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Kings Canyon: Glacier

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Glacier shaped Kings Canyon

The most badass sculptor on earth. If you’ve ever seen Yosemite or Kings Canyon, you know this to true. Thousands of sheer feet of granite. Rock formations that boggle the mind. Cathedrals. Castles. Spires. Carved by raw strength, the power of water’s most cataclysmic form: glacier.

If you weren’t impressed by a river’s ability to carve a deep valley; if you ever underestimated the strength of innocent, giggly water, water in the form of a glacier will make you think again.

A glacier is “a perennial mass of ice which moves over land.” It is this moving, this slow melting and shifting, that has cut and formed some of the most beautiful places on earth. Yosemite and Kings Canyon are great examples of glacier carved valleys. John Muir figured this one out. No one could understand why most valleys were shaped like V’s, but Yosemite and King’s Canyon were shaped like U’s with massive flat valley floors and sheer cliffs of rock.

After volcanic action formed the granite of these canyons, unfathomably large glaciers began their sculpting work, melting and expanding, melting and shifting, cutting and exposing until the expansive canyons we know today were formed.

Interesting bits and pieces about glaciers: English folks pronounce glacier “glass-e-ar.” Cryosphere is the word that describes the portion of earth where water is in solid form. And one of my favorites: tidewater glaciers are glaciers that terminate at the ocean. As they reach the sea, pieces of them break off, or calve. In other words, tidewater glaciers give birth to icebergs.

Glaciers are also the largest reservoir of fresh water on earth. This is why they come into the global warming conversation all the time. We’ve all heard the one that if a particular glacier in Greenland melted, the sea would rise 20 feet. There are other glaciers or ice sheets that would cause the sea to rise 165 feet if they melted. So we should probably do our best to respect their strength. And admire their handywork.

Kings Canyon pic: James Kovacs

Pic below courtesy of wikipedia: the flowing Baltoro Glacier in Pakistan.

King’s Canyon: Lake.

Thursday, August 5th, 2010

The next three segments of the Sweetwater Project will relate the stories and revelations of a trip to Kings Canyon and encounters with its watery side.

King's Canyon

Kind of a strange trip, a bit off kilter, and in the midst of confusion, it was as if the world was speaking to us through signs. Strong elements. A thunderstorm we watched approached on the other side of the river, our side without rain, and the other being pelted with raindrops. Lightning. A rainbow. Fire caused by lightning burning up the canyon behind our tent. Let burn by the park service. A clear green river. Towering granite formations cut by the world’s most accomplished sculptors- glaciers. Every night watching bats snatch moths from dusk. And on the last day, finally, a pleasant sunny day by a still body of water, the gentle touch I needed, a lake.

Lake

“a body of liquid on the surface of a world.” – the poet, Wikipedia.

I have to admit, of all natural bodies and forms of water, the lake was always the least interesting to me. I grew up by the Pacific Ocean, rocked by the loud crash and surge of that titanic body of water. Of course, as you know, I’m pretty partial to rivers too. Moving, roving streams of water that somehow find their way together, and gurgle and splash as they move across the land. Lakes, however, are quiet. Generally, there are not big enough waves to bodysurf on. They normally don’t lead anywhere. They have always seemed kinda static to me.

Hume Lake

But taking a step back on this trip, next to gentle Hume Lake, I started to wonder: what the hell is a LAKE? Wikipedia gave me an answer I wouldn’t have expected- “a body of liquid on the surface of a world that is localized to the bottom of a basin.” Mostly it’s straight ahead, but what about the surface of ‘a world’ rather than the surface of ‘the world’ or ‘our world?’ But no my friends, the beauty of lakes is that they are not just confined to our small Earth, no. Lake can also be found on the world Titan, Saturn’s largest moon.

On Titan, the ‘bodies of liquid on the surface of the world’ contain liquid ethane and probably methane as well. Gaseous fluid lakes.

The next biggest surprise to me is that lakes are “temporary over geologic scales,” because they are destined to slowly fill with sediment or find their way out of the basin they are held in, and to the next low ground to flow on. Guess they’re not so static after all; only to my microscopic perspective.

Interesting tidbits: in England, most of the lakes in the Lake District are not named Something Lake, but are called Waters or Meres. In Scotland, almost everything we would call a lake, they call a loch. (aka Loch Ness)

Lakes generally occur in mountains or other low-lying basins or sinks. Basically, a basin that collects a gulp of water for a millennia or so till the plug gets pulled. A collection of water in a creased hand that can only be a birdbath for a bit. An umbrella upside down collecting the rain. That tiny little puddle on the sidewalk that’s a Lake Tahoe to the ants.

