Steeped in beauty ….
Read MoreBroken Contract
Yellowstone National Park, Winter 2022
Winter Wildlife
Winter Palette
Mammoth Hot Springs
Morning Walk
I had those few hours in-between breakfast and time of departure,
so I took a walk.
Men rushed past me,
women anchor their hair against the elements.
I don’t know the city well,
especially this new version.
I was here to watch, look, and see,
Good Morning Chicago.
Visions are True
On my own
shadows followed me.
Remember the day we
were awestruck together?
Hands clasped, our breath measured.
I never tire of Rothko
for color is life.
Her always Chagall,
to be untethered from it all.
Don't Prolong
I know why
so alone
with the dark
shadows stare.
Acceptance
did not come.
Meaning lost
fall away.
To forget,
to remember.
Nothingness
is always there.
I know why
so alone,
cannot speak,
there should be sound.
Bicycle Tour in the New Year
Waking up from three days of Covid Haze I faced the first day of 2022. I swung my feet over the side of the bed, staggered to the kitchen to turn on the kettle before finally settling on the couch in front of the fire. I, the one who prefers to cook and bake at home on holidays, had been persuaded to attend a Christmas party. My hesitant sociability was rewarded with a bad case of Covid-19.
The last unmasked event I had attended, before Covid, was a EDM concert downtown in January 2020. We danced and were invited to meet the DJs. It was a carefree urban type of night that acclimated me back to Denver having just returned from a 9-day cycle tour in South Africa.
A South African bicycle tour operator had popped up on my Instagram feed in December 2019. I immediately signed up to join the group and in three week’s time I was on a flight to Cape Town. I took a couple of days in Constantia to sightsee and build my bicycle from the travel case. That Monday morning the tour operator collected me and the rest of the group and we drove out to the Garden Route to start our tour.
Touring Schedule Part 1:
Monday: The five of us cyclists got to know one another on the drive to George. We were a non-competitive group out to enjoy the summer weather. I was amazed that the guys from England had traveled all the way to Cape Town to attend a cricket tournament held the week before and they were equally amazed that I would fly in just to ride my bike. Before dinner we took a quick ride in the evening mist, a test of our wits perhaps? The face paced ride was the perfect warm up for the next day.
Tuesday: George to Oudtshoorn - 70K (approx.) - Outeniqua Mountains
This proved to be one of my favorite cycling days. We rode through indigenous forests of the Witfontein Nature Reserve then into mountain fynbos terrain. It was a cloudy, rainy day perfect weather for strenuous climbs. Montagu Pass was the climb of the day, here we encountered 4 mountain bikers and 2 vehicles., blissfully low-key compared to Colorado traffic.
The world has experienced a seismic shift since my January 2020 bicycle trip. I don’t expect to return to indoor dance concerts or any other indoor social events for awhile, but I do plan to return to bicycle touring this year. 12 weeks has always been my optimal training time. The time commitment is probably the hardest part of the program next to winter conditions. Let us see where I’ll be in April or May.
African Painted Wolves
Our first encounter with painted wolves was during a mobile camping trip in the Okavango region of Botswana, after morning tea we all trundled into the safari truck for a day of exploration.
Read MoreHimba Village in the Kunene Region
Archive Alert
I recently completed a school report regarding the impacts that prolonged drought events are having on the HImba in the Kunene Region. My photographs were taken in 2018 and the drought had continued since then through 2020 with predictions for unpredictable weather patterns to continue in the region at large.
I enjoyed my visit and learning about some of the cultural traditions that the Himba live by. It is humbling how well they have adapted to living in this arid environment for generations.
Why not Botswana in August?
Okavango Delta region, Botswana
Read MoreHimba Village in Northern Namibia
Soil is an organic matter
From an early age my father taught my brothers and I to appreciate good soil. I can hear his instruction now as we cupped soil samples from our organic gardens and orchard in our hands, “feel the texture of it, can you smell the living organisms in the soil?” Good soil takes effort, and the rewards are far greater than production and turnover rate, good soil is the heart of our environment.
soil, climate change, and farmer's field experience
I visited a Himba village in Northern Namibia in 2018, and as a soil aware person I was struck with how degraded the landscape was from overgrazing. I asked our local guide about the state of the landscape. He explained that the land was typically like this at the end of their dry period except that the normal rain systems were not arriving as they had in the past. I pressed him about possible solutions, he shrugged his shoulders.
I thought about this experience as I read my ecological systems assigned readings this week. One author briefly mentioned the possibility of making topsoil. The first step to reclaiming soil is testing and evaluation. I discovered that there is a group of European scientists who are working with Namibian farmers on soil degradation problems similar to I had seen (Prudat, et al., 2018). They recognize that previous reclamation efforts had not included local farmer’s field experience. The renewed approach includes creating a soil testing system that is relevant to the regional farmers by incorporating their local soil classification system and by recognizing all of the actors involved in the farming activities. Finally, a bottom-up approach to developing a soil testing system that could lead to a long-term soil management policy in which all stakeholders are invested in.
Prudat, B., Bloemertz, L., & Kuhn, N. J. (2018). Local soil quality assessment of north-central Namibia: integrating farmers' and technical knowledge. Soil, 4(1), 47–62. https://doi.org/10.5194/soil-4-47-2018, 2018.
Giraffe in Etosha National Park
At dusk giraffe gather in sheltered locations to prepare for the night. Most of the group will lay day and sleep for a few hours while one or two group members stay alert to watch out for predators. Giraffe’s nocturnal behavior is structured to benefit their community.
Wild giraffe populations are declining due to human development, political unrest, habitat loss, and poaching. We have the responsibility to conserve their habitat. As we learn about their complex social systems the responsibility is even more fundamental. The recent article published in Ecology and Evolution outlines the current studies of giraffe’s nocturnal behavior patterns hoping to provide guidance to human behavior towards wildlife.
Burger, A.L., Fennessy, J., Fennessy, S., & Dierkes, P.W. (Feb. 2020) Nightly selection of resting sites and group behavior reveal antipredator strategies in giraffe. Ecology and Evolution, 10(6), 2917–2927.
DOI: 10.1002/ece3.6106
Quiver trees in Namibia
An endemic tree species of Southern Africa the Quiver tree is an example of another endangered species that may have a very short future. Quiver trees have been disappearing from the landscape…
Read MoreElusive or Blind
It is helpful to say
there is hope.
You see it
with those you want to meet.
You see it
by the stories you tell.
You probably have hope
by offspring.
Problem is I don’t know
when to look
branding me
vaguely free.
Strength
Uncontrolled
torrent on salt
damned by a plan
When I was strong,
once,
a rhythm of laughter.
Strength
was a mere shadow
fractured by one breath.
Out it Alone
It came slowly
yet you are shocked?
no question asked
quiet with time.
Maasai Pastoralists, Their Community and the Amboseli Ecosystem
… hard work with unforgiving physical labor is required of all farmers
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