Helene. I will, however, share this from Bill McKibben’s newsletter which I did read:

Were it happening just in one place, a compassionate world could figure out how to offer effective relief. But it’s happening in so many places. The same day that Helene slammed into the Gulf, Hurricane John crashed into the Mexican state of Guerrero, dropping nearly 40 inches of rain and causing deadly and devastating floods in many places including Acapulco, which is still a shambles from Hurricane Otis last year. In Nepal this afternoon at least 148 people are dead and many still missing in the Kathmandu Valley. Just this month, as one comprehensive twitter thread documented, we’ve seen massive flooding in Turkey, the Philippines, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Marseilles, Milan, India, Wales, Guatemala, Morocco, Algeria, Vietnam, Croatia, Nigeria, Thailand, Greece, Romania, Poland, the Czech Republic, Austria, with the Danube hitting new heights across Central Europe. 

Make no mistake, we are in climate collapse. And yet, the powers-that-be still pretend it’s not happening. Last week, Zippy received an email survey from one of Colorado’s senators (Michael Bennet), asking Zippy to name his priority issues. That survey did NOT even include climate (or Gaza or Lebanon and the corresponding billions of dollars and weapons to Israel). Clearly, the electeds are completely happy to drive humanity to extinction.

Which is why today’s post is devoted to mutual aid groups working on the ground to help those impacted by Hurricane Helene.  Also, with some overlap, here’s another mutual aid list. What is mutual aid? Per Global Giving: Mutual aid is about cooperating to serve community members. Mutual aid creates networks of care and generosity to meet the immediate needs of our neighbors. It also addresses the root causes of challenges we face and demands transformative change.  

Mutual aid is a powerful way to give because it helps build community and create people power. People trust those who’ve helped them in hard times and are more likely to join later efforts to push for beneficial change in their communities. Mutual aid builds on the present and for the future.

Helene impacted Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia. There are many needs right now and so I again offer this list of mutual aid groups and this list.

I hope you’ll join me in helping the people of Florida, North Carolina, South Carolina, Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia. Any amount is appreciated! Thank you in advance for your humanity.

Please take care of yourselves. Solidarity! ✊🏽

Climate Movement Monday: turning the fossil fuel narrative on its head

Welcome back to Movement Mondays in which we discuss all things climate. Today I’m returning to Not Too Late: Changing the Climate Story from Despair to Possibility (edited by Rebecca Solnit & Thelma Young Lutunatabua) in order to offer my readers another lens to look at our climate reality while also imagining a better world.

At the start of the chapter “Different Ways of Measuring: On Renunciation and Abundance” (a conversation between Solnit and Lutunatabua), there’s this quote from Dr. Elizabeth Sawin:

“It is some very effective marketing that has convinced so many of us that getting off of fossil fuels is a sacrifice as opposed to a money-saving, peace-promoting, water-protecting, health-improving, technological leap forward.”

This jumped out at me because whenever I (foolishly) read comments about various climate actions (and it doesn’t matter if it’s folks politely demanding better of their government or Climate Defiance interrupting fossil fuel executives as they’re being celebrated), there are always people who ridicule the activists for imagining a world without fossil fuels. Those naysayers insist the many negative consequences  we’re experiencing in real-time are a given and that there’s no way forward that doesn’t include fossil fuels. A frequent commenter “gotcha” is “Did you drive your car to that action?” which reveals a complete lack of imagination in regards to our woefully inadequate public transportation, connected biking routes, etc.

Directly following Sawin’s quote, Solnit eloquently presents a different perspective that I’d love to copy and paste in reply to those cynical comments.

What if the climate crisis requires us to give up the things we don’t love and the things that makes us poorer, not richer? What if we have to give up the foul contamination around fossil-fuel extraction, the heavy metals people inhale when coal is burned around them, the oil refineries that contaminate the communities of color around them from the Gulf of Mexico to California? What if the people of Richmond in my own home region, the Bay Area, didn’t have emergency alerts where they were supposed to seal their homes because of a refinery leak? What if the incidence of asthma in kids went way down, and we stopped losing almost nine million people a year to pollution worldwide? What if that moment when the pandemic shut down so much fossil-fuel burning that people in parts of northern India saw the Himalayas for the first time in decades became permanent?   