Needless to say, lakes has got a lot to relate. They’s coo. They’s hip. Lake.

another sweet lake: Siskiyou Lake

The Sacramento River’s birthplace in pictures

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

The Sacramento's birthplace, Mt Shasta

Cold jets of water pouring from a rock wall is how the Sacramento River begins. As most rivers do, the Sac starts small, picking up momentum with each river added until it is the Sacramento we know it as, wide and smooth. We sit at the end of pipes on one end, and on the other end is river country. The Sacramento River originates from this land around Mt Shasta- of trees and sky and LOTS of water.  In this river country, we found ourselves by rivers of such lushness and plenty, of such primal beauty that we could’ve been in Costa Rica (the lower McCloud). Camped by waterfalls that the Wintu, the native people of the area, call “falls where the salmon turn back” (Lower Falls on the upper McCloud). Crunched our footprints into the icey white blanket that is our water reserve on the flanks of Mt Shasta.

Take a visual trip through the homeland of the Sacramento River. This is what is on the other end of your (California’s) water pipes.


Middle Falls on the Upper McCloud River

Lake Siskiyou and Mt Shasta

the primal lower McCloud

Upper McCloud River at Fowler's Camp

California's water reserves stored in snow on Mt Shasta

a calmer stretch of the lower McCloud

"Falls where the salmon turn back"

the lower Sacramento River near Redding

The Sacramento River and Mount Shasta

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

the headwaters of the Sacramento

Thinking of my sister, who’s made her own sort of pilgrimage to the Holy Ganga of India, the Mother of Rivers where people come to pray, to drink, and to die, the only journey that could possibly compare in California, is to the source of our watery lifeline, the Sacramento River.

The Sacramento is the aorta of California’s water circulation system, the mother of all Californian rivers, carrying nearly a third of the state’s freshwater runoff. And in the case of the Sacramento, the comparison between rivers and mothers is not a stretch. The river gives us ample water to drink, grows our food, waters our landscapes, carves our computer chips, and at the same time nourishes the plants on her banks and the fish in her streams.

Just as a mother feels the incessant needs of her children (especially a Californian momma), and precariously struggles with that elusive word ‘balance,’ so the Sacramento feels many pulls on her. The pull to grow our food. The Sacramento gives water towards not only our sustenance, but towards our wealth as a state, being the cornerstone that supports CA as the fifth largest economy in the world.

The pull to quench our thirst.  Rivers that feed into the Sacramento, provide most of Southern California’s drinking water. Rising urban populations ever at odds with agriculture.

The pull to support all of our human needs. And at the same time, the needs of the plants, trees, marshes, salmon, trout that depend on her. And like a mother, she keeps giving, even at her own peril, even as her body threatens to give out.

It was a special thang, then, to visit the source of the Sacramento. As with all sources, the headwaters of the Sacramento are small, unassuming. Impressive because of the great river they will become. And the purity of the water. Flowing out of the rocks in the corner of Mt Shasta’s city park.

One of the only watery spots I’ve ever been to, where the attitude of reverence pervades the air. There are angel-lovers and Lemurian devotees, as Shasta tends to draw a crowd of eclectic belief systems. But there are also the more down-to-earth folks- who come to stand quietly, reflecting- possibly on how such a small spring of water could turn into a gigantic river like the Sacramento. Everyone takes their turn to drink from the spring, which has the sweetest, most delicious water. After all, the headwaters of the Sac are the place this water first issues from the stony gut of Shasta, filtered through lava tubes deep in the mountains core.

People of all ages bring bottles. And come to drink. And for a moment, reflect.

Reflection Two

Wednesday, June 23rd, 2010

Looking over the last six months, the maiden six months, of the Sweetwater Project, I think of what an amazing/crazy journey its been- getting to know about water more, and at the same time understanding so little. As I learn more,the world of water seems dangerously complex and intricate. Its enough to bowl me over sometimes. So, I stick to what’s important.

For me, what is most important about this whole project is deepening my relationship to water (and maybe,yours too!) – even just having a relationship. Just touching my toe to a lake or a creek, smelling water plants growing, hearing gurgling and sloshing and trickling. Following a water course to its transition. Making even a slight effort to see its nature- the things we love about water, its nurturing and life-giving properties, its beauty, and also, the things that drive us nuts, floods and monsoons.

