Nahma MI., 2007 from 4x5 transparency
Through the old sawmill town of Nahma Mi., Upper Peninsula timber once flowed like a mighty river into Lake Michigan, then was carried to
Chicago and points beyond. The timber and the business made from it played out a long time ago.
What remains of the prosperous but ultimately unsustainable glory days of Nahma is primarily its iconic sawdust burner. The image above is from inside that burner.
What remains of the prosperous but ultimately unsustainable glory days of Nahma is primarily its iconic sawdust burner. The image above is from inside that burner.
I'd been thinking of resistance, but the word for today is resilience.
One of the first things I fell in love with around the Superior Basin
is how life grows where you wouldn't believe it could, yet there it is.
Pinguisibi River Ontario, 2012 4x5 transparency
I've been capturing this sort of thing for decades but like the Swiss
images, that work's remained largely unseen because it didn't fit into the greater scheme of the portfolio as it came to be.
Cascade River MN., 2012 120mm transparency
Life's pretty damned hard up 'round Superior. Still, in the most unlikely
places under the harshest conditions, life finds a way.
Ontario Canada, 2012 120mm trnasparency
During the cold, dark days especially but also as a general rule, resilience counts
more than resistance. It's what you need to stick around long enough to put
down roots and grow, then thrive.
Presque Isle River MI., 2010 120mm transparency
Seasons change. Sometimes conditions for life aren't optimal and that's just the way it
goes. I thought that after showing you so much wreckage of men's unsustainable hopes and
dreams over the years, I should end this year on a note of natural resilience.
If you feel these times of ours are treacherous and uncertain,
consider that trees can and do grow from rock.
Presque Isle River MI., 2010 120mm transparency
Or look again at that gleaming tuft of grass in the wreckage of the Nahma sawdust burner. From decades of worn out pulp lying fallow for decades more and with a periodic bit of sunshine, it not merely thrives but brings light to the otherwise permanent dark.
Resistance is a word more appropriate to the growing season. That'll be here soon enough.
Resistance is a word more appropriate to the growing season. That'll be here soon enough.
For now, it's enough to be resilient. To hunker down and make plans, so
that when the world turns again as it must, we'll be ready to flourish once again.
Keweenaw County MI, 2012 120mm transparency
In any event, the very best of this brave new year to us all.
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