I don’t know about you, but reading those words expanded my mind and heart, while reaffirming my belief in a better world. Kicking our fossil fuel addiction won’t set us back, but will instead liberate us to live healthier, happier lives.

If you’re interested, here’s an article about the visible Himalayas, including grateful social media posts:  Peaks of Himalayas visible from parts of India for first time in decades as pollution drops amid lockdown. And if these quotations resonated with you and you’re interested in reading more, Not Too Late is available through Haymarket Books and is currently offered at a discount.

Thank you for reading this far and please know I welcome all thoughts and comments below (spoiler: no, I did not drive my car to this post). Until next time, solidarity! ✊🏽

You should have joy and pleasure

When reading this week’s newsletter “Organizing My Thoughts” from Kelly Hayes this morning, a quote jumped out at me. It came via the linked piece from Lewis Raven Wallace “The Right Wants Us to Submit to Nihilism. Here Is Where I’m Searching for Hope.”

“You should have joy and pleasure from being on the right side of history,” [ . . ], “not anguish and despair. Let the other people have that.”

My first yellow leaves of the season. Golden Gate Canyon State Park. August 30, 2024

Wallace continues with this:
Joy is not just icing on the cake or the purview of the privileged. It is an exercise in hope that has always been rigorously practiced by people facing impossible situations of oppression. Laughter, pleasure and small acts of connection are precisely where we find our power — and the soul fuel that makes it possible to go on.

Anyway, that sentiment helped me a lot today–helped me remember who and what I am–and I wanted to share in case it could help someone here. Let’s hold onto our shared humanity and refuse to let the horrors and ugliness turn us into shells of ourselves. Let’s rejoice in nature and each other, and laugh as much as possible.

The fear-based, mean-spirited people can keep all that ugly for themselves.

Thankful Thursday: shared humanity

This beautiful begonia bloom was waiting for me this morning when I arrived at a neighbor’s to water their plants.

The delicate bloom rested on the concrete below the pot, looking perfect as could be. It felt like a gift and I brought it home.

And now I offer this beautiful flower to those I’m grateful to be in community with, the people whose hearts are also broken on behalf of the Palestinians facing horror after horror as the United States arms and gives political cover to Israel’s genocide. This begonia bloom is also for those experiencing further outrage and heartache on behalf of the Lebanese who suffered two terrorist attacks this week as Israel carried out its long-range plan that involved a shell company in Hungary which built electronic devices laced with explosives to be detonated at a later date. That later date was this week. Dozens, including children, are dead, and thousands are maimed as a result of electronic devices literally exploding in their faces.

For all who refuse to normalize death and destruction, who refuse to harden their hearts against people halfway around the world, I’m grateful for your shared humanity. Thank you.

Edited to add: I meant to also share the begonia gift with those sickened and heartsick on behalf of the Haitian immigrants being demonized and terrorized by people using the “othering” playbook to advance their fascist goals. I’m grateful to all who refuse to remain silent in the face of that hateful demagoguery.

PSA: Novavax Covid Vaccine

But first, a word from our sponsor:

Adult and young blue Jay.    July 13, 2024.    Photo by Zippy.

Only kidding. Another Day On the Planet has no sponsor which is why you never see any strategically-placed cans of Pringles or bottles of Dos Equis on this blog. But if there was a sponsor, BIRDS would be a great choice!

I actually just wanted to offer information and resources on the updated Covid vaccines, specifically the Novavax vaccine. Why? Because I’m realizing not many people know about it, in large part because the government is pushing Pfizer and/or Moderna. (Despite Novavax being submitted for approval in July before the other vaccines, the FDA approved Novavax last, and only after much public pressure via emails and phone calls.)

A recent study (on a previous strain) showed that while Moderna reduced the viral load by 100x, Novavax reduced the viral load by 600x.  Novavax also provides protection for both the upper and lower respiratory tracts. Many (including Zippy and me) also like Novavax because there are fewer side effects. The two times I’ve gotten Novavax were much easier than my previous Pfizer and Moderna shots. Here’s a handy graphic explaining the other benefits of Novavax.

I follow many Covid-aware people on Twitter such as virologists and immunocompromised people, and the consensus is that Novavax is the superior vaccine that offers the greatest protection. If you’re interested, the Novavax locator site will help you find the vaccine close to you.