For it is there, when we see and feel our relationship to water, that we see our relationship to life. To each other as humans, to the natural world, to our own private, delicate existence. We see our desire to dominate, we see our need, our fear of death, our desire for stability and safety. We see our desire to control the uncontrollable. We see the way we play money, political, and ego games; we see our love of beauty, our love of invention and overcoming obstacles, we see the better sides of our nature (and the harder) all reflected back at us.

All the details and policies get complex, but our mindset is under our control. And from a loving mindset, loving actions follow. I sound like the I Ching right now. But hey, seriously, you may think its funny for being a lover of water that I’m (shhh, this is a secret) not really a conservationist. I just like water- simple as that. I have begun (and only begun) to really care about water. And as I care more, my actions change to reflect that. Conservation may flow from my caring mindset. But it is not enough in itself. If we want to get ourselves and other people to save water, do something for the environment, or to make any step towards creating the world we want to live in, we must start from developing awareness into a deep and gentle caring about the world we live in.

The other thing I am even more deeply committed to since the inception of the Project is keeping an ethic of simple.We humans can get kind of complex about things. Especially in the realm of technology. Obviously, I appreciate human creation and innovation, but I like to stick to the ethic of using human invention when its needed, when it does make life easier, not just for the sake of it. Appropriate technology. I love those two words. Expect the Project to move towards simple and effective ways to respect water- swales, making natural filters, contouring land to catch water, graywater, more…

Also, check out what’s NEW with the Project!
Check out the updated Water Organizations page for tons of great resources!
Donate to the Sweetwater Project– Click the Donate button on the sidebar and make a donation to the Sweetwater
Project through PayPal. Thank you for supporting the Project’s work!
Give feedback on where you’d like our waterscape to be, where you’d like the Project to go….

This next week, the Project journeys to the Northern reaches of California, to track the Sacramento River,
the aorta of our river system, to its source at Mount Shasta. Stay tuned for stories!

Retrofittin’ the ol’ apartment

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

With all this talk of changing our relationship to rivers and water, it would be a sad, sad thing if the author of this Project did nothing herself to change her way with water- knowing how the pipes in our homes are connected to rivers and all. And so, in a humble way, I began the ‘retrofitting’ of my cozy little one bedroom apartment.

The beauty is, it didn’t take much time or much money to save about 27 gallons a day of water. Think of what a gallon of water looks like. And imagine 27 next to each other. That’s a good amount of water. Water that can stay in a river. Nurture plants and fish and wear down rocks. At the very least can be put to better use- used wisely in a garden or for growing food.

Because I live in a great city, the aerator I put on my bathroom sink and the shiny new showerhead I replaced my old water-guzzler with, were free- provided by the City of SF’s Water Conservation program to all city residents. And friends, the showerhead is even a nice one. See, they got all smart and designed showerheads and faucet aerators that have less water coming out of them and at the same time, have great water pressure thanks to air.

After learning more about water use in the house, it’s pretty obvious that showering and flushing the toilet are the

an aerator

biggest water-users. Replacing your showerhead with a well designed water-efficient model is a no brainer and ranges anywhere from cheap to free depending on where you live.

Toilets are a bit of a different story. If you have old toilets, chances are they use anywhere from 3.5 to 5 gallons or more a flush. Kinda crazy. The best thing you could do is replace your old toilets to High Efficiency models that use 1.28 gallons per flush. That is costly, for sure. Though, in many cities (including San Francisco) you can get rebates to pay for toilets or washers that are water-efficient. And you will save money on your water bill.

So what about apartment-dwelling, landlord-having people such as myself? First, you can do the dye test. Put a few drops of food coloring in the back of your toilet after it fills up after a flush and see if the dye comes into the toilet bowl. If it does, the black rubber thing at the bottom of your toilet tank, the flapper, is leaking and needs to be replaced. Cheap and easy.

Other than that, depending on where you live, there might be incentives and programs to help you or the owner of your house pay for high-efficiency toilets. Nothing like a little call to the ol’ landlord dangling an idea that will save them money on their water bill. And the beautiful thing about installing a new toilet or an efficient showerhead in your house is that long after the people who care about saving water are gone, the appliances remain, saving gallon after gallon.

For San Franciscans, check out Water Conservation programs at sfwater.org. One of the best services in the city is free Water Wise Evaluations. A trained conservation specialist comes to your home, reviews your water usage, and provides you with free aerators and efficient showerheads! Take advantage! Also listed on the website is info about rebates and other water-saving tips and programs.

