Showing posts with label Earth Day. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earth Day. Show all posts

Monday, April 23, 2012

Blog Crawl Gems


Recent Treasures: trees, trees, and more trees, including some in rocks; neat geo/adventure blog; and Earth Day history.


I have only a small collection of blog gems to share today, but they are gems.  I discovered several blogs of interest at Treeblogging.com, "a forest of arboreal links”. Tree A. Ware ... mad about trees posted some truly spectacular photos of amazing color and beauty featuring the rainbow eucalyptus.  Rainbow-hued tree bark below courtesy carvalho by way of flickr.




Loose and Leafy put together a wonderful post about urban gardens: the tough little plants that make it amidst concrete and metal and speed-bump cobbles in urban landscapes.

Dandelion to left courtesy martijndevalk.nl by way of flickr.



For plants in rocks, check out the cool fossil scale trees courtesy Wooster Geologists.  Right:  reconstruction of the scale tree Lepidodendron by Dutch conservationist Eli Heimans (1911).



I was happy to find the geology/adventure/photo blog, Cedar & Sand, while searching for information on the San Rafael Reef -- terrific photos and nice stories, too.


Map of the 1969 oil spill off Santa Barbara, the original impetus for Earth Day;
from the American Oil & Gas Historical Society.


A friend and I got to reminiscing about our experiences on the first Earth Day back in 1970, prompting me to refresh my memory re its history.  I came across this very interesting website/archive devoted to Gaylord Nelson (left), Earth Day, and “the making of the modern environmental movement”.

The making of the modern environmental movement:  Santa Maria High School Ecology Club, 1970.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Happy? Earth Day


By 1970 the environmental movement had reached our town.  We formed an Ecology Club at our high school, and our science teacher lined up excuses for us so that we could attend the “Environmental Teach-in” in Santa Barbara on the first Earth Day.  We packed into Frank’s yellow Chevy and headed south.  It was an exciting day for idealistic teenagers from a small working-class town, culminating in an “occupation” of the Santa Barbara pier.  It was the beginning of my trajectory as environmentalist, field botanist and conservation biologist.

Now 42 years later I’m still at it, but I find it very easy to fall into cynicism and pessimism in thinking about the future of US environmentalism.  What was once progress now flounders amidst bureaucracy and red tape.  A Congress that once passed legislation such as the Wilderness Act, Clean Air Act and National Environmental Protection Act, now would not be caught dead doing anything that might hamper economic growth.  How easy it is to stick our heads in the sand.  And what happened to all those idealistic Boomers?  are they only worried about their IRAs and 401ks now?
But then I look around my part of North America and I forget about all the craziness for a little while.  I remain impressed by the wildness in our country, and the value we put on natural areas.  Maybe hope is not so silly after all.  It is critical to take this step back every now and then, for the sake of sanity if nothing else.

“It is not enough to fight for the land; it is even more important to enjoy it. While you can. While it’s still here.”  Ed Abbey

PS  I highly recommend Geotripper’s thoughtful Earth Day essay “Only a Little Planet ...