NOTE: if you do opt for Novavax, be very clear about that when you go into the pharmacy because there are many anecdotal instances right now of people requesting Novavax and having the pharmacist instead offer Pfizer (because they see it as the default) or grabbing a syringe of Pfizer or Moderna out of habit. When I showed up for my appointment (in which I’d requested Novavax in the online form), I said I was there for Novavax (as opposed to “Covid vaccine”) to make sure we were all clear on my intentions from the outset. It’s also a very good idea to ask to see the label on the syringe just to be absolutely sure. The pharmacy I visited was very busy and those workers have LOTS on their minds, so it’s totally fine to clarify.

Please let me know if you have any other questions because I can probably point you to the answers.

Remember, the more we can do to curb the mutation and spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, the healthier and happier we will be. 🙂

Edited to add: BonaFide Masks is where I get KN-95 masks (ear-loops) which I mostly give out to others who want to mask but don’t want to wear a mask with head-straps. Use code BFM25 for 25% off your order through October 1. Free shipping!

Climate Movement Monday: the war on Gaza

Welcome back to Movement Mondays in which I highlight a climate-related issue and offer suggestions for taking action. It’s been a while since I posted one of these and that’s due to a sense of overwhelm and futility. But I’m rousing myself today because the U.S. military is one of the major (if not the major) driver of climate change and because today is Day 346 of the war on Gaza. I’m hoping that people who might have remained silent thus far regarding the ongoing genocide of Palestinian people might be motivated to take action if they realize what the many tons of bombs supplied by the U.S. are doing to the environment, effects that will impact everyone on this planet.

Per “The Gaza war is an environmental catastrophe,” an article published September 5, 2024, in +972 Magazine, Gaza’s future was already precarious with the specter of “Ever-worsening shortages of water and electricity. Catastrophic flooding in dense urban areas. Food insecurity exacerbated by drastic temperature increases, reduction in overall rainfall, and the long-term impact of toxic chemicals.” Those predictions were made two years ago and now, after nearly one year of the U.S. enabling and providing cover for Israel’s campaign of death and destruction, that threat has radically accelerated.

“…environmental degradation in Gaza has worsened exponentially: as Israel’s bombardment destroys infrastructure, an inordinate amount of toxic dust has been released into the air, and wastewater management has entirely collapsed due to the shortage of fuel. 

By April, the destruction of buildings throughout the Gaza Strip had produced an estimated 37 million tons of debris. As buildings are damaged or collapse, they release clouds of noxious smoke, toxic dust, and fumes into the environment.”

As someone who recently lost a beloved family member to cancer as a result of him working several blocks away from the World Trade Center, the thought of this ongoing assault sickens me. Can you imagine 346 days of this where you live?

Smoke rises after an Israeli airstrike in Gaza, seen from the Israeli side of the fence encaging the Strip, January 7, 2024. (Chaim Goldberg/Flash90)

Beside the genocidal depravity of all these bombs, “It is projected that the current war already yielded a minimum of 900,000 tons of toxic waste. These pollutants — which include radioactive and carcinogenic materials, heavy metals, pesticides, and other chemicals, emitted both through the use of military munitions and in the destruction of buildings — persist in the environment, posing a threat to all forms of life, including animals and vegetation. They contaminate soil, air, and water sources, endangering ecosystems.” [emphasis mine]

I encourage you to read the article in its entirety as Dr. Mariam Abd El Hay, a researcher in social dynamics and the environmental impacts of conflicts and a Palestinian citizen of Israel from the city of Tira, answers questions posed by +972 Magazine.

So what can we do? I fully admit that what the global pro-Palestinian coalition has been doing for the past 11+ months hasn’t brought about a ceasefire and aid for Palestinians, but that doesn’t mean we should stop agitating. I continue to contact my electeds to voice my outrage for their continued support for genocide. Today I focused on this document from the Ministry of Health in Gaza.

I used that Tweet as a script which helped me focus my rage at their complicity. Fourteen pages of dead children younger than one year of age! 

To contact your electeds, go HERE for your Representative and HERE for your two Senators. HERE for Biden and HERE for Harris.

In addition to referencing the 649-page document of (documented) dead Palestinians and/or the climate impacts of this U.S.-sponsored genocide, what else might you say to your electeds (particularly if they’re Democrats)?

