Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Canary in the Mine


I think of myself as a rather large canary in the mine.

When I was a kid we would play daily on the Kalamazoo River that flowed near my home. The town was one of those small industrial towns that had quite a few factories and a couple of foundries. Upstream from town was one of the foundries. We would follow the river on long summer days, on the hunt for adventures, critters to discover, animal prints in the mud to follow, frogs and crayfish to catch -- kids on the river kind of lazy days. There was one spot on the river just outside of town that we'd stop at that caught our attention; a place where warm water trickled down a hillside from the rear of the foundry property.

I'm sure few people saw this riverside part of the countryside except for maybe the occasional hunter or fisherman, but being kids walking and exploring the area, we stayed. We explored. We played. The water was warm and inviting --  fun and intriguing because if we waded in past the bright orange-colored shore and into the collecting pond of warm water to the side, we would sink down past our knees into the sand below. We called it quicksand and would spend hours splashing in the strange water pretending we were in a Tarzan movie rescuing one another from quicksand.

Years later I learned this site had been cordoned off by the EPA in the late 90's as a toxic wasteland. The earth of the property is contaminated with a long list of long ago buried carcinogenic chemicals that over the years seeped down into the ground and drained into the river. The EPA document shows this spot on the map as the same pool of orange, warm quicksand water we played in years ago.

The waters were poisoned, along with the earth, and my young body. Back in the early 60's there wasn't much thought given to the dumping of toxic waste beyond putting it into barrels and burying it. Today, the foundry sits empty, the land declared "brown land" - land that must sit idle because it can't be sold, built upon, or used. The land, the water, animals, plants, and myself have all been the recipients of the consequences of dumping toxic chemicals into the midwest countryside - unfortunately, nothing unusual in small towns across the land.

My body reflects the earth's. The same tracks cross us both. As a resident of the Great Lakes region one of my responsibilities is to be a guardian of the fresh water - your grandchild's drink.

This is the only water we get. What we see is all we get. There is NO new water. It's the same finite amount of water that's been recycling on our planet for thousands of millennia. The same water the dinosaurs drank millions of years ago ago was pissed out onto the ground, evaporated, and eventually fell as rain re-entering the earth's water cycle. This process has been going on for eons without problems until our modern industrial age.

What can we do?

We can start by appreciating the fact that over 1 BILLION people TODAY do not have clean drinking water. If we appreciate this limited resource we won't squander it. We'll protect it because there's a high probability that the 1 billion without clean water today will grow to become more tomorrow.

We are the lucky ones. We are the privileged ones with clean, treated water. We share in collective responsibility to our children, to our children's children, and to the children across the world, many of whom will walk many miles with buckets and jugs to a dirty watering hole in order to carry some precious, suspicious, brown fluid home for their family, grateful for the only water they have - the only water we all have.


5 comments:

Sandi said...

Growing up, I was a canary, too, but that sure knowledge just makes me sad and tired. By and large, our species is still so very immature. Like toddlers, we have spent lifetimes of grab, grab, grab. But some of you know better. Some of you want to give back, to protect, to enlighten. I live in the Mississippi river valley. Since being introduced to the water walkers, I will never look at this river in quite the same way again.

Linda Diane Feldt said...

Well, it is good to begin to have some answers to the question "why me?"
I remember going for walks in 1972 a the Gelman property. There was the pond of weirdly colored water, I was freaked out by it and it was just there, anyone could walk up to it. But we knew something was wrong, just didn't know how seriously.

I'm doing a training on Saturday for assessing the health of natural areas near the Huron. It feels like a very good thing to volunteer for.Take care.

el poquito said...

" Some of you want to give back, to protect, to enlighten. I live in the Mississippi river valley. Since being introduced to the water walkers, I will never look at this river in quite the same way again." - Sandi

Dear Mississippi River Valley Woman,
I think you could probably change all those "you's" to "I" as in" I want to give back, protect and enlighten" - especially in light of "I will never look at this river the same" Sounds like you've been touched by an ordinary (yet not at all) group of tuff women with strong heart and will, kinda like that face you see in the mirror.

hey LD! Good to 'see' ya. Why me? I gave up on that question long ago after realizing the real question was: "why not me?", but yeah, the foundry water probably didn't do a lot for my baby DNA.

But as I said: "My body reflects the earth's; the same tracks cross both."

Same thing for all of us on this little blue marble.

If you need a 'public health' and health of nat'l areas story for Saturday you're welcome to use mine, but also talk with 'em about the common farm and yard herbicide (scourge upon the planet) 2,4-D more commonly known as Round-Up and the NHL connection ('tis the season). It could have as easily been the corn fields I used to play in that hit my DNA. Sadly, that stuff's pouring into the Huron & Mississippi and every other body of water connected to the world's farmlands and green weed-free lawns. That would be everywhere. Oh, and NHL is fast on the rise. Hmmmmmm....

The Leaving Years said...

Remarkable and terrifying. Dave is working on a superefund case right now. These cases are slow and often getting the land owner to clean up is a tough proposition. I recycle water. Any drinking cup with water is collected and goes to the garden. Thanks for sharing, caring.

el poquito said...

You're a Pennsylvania Water Protector - raising awareness. I bet there's folks in California who don't come near your awareness.

re: Dave and superfund case. Oy. Yeah, damn complicated and timely. This spot I wrote about became an EPA Superfund site. Ironically, the spot I live on now has an underground toxic plume from an industry uphill just out of town that's been under contention since the 80's. Only now is there talk of serious clean-up and the possibility of being declared a superfund case. A strange recurring thread of my life span... and I'm sure many others who just don't happen to know. It's the story of Middle America and its factories.

The toxic holding pond was one of my "possible theories" that you run when first diagnosed with cancer. But who knows, right? Then I found the EPA document just in a google search. The clincher was the night I sat down next to a guy at U of M Cancer Center's Lymphoma Support Group. When we exchanged names we realized we were both from our old childhood neighborhood --- and yes, he swam in the same water and today has the same exact kind of immune system cancer. I know it's just anecdotal evidence, but it answered something for me not a lot of folks get an answer to: "What caused this cancer in me?"

Becoming the question: "How do I live WITH it - and how do I use it?" I talk - hopefully getting others to think a bit.

thanks for reading, responding and caring, Kathryn.
xo >>>>