Category Archives: Eco-literacy

American Chestnut

The Life, Death and Rebirth of the Perfect Tree

 

Disasters are not always big loud booming events.  Some are silent, protracted affairs that can take generations to manifest.   The story of a disaster is the stuff journalists live off of.  After all, none of us can keep our eyes off a trainwreck, no matter how horrible, and someone is going to tell the story.

Susan Freinkel’s new book from UC Press is more than just good solid journalism.  It’s a story that affects all of us.  The American chestnut , Castanea dentata , was the keystone species of most of Eastern North America up until about a century ago.  This tale of death and rebirth is inspiring.  We’re going to have a public conversation tonight at the the Book Bay at Fort Mason in San Francisco.  I’m looking forward to getting her take on how this story can tell us something here in California about our own Sudden Oak Death (mocking acronymed “SOD”) and that pesky Phtophtera ramorum that is gaining the upper hand in the oak drama.  Stay tuned…. and if you havent yet picked up Susan’s book, grab it.  It’s a fine piece of work.  Trust.

Dharma in the Dirt

Wendy Johnson is so inspiring.  The woman has devoted her life to the garden – and the benefits are enormous.   Working with her was a delight, and if you’ve ever been to the Green Gulch Farm and Zen Center in Marin Co. California, you’ll see what I mean.  It’s AMAZING!  And their food is good, too.  Check this article in the New York Times.  I gave that reporter twenty  minutes of brilliant sound bytes,  so she used the most boring throw-away line ever.  Ah well. http://www.nytimes.com/2008/05/08/garden/08zen.html?_r=1&ref=garden&oref=slogin

If Michael Pollan tells you to bother, you just might as well do it

He’s just so persuasive. It irrates me that I have to agree with almost everything this man says. 

 

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/20/magazine/20wwln-lede-t.html?ex=1209441600&en=4b8f85b0f7e2157a&ei=5070&emc=eta1