  • Don’t threaten me with the end of democracy when poll after poll shows the vast majority of voters DO NOT want billions in aid and weapons sent to Israel to commit genocide. What you’re doing is NOT democracy.
  • The poliovirus, which we eradicated, is now present in Gaza’s wastewater. Worse, Israeli soldiers are hindering the delivery of polio vaccine to Palestinians.
  • Humanitarian aid workers are being murdered. As of September 12, 220 UNRWA aid workers have been killed. 
  • Know how to get an immediate ceasefire? Halt all weapons and aid to Israel!
  • There are anti-genocide candidates on the November ballot and I won’t be voting for anyone who doesn’t fully support an arms embargo, immediate ceasefire, and aid to Palestinians.
  • Edited to add: You’re no better than a climate denier if you continue to support this war on Gaza. And that goes for if you support fracking and brag about how much oil production is happening under the Biden administration. You can’t call climate change an existential threat and then push policies that accelerate the climate crisis.

And if you’re unwilling to bang your head against the entrenched political duopoly, you could donate to Municipality of Gaza (water and sewage treatment), UNRWA, esims for Gaza, or vetted fundraising campaigns for families in Gaza via Gaza funds.

Okay, I’ll stop here. It feels gross to frame this genocide in terms of what it’s doing to the climate, but because climate change is a global issue that affects every single one of us, I’m hoping more people will speak out on behalf of Palestinians. And to anyone who continues to scroll on past any mention of what’s happening in Gaza and the West Bank, shame. We need to regain our sense of shared humanity.

Thank you for reading this far. Solidarity! ✊🏽

EDITED TO ADD: Drop Site News is hosting a live screening of the documentary “The Night Won’t End” tomorrow (Tuesday) at 8 p.m. ET. The film tells the story of three Palestinian families in Gaza fighting to survive the genocidal onslaught. Go HERE to subscribe for free and gain access to the screening.

Sunday Confessional: saying goodbye

As mentioned before, I’m in the process of cutting ties with some of my stuff** which is bringing up all sorts of feelings. Some giveaways via a local Buy Nothing page are easier than others, such as saying goodbye to the boys’ old bunkbed, exercise balls, and a couple bulletin boards. Those transactions leave me feeling purely liberated. But the other day, I offered up our two sets of skate skis, boots, and poles. Zippy and I brought that ski equipment with us from Alaska 28 years ago and used it exactly one time since. Clearly, it was time to let go of those belongings. Zippy thought it was a waste of time to post such outdated gear, but multiple people expressed interest within an hour or two. And when it came time to set the skis, boots, and poles outside for pick-up, all sorts of emotions arose. With tears in my eyes, I photographed my yellow-sided skis alongside the purple-and-white boots that’d transported me into a new way of living in Anchorage.

I happened to look out the window when the person came to pick up the stuff and I couldn’t refrain from stepping outside. I don’t remember exactly what I called out to him, something to the effect of “Happy skiing!” and “I have so many memories of those skis!” I’m sure I sounded emotional because he quickly assured me they’d be put to good use. Tears in my eyes, I went back inside and closed the door.

It wasn’t until later that I remembered experiencing those same emotions years ago. Not only that, I’d written an essay about it (see FREEDOM RIDE below). And when I looked up the file today, I was reminded that a parenting magazine had expressed interest in publishing the essay. Unfortunately, they ultimately passed, but the good news is there were photos in the file. Because I’d mostly skied alone, there were no photos of me in action, and I’d given the magazine pictures of a friend with her son.

This photo isn’t a perfect representation of my experience because she’s skiing on longer, diagonal skis rather than my short skate skis. Also, the pulk is a different color. But in the absence of authentic images from my days on the groomed trails (and you can bet I regret that deeply), this gives you a good idea of the set-up.

So, here is that essay. Note: The original version included my sons’ real names, but I’ve switched them to their “blog identities.”

FREEDOM RIDE

I recently said good-bye to a piece of my son’s childhood and symbol of my early years as a mother: I sold my ski pulk.