For San Diegans, visit your Water Department’s page for conservation info including rebates, facts about graywater and rainwater harvesting, and also FREE Residential Water Surveys, just like SF’s.

And for you folks who live in the rogue and scandalous city of Los Angeles, check in with water conservation to see what’s going on!

Special thanks to Al at the SFPUC for showing me the ropes!

Our water is river.

Thursday, May 27th, 2010

“When we try to pick out anything by itself, we find it hitched to everything else in the Universe.”

– John Muir

Road Trip to SoCal: the Imperial Valley

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

the All-American Canal fifty feet from Mexico

The story of the Imperial Valley is not only the story of humans making a desert fertile, but also woven into my story. My great-grandparents met and fell in love there, in the tiny town of Brawley. And their story follows the development of this desert in the most south, most east part of California.

That was what it used to be called, the Colorado Desert. And that was what it was- ‘just’ a desert- the desert west of the great Colorado River. A few smart men saw the very dry, yet very fertile soil east of the river and decided to ‘civilize’ the place. In 1901, a large canal was opened from the Colorado into desert. From the desert, lettuces and grapefruit, melons and tomatoes came. An Imperial Press newspaper from 1901 proclaimed under its heading, “Water is King- here is its Kingdom!” A kingdom built on desert.

By 1902, Southern Pacific railroad laid tracks into the desert, now renamed, the Imperial Valley, by a very smart business man who knew the value of an enticing name. The town of Brawley was added to the map around then.

Vegetables and fruit piled up in bountiful baskets. And with so much abundance and a wealthy of opportunity, people came from all over. After all, not only were they growing food from what looked like wasteland, because of the climate, they were growing food ALL year long. Everyone wanted to be part of this great experiment, that sparked the imagination of every American mind.

Which is when she came onto the scene. In 1916, my pretty little great-grandmother, Delia Campbell, arrived in Brawley at the sweet age of sixteen. She came straight off the farm in Oklahoma- used to working hard, riding horses, and cooking up fried chicken and corn bread. Her father had gotten a job, unrelated to farming. And so the family came and settled.

Imperial lady (not of my blood)

Two years later my great-grandma met a young chap named Sam and became Delia Dotson when she was just 18 years old. The family moved away from the Valley for some time, to San Diego, to El Paso, Texas with the story of the Imperial Valley picking back up with my grandmother, Millie Delong.

Her family moved back to Brawley when she was ten years old in 1936. Growing up, I always remember my grandma mentioning how much she loved Brawley.

“It was a beautiful town. Everyone knew everyone,” she recalled recently.

She told the story of a small town- of just 10,000- a wealthy agricultural town. A town overflowing with giant heads of winter-grown lettuce. In fact, a point of pride, was that the Imperial Valley always sent the first cantaloupe, watermelon, and lettuce of the year to the White House. The desert climate made it possible to grow all year long. But without water, the Kingdom would have come crumbling down.

the Yuma Canal

My grandma remembers how a certain produce driver on the way to the market would stop at her house and give my great-grandmother loads of giant melons and heads of lettuce. She remembers the kitchen counter always full of produce.

She remembers going to the opening of the All American Canal- the lifeline of the Imperial Valley and the largest irrigation canal in the world- how the US Secretary of the Interior was there.

And she always recalls the story of the 1940 7.1 earthquake that nearly shook Brawley apart. That was when her family moved- picked up again and went to San Diego where the rest of history played out and led to a little baby named Me.

The Colorado River

the Colorado River near Yuma

I had to pay a visit. Being so close and all. When my mom and I finally found a small stretch of the Colorado, in an RV park, we found a modest river- not the raging Colorado you see crashing its way through the Grand Canyon. No, this river is an all but spent river. Most of what it carries is run-off from farm irrigation. Soon, it crosses the Mexican border, and before it gets to its old delta in the Gulf of Mexico, is pretty much used up.

I felt bad, but I didn’t really want to touch the water, muddy with fertilizer and farm soil. This river that helped sustain me as a child. As a San Diegan, about half the water I drank was from this river. This river, classified as a deficit river, because more people own water rights to it than there is water. I had to stop and pay homage- to this wild creature, wild and now tamed. But giving us ‘civilization.’ Producing over $1 billion in agriculture a year, and providing homes for many people.

So many times in southern California, you can look around you and see that the mirage around you is made of water. The gift of a loving mother, a particular river, created our economies of agriculture, industry, Hollywood, SoCal suburbia….all of it.

The Colorado continues to give. And give. And give.

