Apparently, our well for Aisling is only 60 feet down. Yesterday I was driven out of the garden because it was raining and hailing very hard. Yet I know in two months the temperature will soar to 100 degrees and irrigation will be required, even here. As I learn the art and science of gardening, the issue of water continues to present itself to me. What can I plant that is enjoyable to eat and doesn't require a lot of attention, and water? Just like there are fair weather runners/bikers/hikers; I'm a wet weather gardener. I'd much prefer to have just enough rain each week to keep the plants growing; oh... and maybe just enough natural repellents to keep the slugs and snails and insects away!
I did learn my lesson last year about water and making sure that water penetrates the soil deep enough. I kept having insect problems and I learned from a friend that I was underwatering and in doing so, I was stressing the plants. This was like a beacon to all those insects that like to eat the distressed plants of the world.
However, water is becoming more and more of an issue in the world. National Geographic recently published a new water map entitled World of Rivers. We are land-centric and to see the world in a river-centric perspective is quite dramatic. It is startling to see that the lands of north Africa have almost no rivers. I can't imagine living my whole life and not knowing the flow of a river or the power of a rapid. On the flipside of the map they present water usage in a very impactful way. The bubble diagrams compare how much water it takes to produce some of the things we consume: 1857 gallons for one pound of beef, 1382 gallons for a pound of sausage, 2900 gallons for one pair of denim jeans, 2800 gallons for one cotton bed sheet, 43 gallons for a pound of beans.
Around 20 years ago I made a dramatic shift in my eating habits because of the book Diet for A Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappes. Her work focused around energy and protein- it was shocking to me that it took so much energy to produce beef. I still don't eat very much red meat and this look at the water impact really reminds me that choices we all make impact people more than us.
Which leads me to another book, one that I am reading right now: Values Shift by Brian P. Hall. He mentions two values that were new to me:
- Ecority: the capacity, skills, and personal, organizational, or conceptual influence to enable persons to take authority for the created order of the world and to enhance its beauty and balance through creative technology in ways that have worldwide influence.
- Minessence: The capacity to miniaturize and simplify complex ideas or technological instruments (tools) into concrete and practical objectifications in a way that creatively alters the consciousness of the user.
Water connects us all. Whether through something like the hydrologic cycle or in the energy cycle. Does that mean we shouldn't play on desert golf courses (or golf of any sort), go to water amusement parks, or give roses to our mothers on Mother's Day (the roses probably come from Mexico, Peru, or some other warm climate and the energy use is quite high)? I don't think there are straightforward answers to these types of questions- it is a world of gray. However, as someone who has returned to golfing occasionally after a 30 year hiatus I find myself thinking about the energy use, herbicides/ pesticides, the recreation industry, people who are malnourished and impoverished.
The Jains come to mind. This religion, founded in India, has non-violence as its core tenet. It has been said that the most conservative of Jains will not go out at night because of their concern for inadvertently killing insects. It is for that reason that some of them wear masks around their mouths during the daytime. Is this too extreme? There are those who will say that if we are so concerned about harming someone else that nothing will ever get done... that we will be outpaced by those who have no conscience/ environmental laws/ human rights protections. But maybe it is time for a new age of being overly conservative and concerned about these issues. Maybe it is time for conservatism and progressiveness to join forces so that the water flows clean and the winds freshen. Maybe it is time for those of us who have been blessed with so much to tone it down and consume less. Maybe the Buddha had it right and that it is time to sit down beneath a tree until clarity and sanity return to our minds. Maybe it is time for aggressive inaction.



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