Wildebeest was born in Alaska and his arrival highlighted the necessity of getting outside during the long, dark winters. Every Alaskan knows that a daily dose of the outdoors prevents the sluggishness and depression of sun-deficient winters, but this tactic is especially crucial when sharing a home with a little person. Cabin fever is not some scenario hallucinated by Jack London; it manifested itself in a creeping inertia that left me on the couch in a stained robe with an unwashed face at four in the afternoon. For the record, the blahs never overcame me to the point I neglected brushing my teeth. However, those blahs did foster an environment in which my energetic son began tapping at everything with a meat tenderizer. When that everything included me, I hauled myself upright and bought a ski pulk.

The pulk was a plastic sled converted into what looked like a green and purple space capsule. Completely enclosed in nylon and clear plastic, it had a rollbar, three-point harness, and backrest. Wildebeest could recline or sit and look through the windows at the scenery and occasional wildlife along the cross-country ski trail.

Now the following may sound like a pitch from an infomercial, but it’s true: buying the pulk transformed my life. My days were no longer defined by the tedium of scattered toys and messy diapers but instead included exercise, clean air and, if we were lucky, sunshine.  As long as temperatures weren’t too frigid, I strapped my well-bundled son inside, hooked the long aluminum poles to the sled, and fastened the attached belt around my waist. I was often reluctant to leave the couch’s familiar sag and warmth, but no matter the depth of my gloom, just a few lungs-full of the sharp winter air was enough to make me grateful to be outside.

I didn’t feel gratitude that first day, however. In my excitement to go on our maiden voyage, I hurriedly hooked up the pulk and took off skiing. Within minutes I was exhausted; it felt as if I were dragging a set of bleachers behind me. I turned around to assess the situation and realized I was pulling the sled backwards. My cheeks, already warm from exertion, flushed with embarrassment as I unhooked and got on the right end of the pulk.

From that moment forward, my outings were filled with the smooth side-to-side glides of skate skiing. On my ultra-short skis, I skated along the groomed trails with a fluidity that felt like poetry in motion after being cooped up in a house filled with stale air and dark corners. I became so comfortable pulling the pulk that the only difference between skiing with and without it was the added weight.

But I was always aware of my cargo. While the distance separating Wildebeest from me created a sense of solitude, he was still close enough to share the experience. Sometimes his loud exclamation at a passing image caught my attention and I’d look back to smile and wave. We shared laughs at the sight of kids tossing snowballs or a dog running loose. Mostly, though, he was my silent co-pilot, watching and processing information from his sliding cocoon. I’d point out a squawking raven on an overhanging limb, only to turn and discover him sleeping.

Fellow skiers reminded me of the unique aspect Wildebeest and the pulk brought to my skiing. Most were amused or expressed admiration for my strength, and those exchanges gave me a boost when my energy was fading. But when the super-fast skiers swished by with obvious pity for my burden, averting their gaze as if my pace was contagious, I longed to chase them down and tell them to stuff their sympathy since I was moving pretty damn fast considering the extra thirty-five pounds I was hauling, thank you very much.

Skiers weren’t the only ones using the trails, though. Each day I scanned for moose that sometimes become agitated and trample people, and often saw them bedded down beneath trees. Once I spotted a calf just off the trail to my right. My heart hammered as I looked to the left, praying its mother wasn’t there to put Wildebeest and me in the middle. I poled a rapid getaway on a rush of adrenaline, and never did see the cow.

Another time a moose foraging alongside the trail spun around and stepped in our direction. Even though it was a lone male, I chose to turn back instead of possibly startling him into defensive action. In my hurry to reverse direction, I flipped Wildebeest and the pulk onto its side. Throughout my panicked efforts to right the sled, I was hyper-aware of the moose’s movement. At last, I sped away. But when I glanced back, it was clear the moose hadn’t been charging closer and was merely browsing tree to tree. Still, I kept up my frantic pace until it felt safe to stop, at which point all my energy went into fighting the urge to vomit. My little guy babbled and gestured about our exciting wipeout, oblivious to my moose anxiety and the escape routes I routinely plotted along the trails.

Several years have passed since that encounter, and our family has grown by another son. We left Alaska and now live in suburban Colorado. Because my heart prevailed over my head, we brought the pulk with us. Anchorage has miles of groomed trails within minutes of our former residence but the weather at our new home is fickle; snow doesn’t stick around long enough to warrant grooming. Lack of childcare for my elder son and the long drives to ski areas prevented me from sharing the pulk experience with my younger child, Zebu.