Road Trip to SoCal: Santa Margarita River

Thursday, May 6th, 2010

It’s road trip season! For this four day escapade, I enlisted a research assistant, my momma, to travel with me deep into the heart of California’s water dreams, to the desert at the Southern end of the state. It is there that the vision of taming the vast desert, of creating a lush oasis out of sand and heat, came to pass.

It was pretty striking- the contrast between my last adventure in the upper reaches of Northern California’s emerald green river country, and the tumbleweed strewn desert that our ingenuity/hubris brought water to. Sometimes it baffles the mind how us humans could want so much to do the impossible, to test our wit and skill against the might of nature. An attitude that, while producing impressive monuments to our intelligence and pride, now begins to bear fruit of questionable flavor.

For our route, we chose a loop passing by one of the last free-flowing rivers in Southern California near Fallbrook, through Palm Desert and down the eastern side of the Salton Sea, into the Imperial Valley where my great-grandparents met and married, and finally, to pay our respects to the Colorado River.

This trip will be split into a few different segments over the next few weeks. Enjoy the stories and pictures!

The Santa Margarita River

The Santa Margarita River is one of Southern California’s last free-flowing rivers. Though Southern California isn’t known for its abundance of water, there are a good number of rivers native to the area. The San Diego and Los Angeles Rivers, the Santa Clara (also free-flowing), the Ventura, the Santa Ana, the San Luis Rey, the San Gabriel, the Colorado (which forms the border of California and Arizona), and of course the namesake of this project, the Sweetwater, almost all of which have been put into concrete channels and/or dammed.

On its journey to the ocean, the Santa Margarita flows 27 miles unimpeded, surrounded by lush riparian vegetation, providing a home for animals. Nestled in canyons behind the small avocado-growing town of Fallbrook, the Santa Margarita winds its way through the arid canyons of SoCal from its headwaters 15 miles east of Temecula to its mouth at the Pacific Ocean near Oceanside.

We visited part of the river near to its headwaters. Surrounded by arid, rocky hills checkered with avocado trees, the river meanders through a river gorge lined with white alder and oak woodlands. Its lushness contrasting with the dry hills surrounding it.

My lovely research assistant and I took a hike along the river. From a bank above the river, we spotted five-inch trout treading water, tadpoles hiding in the shallows, a momma duck and her ducklings making their way down small rapids- one of the babies catching a fish and gulping it down along the way. An abundance of life.

We found a trail right down to the river’s edge so that we could sit and listen to the stream’s murmuring. The Santa Margarita has a good feel to it- like you could see a river nymph at any moment dancing on the top of the water with bells on her ankles.

To understand water, rivers, and imagine the waterscape we want to see in California, there is nothing more important than experiencing live, flowing rivers. Dipping your toes in. The pleasure we take from their sight and sound. The abundance of life you can find if you sit still for just a moment and listen.

The Santa Margarita Trail is located off Sandia Road right outside of Fallbrook. Highly recommended for those of you who live in or near San Diego. Check out Friends of the Santa Margarita for more info about the river.

Next week, we shall journey to the strange and haunting lands of the Salton Sea. Join me.

I am ever grateful to my research assistant/momma/friend for her assistance and companionship on this trip! Here comes the chuckwagon!

Journey to the Smith River

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

“The river looked at him with a thousand eyes- green, white, crystal, sky blue…. It seemed to him that whoever understood this river and its secrets, would understand much more, many more, all secrets.”

– from Siddhartha, Hermann Hesse

the primeval river

In the cold and rain, with thousand-year-old redwoods standing watch, the Smith River showed itself to me for a moment.

It was not gentle. Alone with trees as solid as mountains and the presence of  Taoist sages, serpentine liquid running its wild song across the rocks, both forces way larger than me, kindled a primal fear. You know those moments when you see the world in a different way than you ever have? How it can be disorienting. Shake your bones.

Staring at the river for so long, the rocks that line it begin to morph and change. What is this emerald flowing creature? Meandering through the land. Cutting its way through mountains. Sometimes only a trickle. Sometimes a roar.

How does it find its way together? From a raindrop on top of a mountain to a trickle down the side, to a stream, to this hundred-foot-wide river? And how is it that we got so lucky? We could have had turpentine running in streams over the earth. Or liquid nitrogen. Or chocolate milk. (whoops, daydreaming again)

But we have water, our life-giving elixir, coursing in veins across our world. Always changing and always the same.

