America’s Mountain

In the mountaineering parlance of the Western United States, a “fourteener” is a mountain peak with an elevation of at least 14,000 ft. The 96 fourteeners in the United States are all west of the Mississippi River and  Colorado has the most (53) of any single state. Last week, Tony and I—on a two-month hang-out with our grandson in Denver, …

United in Song

These have been tough weeks, bracketed by searing heat (certainly here in Southern Oregon) and scathing Supreme Court decisions. It’s hard not to feel overwhelmed, even though there are so many untold stories — stories mainstream media find unprofitable — that provide occasions for hope. (I cherish the newsletter from Jessica Craven that lists and reminds us of these small …

Montana’s Landmark Youth Climate Trial

We stand at the forefront of a consequential lawsuit, driven not only by a commitment to the environment but also by a love for the people and places that make Montana home. We are plaintiffs in Held vs Montana, the first ever constitutional climate case to go to trial. – Georgianna Fischer and Claire Viases, Environmental Health News, June 16, 2023 A …

America the Beautiful: A Poem Sampler

Last week, I did a deep dive into poems that spoke to my complicated feelings about the state of our democracy. I came up with these eight and figured I’d share them. This small collection begins with Carl Sandburg’s 1970 poem, “The Long Shadow of Lincoln: A Litany,” which builds off of President Lincoln’s message to Congress in 1862 to …

Farm to School: Cultivating Healthy Kids and Communities

Twenty-one years ago, the year after I started my nonprofit What Kids Can Do, I wrote a story for the W.K. Kellogg Foundation about the Boston Food Project, whose mission was to bring together a thoughtful and productive community of diverse youth and adults to build a sustainable food system. Since 1991, the Food Project has employed more than a 100 …

Firmageddon in the Ashland Watershed

Here in Southern Oregon, building fire resiliency for the summer ahead begins the winter before. Wildfire worry, however, runs year round. However hot the fires are burning, the statistics are chilling. In the last 20 years, on average, the number of square miles burned annually across Oregon, California, and Washington has increased sixfold compared with the average between 1950 and …

On the Slaughter of Our Children

I know that what follows isn’t a “proper” blog post, but I offer it with a sense of urgency. Below you’ll find an “open letter” from New York Times opinion writer Margaret Renkl to Tennessee Governor Lee after the slaughter at the Covenant School, along with her column yesterday about young Tennesseeans marching for their lives as Tennesseean legislators prepare …