The pulk collected dust for a year. And then I sold it.

As I closed the door behind the family who bought the sled, I cried. I wept for the cold, crisp air and the exhilaration of swooping down a hill, for the personal strength I’d discovered, and the adventures that were forever in Wildebeest’s and my past. But mostly I wept for Zebu and how he’d never know the thrill of gliding along the trail, searching out moose amidst clusters of birch trees. As my husband hugged me, I wondered if my tears were silly.

“No,” he replied. “That was your freedom ride.”

He was right: the pulk had liberated me from the mundane and sometimes claustrophobic life of an Alaskan stay-at-home mom and, in the process, I’d transformed into a strong, confident, and emotionally stable mama. But we’d moved on, and I had to accept those times were behind me. I had to find new ways to stay healthy while mothering two young children.

So Zebu and I found other winter-time activities to fill the void. Granted, step aerobics in front of a television don’t hold the same magic as skiing alongside the Cook Inlet with the Alaska Mountain Range framing the background, but this is something I do with my youngest son. He smiles up at me, marching in place while imitating my arm movements. We count out steps, his numbers often tripping up my own, and then afterward sit side-by-side on the floor, stretching our muscles as the family dogs sniff and lick our faces.

Sometimes I suffer pangs of regret that ours is a tamer experience than his brother and I shared. But then I remind myself that mom and son aerobics are completely valid, even if there is no adrenaline rush. Zebu and I are creating our memories, and the only significant difference is I traded moose for dogs. And polar fleece for spandex.
_____________________

**do yourself a favor and have some laughs as the brilliant George Carlin discusses “Stuff”

Thankful Thursday: people who reach out

Over the years, I’ve had friends from my distant past find me via this site which is always a happy surprise. And strangers have reached out after reading something I posted. For example, after writing about Aaron Bushnell on Memorial Day, a friend of his wrote to me. Their message touched me deeply and I wrote back to thank them for taking the time to contact me in solidarity.

But I’m not always successful in responding to people and so today I’m using this space to let LR know that I received their message. Thank you! I tried to respond via the email provided but there’s an error with that address and it doesn’t go through. I did an online search and was able to find an edu email address for you, and sent my message there. Because I haven’t heard anything back, I’m  wondering if that’s also a bad address. PLEASE, if you see this, use the contact form again and leave a different return address. I very much appreciated your message and would like to converse some more!

May 29, 2019

Solidarity!

They say it’s his birthday

Today is Zippy’s birthday and he celebrated by going on a 30-mile bike ride. Another thing he likes to do? Hike. Here he is hiking in Pike National Forest last October. See that happy, relaxed smile?

Well, here’s the cut paper card I made for him this year in honor of those hikes and our “forest bathing.”

May we share many more moments of forest-induced peace in the coming year. Happy birthday, Zippy. ❤️

Thankful Thursday: the common

Life feels difficult the last few days–personally, professionally, and globally–and now more than ever, I’m grateful for nature’s gifts. Today I’ve taken solace in the presence of many magpies (my next door neighbor just confirmed her dog–again— spread kibble in their backyard) as they fly to-and-fro, pause to snack on Rainbow’s offerings, and bathe in my bird bath.

Magpies are common around here yet they never fail to lift my spirits. Equally common are the bright, cheery sunflowers smiling in my yard and throughout the neighborhood. These, too, always bring a smile. And when that sunflower sighting includes a Common Checkered-Skipper?

Backyard. August 12, 2024

Well, then my gratitude knows no bounds. Even when I gaze upon the image nearly a month later, it’s like bottled Balm for the Soul.

Wildlife and me

I had a lovely solo camping trip in Golden Gate Canyon State Park last week. The weather was pleasant and my site was level, plus there was a peaceful little Nature Trail right across the road that I wandered a couple times. Oddly enough, there weren’t many birds and it was mostly quiet except for the occasional Mountain Chickadee and Common Raven (which I heard several times but never spotted). I had high hopes for bird sightings since on the first afternoon I saw a White-breasted Nuthatch on a tree trunk near the restroom. That was my one and only nuthatch sighting although I had two encounters with a pair of Gray Jays. I’m not sure it was the same pair both times, but one flew directly at me near my campsite then landed in the tree right next to me, followed by another jay. And the next morning as I paused outside the restroom to put on my mask, a Gray Jay flew right (like, right) in front of me and into the building wall as if it thought it could perch there. Then it flew back into the closest tree where another jay waited. I never saw them again, but spent some time pondering whether they were trying to tell me something or maybe thought I was a kindred spirit in my gray fleece jacket that’s the same shade as their feathers.