Jed Smith Redwoods

the journey

Driving from San Francisco up through Petaluma, Ukiah, Willits, Eureka, and Crescent City to the bed of the Smith River, it was apparent that we were in river country. First the Russian River. From a land of grass hills and oak trees to deep green redwood forests. Then the Eel River criss-crossing back and forth under the 101. Then the Mad River. Then the mighty Klamath. From who’s waters we ate wild Chinook Salmon smoked for five days by Yurok Indians. And finally, the clear and green Smith River.

This is the land where California’s rain falls. The green and wet, sparsely populated North.

tracking the river

I had this notion that I was going to track the Smith River. So that I could understand it better. It turns out rivers can be challenging to track because of where they come from. Lone drops of water finding themselves sinking into the land to meet up with other drops, seeps, trickles, creeks, rivers. Most simply, the headwaters or the source of a river is the place from which water in the river originates- maybe a spring, marshland, or creek. A tributary is a stream or river that flows into the main river.

In the Smith’s case, three decent size rivers, the North, Middle and South Forks of the Smith have their own headwaters and meet up to create the main Smith River. From around the town Gasquet, the Smith River winds its way through redwoods and into wetlands until it makes it to its final destination, the mother of all bodies of water, the Ocean, about five miles South of the Oregon border.

the river’s work

Watching the Smith, you get an idea of how much work a river does. Moving water, nutrients and material from one place to another, providing a myriad of different homes for the plants and animals that live next to and in it- salmon, red alder, steelhead trout, big leaf maple, frogs. They are also a source of food for all us animals and of course, contain the liquid that sustains every form of life we share the planet with. Rivers sculpt and form our landscape.

the last of its kind

The Smith River has the distinction of being the last undammed river system in California. That means that every other major river has dams on it.

Dams hold our water, and save it up for when there is no rain in the summer or in dry years. But I wanted to understand what a river that has no dams on it acts like. Turns out the Smith is a wild creature.

Talking to a ranger who’d lived around the river all of his life, we found out that the Smith’s water level goes up and down dramatically between the summer and winter, and also from day to day. Flooding is a natural part of a river’s cycle, one that humans who like building their houses on floodplains like to control, but a part of the river’s lifecycle that is essential. We saw giant redwoods whose bases had been covered by silt and nutrient rich material from the Smith’s past flooding. Flooding brings nutrients and materials to the thriving eco-systems alongside it.

I was also pleased to hear that the Smith River had an absolutely amazing run of Chinook salmon this year. Coming from the Bay Area, where news of the local salmon runs is increasingly depressing, I was happy to hear it. To get an idea of numbers, the Rowdy Creek Hatchery on the Smith counted a total of 687 Chinook in the last three years. This year, in one year, the hatchery counted 2,775 Chinook just in Rowdy Creek! The ranger we spoke with said he was at a fishing hole, during the run, as 20 large Chinook fought their way up the current. He said, at up to 75 pounds, they looked “like little whales cresting.”

In rivers with dams, the chances of a large run being able to happen are a lot less as migrating salmon needs miles of streams and healthy stream beds on the river they were born in, in order to reproduce. In the Central Valley and Sierra Nevadas, only ten percent of suitable spawning habitat remains. (Intro to Water in CA)

Makes you think. Is there a way we can store water and allow the river to do its many jobs at the same time?

our water is a river

Stony Creek

I reminded myself a million times watching the Smith that this river, or rivers like it, are (unless you drink groundwater) what comes out of my tap. So many times when I drink water, I forget that I am in direct connection with a living thing- a river- which changes its mind, has a job, provides homes, and nourishment and beauty for our eyes and ears, and is constantly changing and shaping the way the world looks to us. The Tuolumne, the Colorado, the Russian, the Feather River. No matter where you live, you have a connection with a wild river that has its story to tell.

me and the Smith

I sat by the river most everyday and listened. The Smith had much to tell. Like every river I have sat by, the Smith told me a story of change. Looking at its whirls and eddies and flows I couldn’t not notice that every second was something new, that the only constant in a river, and in the world for that matter, is change.

Before I got to the Smith, I felt like I’d been holding on a bit too tight- to the way I think of myself and the world. I kept having visions of submerging myself in the water, letting the river wash all the extra away.

And so I did. Lowered myself into the startlingly cold Smith and let go. Of all the brown stick debris, wondering leaves, the silt of the city. Bringing me into the main channel of movement, surrender, flow.

Thank you to James for being a sweet traveling companion! (and for the great pictures). Stay tuned as I journey next week to the dry South of California, to the Salton Sea and the great (very thirsty desert) at our southern end.