Susan Imhoff Bird

Howl


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range, sixty miles distant. I had no idea skies could be so huge, that I could live on a mountain, that mountains could rim the edges of my world.

      A few houses lined the road north of us, and to our south lay an expanse of sagebrush and bare dry earth, the only other houses so encased by pines and bends of the road that only a portion of roof top and the occasional glint of metal gutter were visible. Isolated from city life, even country village life, we were twenty minutes—in good weather—from a grocery store, schools, work, any kind of extra-curricular activity. A gas station and café sat at the interstate exit, one mile and two big hills below my house, and early on I learned that a quick bike ride down to buy a candy bar resulted in a twenty-five minute walk and push back home. My friends were ten- and fifteen-minute walks away, and though a few houses perched in between, most of what I walked past was sagebrush, oak, aspen, and wild native grasses. Grasshoppers clacked and flew past, a dragonfly might magically float along beside me for dreamlike moments. The soil was gray and rocky at the edge of the road. We had moved to something called high desert which was arid and parched when it wasn’t arid and covered with snow and ice.

      We owned the sky above us in every direction, the air almost always clear and clean, the blue cloudless. I quickly learned the magic of Utah winters: snowstorms blanketing the land, wind whipping snow drifts to heights above my head, the world nothing but a blizzard of white, and then the clouds pass, breaking apart and away, and the skies turn blue as the sun sparkles and bounces from surface to surface, simultaneously blinding and thrilling the eye.

      Stewardship is a concept espoused by most who work the land, by conservationists, by hikers and rock climbers and explorers, by those who run rivers and guide people on outdoor expeditions for a living. Experiencing changes over time brings home the effect we have on the land, and this effect is magnified in drier, western environments. Cryptobiotic soil illustrates the importance of understanding the landscape. It looks like a dark patch on sandy soil, but is actually alive. Made of lichens, algae, fungi, mosses and cyanobacteria, it not only helps retain moisture, but also stabilizes the dirt and sand, and plays a role in nitrogen fixation. One errant footstep destroys what may take from years to a century to re-form. Step here, don’t step there.

      But we haven’t done as well for our environment. We’ve sliced away at wilderness, and let former ranch and wildlands be sold to developers. The Keep America Beautiful campaign began in 1953, and anti-littering laws exist in all states—in some, for longer than forty years. Yet people continue to litter. Cigarette butts are the most commonly littered item in the world: over 4.5 trillion butts are tossed out car windows, thrown on sidewalks and streets, ground into the soil of hiking trails. Each takes from four to five hundred years to completely break down. We take for granted our hills and canyons, our lakes and streams, and the soil of our farmland. We have been reluctant to respond to the promise of a warmer earth. We roll our eyes at environmentalists. But reality is that we share a single environment with every other being on this planet. Our collective homes form one huge, interconnected home. Risk to one is, essentially, risk to all.

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