On my first morning there, I suited up to run on the Raccoon Trail which is a 3.5 mile loop (including spur from campground) that includes Panorama Point and a view of the Continental Divide. Because I was starting at 9100 feet elevation and would gain several hundred feet more, I knew water was essential. And while I never run with my phone, I knew it would be wise to have it, so wore my small hiking pack that holds a camel back for water. After some stretches to warm up, I took off. The pack bouncing on my back didn’t bother me, but I was very aware of the water as it sloshed with every step. The trail starts out in forest and soon opens up to aspen groves. Five minutes into the run, I sloshed my way around a curve and was startled by a large crashing in the brush. A moose! Heart hammering, I immediately stopped and spoke quietly while glancing around for a calf. I only saw the one moose, but my heart still pounded at the sight of all those skinny aspen trees that weren’t big enough to hide behind if the moose decided to charge. Fortunately, we both calmed down and it soon went back to browsing. As it moved farther from the trail, I slowly and silently (no sloshing!) continued on my way. A few minutes later I came upon a hiker and as she stepped off the trail to let me pass, she asked if I’d seen the moose. I said I had.

“That calf was so cute,” she replied.

Calf?

Turned out, this woman had been about ten feet away from the juvenile moose and she’d taken photos. Yikes! Fortunately, all was well with the mama and everyone moved on without incident.

The rest of my run/scramble up rocky slopes was uneventful. I stopped to check out the view at the top and then kept going. It wasn’t until I was back at my camp site doing my cool-down stretches that I had my favorite wildlife encounter of the trip.

This ground squirrel calmly perched a few feet from me, drinking up the warm sun. Moments later, the squirrel was flat on their tummy in an obvious display of fearlessness.

I’ll confess that I took loads of photos of this squirrel and their many poses. It made my heart so happy to share the space together, that morning and throughout my stay. This squirrel was a very gracious host and I’m grateful both for the companionship and also for the fact my heart didn’t practically leap out of my chest at our encounters. Moose are amazing creatures but my time in Alaska taught me they can be very volatile and extremely dangerous. Unlike this little ground squirrel.

This squirrel was pure chill which was exactly what I needed on my trip.

On this Labor Day

Labor Day is dedicated to workers uniting, using their collective strength to demand changes in work policy to include respect, safety, health care, livable wages, shorter hours, sick time, etc. Sadly, the fierce and strategic labor organizer, Jane McAlevey, died at age 59 in July. Jane had an incredible impact on organized labor and you can read some tributes here.  She published a number of books and this is what I wrote in my reading log after finishing A Collective Bargain: Unions, Organizing, and the Fight for Democracy (2020):

“This book fired me up! There’s so much we can accomplish if we stand together. I wish I had a job where I could organize a union. Biggest takeaway: even in states w all GOP elected (WV), the teachers & school workers won huge demands via strike!” No matter if you’re in the work place or not, I highly recommend reading this inspirational book because Jane makes it clear that people power is the way forward in every single challenge we face. People standing shoulder-to-shoulder as we demand better for people and planet.

 

I believe Jane would be thrilled by some of the powerful collective actions happening right now:

Lastly, PLEASE take 2 minutes to personalize comments in support of United Farm Workers who labor in the fields to bring food to our tables. They work in all sorts of extreme weather, including in dangerously high temperatures. The comment period is now open for Federal Heat Safety Regulations and I hope you’ll join me in advocating for training, shade, cool water, and paid rest breaks for the workers. You can do that HERE.

I’ll close this Labor Day post with some wise words from  Mother Jones:

  • “Pray for the dead and fight like hell for the living.”
  • “The first thing is to raise hell,” says I. “That’s always the first thing to do when you’re faced with an injustice and you feel powerless. That’s what I do in my fight for the working class.”
  • “Our present civilization is one of brute force. We hope to make it a civilization of justice and love.”

Thank you for reading this far. Happy Labor Day!
Solidarity! ✊🏽