Wednesday, August 30, 2017

Reverence: The Monarch Project

Image result for reverence the monarch project


Sometimes it doesn't take much to make me happy, and often it is the seemingly small observances of the natural world which lifts my spirits.

Since our return to Ontario we have noticed more Monarch butterflies than we have seen in years. We've heard a lot about the catastrophic decline in Monarch numbers and the causes are many. Habitat loss in their wintering grounds in Mexico, efforts to eliminate milkweed which is an essential source of sustenance, and urbanization of breeding areas are all factors. Apparently the cooler weather of early summer this year was beneficial. There are also greater efforts as well to protect the forests in Mexico where the Monarchs congregate, along with the encouragement to plant milkweed. All these may all be factors in recovery, although this is just one year.

Image result for monarchs in mexico 2015

There is a film which I would like to see called Reverence: The Monarch Project. It's only 13 minutes long but the trailer is fascinating. Here is the description of the story line:

Reverence: The Monarch Project presents the synergy between art and science. The duet Spazuk-Delhaes collected, in their natural environment, thousands of traces of monarch butterflies on some carbon black to assemble then and create a self-portrait of it majestic lepidopterous. From Mexico to Quebec, the film depicts the journey of these insects who's survival is threatened. Thanks to a meticulous work involving hundreds of volunteers who cut and and assemble pixels to form a unique image. The artistic creation's purpose is to raise awareness about precariousness of the animal and vegetable life.

I like this notion of reverence. When we sense the holy in Creation, when we return to wonder for the the creatures we may have once taken for granted, such as butterflies, we may be motivated to honour and protect. The reverence we experience in places of worship such as churches must be extended to the forests and meadows and waterways.

Have you seen more Monarchs this year? Does the Reverence film intrigue you? Do you experience the holy in the natural world? I think I'll dig out my copy of Barbara Kingsolver's Flight Behavior,  which is also about Monarch butterflies and reverence.

Image result for barbara kingsolver monarch butterfly

Monday, August 28, 2017

Water Week & Living Water

sewage treatment plant with sunrise

Sometimes it's a challenge to figure out the international and national events such as special days and weeks. World Water Day was back in March and World Oceans Day was in June. But this is World Water Week -- are you keeping up here? There is a conference in Stockholm with representatives from 130 countries, so it's a global gathering. They will look at issues of improving water quality and reducing waste.

This morning we cycled along the Belleville waterfront, which is on the Bay of Quinte. The lovely trail goes past the sewage treatment plant which was a bit "whiffy" today. After Ruth turned to go to work I carried on past the water treatment plant. I wonder how many people in the city could identify where each of these essential processing facilities are.

We are blessed with a lengthy trail, but there is not a public swim beach in Belleville, which is a shame. Is it because of concerns over water quality.  I see that some Dalhousie students are lobbying for a swimming access spot on the Halifax waterfront, something which would have been unthinkable a few years ago when sewage poured directly into the harbour.

As we watch Texas turn into a watery nightmare because of Hurricane Harvey we know that there will be issues with water quality for millions of people even though days ago they would have taken this for granted.

Water is a recurring theme in scripture and Jesus is Living Water, because it is the source of life and precious. On a planet of nearly seven billion humans it's important that we make the connection between the spiritual metaphors for water and the practicalities of wise water use for all creatures, great and small.

Strategy 2016 - WWW Theme Sustainable Growth

Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Even the Fish of the Sea are Perishing

Image result for master mariner david blackwood

Fish, fish, and more fish -- or less fish. The discussions about the presence of fish and the absence of fish were constant during our stay in Newfoundland during the month of July. If we had been moving around or only in the province for a week or two we might not have been as aware. A month makes a difference and we were settled for four weeks on Change Islands, a community with a fish plant.

Fish have become scarce in this province which a destination for European fishers of many nationalities before becoming a British colony. Change Islands was a summer fishing destination for Paleo-Esquimault people, then Beothuk Indians long before the Europeans arrived. At one time the population of Change Islands was as many as 1200 year-round residents but has dwindled to 200, in no small part because of the disappearance of fish. 

Image result for newfoundland stamp cod fish

While we there the province acknowledged a dubious anniversary, the 25th since the declaration of a moratorium on fishing cod, once so abundant it was assumed that it was impossible to overfish the stocks. That was catastrophically wrong and so a "two-year" moratorium was imposed which has stretched on for a quarter century. For a week following the actual date CBC Radio in Newfoundland ran a series on what happened then and the gradual recovery of cod stocks. There is pressure to expand the small commercial fishery but scientists insist this would be a disaster. While we were there the recreational fishery allowing individuals to catch up to five fish a day was opened, but there wasn't much out there worth keeping.

Other species have sustained a smaller group of fishers, including crab and shrimp, although shrimp have now been over-fished as well. There were a fair number of lobsters "on the go" as folk there say, but in one of the communities I served as a minister four decades ago there are only three lobster fishermen today compared to the thirty back then. The Change Islands fish plant is empty a good part of the year because there just aren't species to process.

This is an ecological tragedy and a human crisis as well. The Change Islands school is almost without students now, and we chatted with the one student who will enter Grade 12 this Fall. All her courses this year will be online -- except gym! It is possible that within a decade or two the government will decide to end costly services to the aging, shrinking populations of many communities such as Change Islands. Resettlement is a real possibility.

Part of the public conversation while we were there was about a different outlook on fishing that moves from methods which are destructive to sustainable practices. The example of Iceland is cited, a nation which reinvented its failing fishery so that it is now a viable aspect of the economy. Interestingly, I spoke with an Icelander during our vacation there last September. He was proud of the change of direction for the fishery and mentioned Canada as a cautionary tale of how not to steward the resources of the sea.

At the top of this blog is an image by David Blackwood, a Newfoundland artist now living in Port Hope, Ontario. I've used this before in a blog. We had the honour of a meal with David and his wife several years ago and I asked him about the subject. This was his uncle, the Master Mariner of the title for the work. It is a lament though, for a lost way of life, one we can hope will be restored, even if partially. There is a biblical reference from the book of Hosea tucked along the bottom:

Therefore the land mourns,
   and all who live in it languish;
together with the wild animals
   and the birds of the air,
   even the fish of the sea are perishing.

Hosea 4:3
 
In Hosea there is also the promise of restoration. We'll  continue to pray for this in the province we have grown to love through the years.  
 
Image result for cod book
 

Monday, August 14, 2017

Devilishly Hot

Image result for lucifer heat wave

There are a number of Biblical names for the presence of evil in the world. The devil is one, Satan another, Beelzebub, Father of Lies, and Lucifer. Lucifer is the label given to the latest killer heat wave affecting Europe. Temperatures soared about 40C in places, causing distress to millions. Crops have withered, water supplies have been depleted, roads have sagged and train tracks buckled. In the mountains of Slovenia the first ever overnight temperature of 20C was recorded. Earlier this summer hot, dry temperatures turned Portugal into a tinderbox and a number of people were killed by wildfires which swept across highways.

Rain has brought relief to some countries but we can pray that governments do not ignore what is happening, or consider it an aberration. What some are calling "global weirding" has produced both unprecedented droughts and floods in locations across the planet. A wildfire in Greenland and this year's stunning number of icebergs point to climate change at one of the poles.

What scares me if that this isn't Lucifer at work, it is the result of human activity and indifference to a global crisis. We can't claim that "the devil made me do it" either. We must pay attention and develop strategies for change.

Thoughts?