Thursday, April 21, 2022

Shining Light on the Prairie – The 1st Butterfly of 2022

And of course, it was a Cabbage White. Typically the first to arrive, most often the last to depart.

Hardy buggers. Foreign invaders too, but that was 150 years or so ago and I wonder how long it takes before an invader becomes a resident. I grew up with these. They were never not here.

I wonder too what the little fellow eats. It's been a cold, dreary spring. That's made my treasured Lupine happy, but those're a ways away yet. Only Bluebells and Daffodils are in residence. Not much food there.

The pioneer butterfly this morning was a fleeting glimpse in a warming sun and my having seen it was entirely enough for today.



August, 2018


Wednesday, April 13, 2022

Zion - Ten Years After, Part 3

 

High Desert, Endless War



Time came to leave Zion, Heather and I chose not to go out the same way we came in. There lay the graveyard of Grafton, both literal and figurative.

Been there, done that.



Even if we hadn't, taming the American West is foundational national myth  celebrated in story, song and (especially) movies, even before the culturally formative 'Golden Age of Television' came awash in "adult westerns."

That story is in our bones. By now, it's in everybody's bones.



So on our way out of Zion we chose the back door, traveling up and over the towering canyon all the way to high desert, specifically in search of a far older story than the one peddled so avidly to crowds of tourists below.



No one knows how many people lived in what's now the United States prior to it's appropriation by mostly white people. Seems likely some millions of just plain folk making their way, much as they had for millennia by then.



What's reasonably true is by 1890, the robust and diverse population that had evolved and by & large thrived here for untold thousands of years was cut down to about 250,000 native souls. The official census tells us so.



The causes of this horrific decline were myriad. White folk brought a variety of foreign diseases with them and people not accustomed to living with those died in droves. No vaccines or mask mandates in those days, alas.

Of course, diminishing/diminished resources are commonplace to the story of Western Civilization. We levied what was newly 'ours' with a vengeance and from that the land of the free carved a new cultural empire that supplanted the old.


Mesabi Range, MN

But the concerted, century's long genocide waged by mostly white folk against an entire people they'd later see fit to romanticize as nobly savage, that was Modern Civilization's long game showing its cruel hand.



Thankfully, we didn't completely succeed in cancelling the older culture.



That doesn't mean some folk aren't still trying.

Agawa Rock is among my favorites sites on the Superior Basin. When I learned there was rock art @Zion, I put that on the list. Considering it's Zion freakin' National Park, it figured to be easy.



In the end it was, but only because a fellow traveler pointed us the exact way. There's no parking lot to speak of, just a wide spot on the shoulder of the road. The trail's not marked. That and general ignorance is maintained for the site's protection.



Though Zion was to us an utterly alien landscape, as in the Superior wilderness, we were never alone.



A short walk in and we found the greater perspective on human history that we'd sought. A story so enduring that when considering mythic cultural status, it puts both colonialist claptrap and two-gun slingin' cowboys to shame by its continued existence.



Yes, to 21st Century eyes the story carved in stone by our continental predecessors can sometimes be obscure. I mean…



Early American peoples weren't homogenous. They didn't always 'get along.' They were just folk, after all. And despite the perhaps unprecedented natural wealth of their continent, it's then and now a hard land to thrive on.

Sustainable success is a mean taskmaster.

At Zion, I was struck by similarities between these petroglyphs and the pictographs at Agawa. Admittedly, the ungulates are different. Then there's that canoe. Don't see many of those on sand.

Just the same...





  

Reconsidering Zion reminded me yet again of how naturally rich and diverse this great land was/is.

Also that Western Civilization was constructed not of whole cloth but on an accumulation of those cultures that preceded it, and we collectively depend on that perennial nourishment still.



Traditionally, failing cultures tighten their grasp on history's narrative. It's a fool's errand. Story doesn't go anywhere.


Ontonagon County, MI

Except that's why today there's no trail marker to the deeper human history of Zion, from before anyone thought to call it that.

Somehow, an age old narrative predating the most recent by a considerable wide margin manages to offend and/or frighten some people to no end.

Must be powerful stuff, right?



On a national upswing, the populist impulse to cancel history is simple arrogance. Cultural dominance on such a massive scale as ours breeds presumed ownership right in. I'm quite sure if there is a god, it believes in its prerogatives.

Maybe even takes those for granted.



On the nationalist downslide, consider the collective obligation to name that same arrogant impulse for the raw, grasping fear that it plainly is.

An enemy, of anything resembling liberty.


Houghton County, MI


There's only one earthly story and we're all in it together. Then, now, whenever. Ungulates included.

And that transparent fact makes some clowns just want to watch the circus burn.

Not even counting the daily news, having once discovered the truth painted on a ruined sacred stone, I must take it as given.


Houghton County, MI