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Extinction Rebellion, what??

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As often happens my day began with a call from Mr X…Scan_20190219

The call continued:  “Dipper i was slowed down getting to work today, a real mix of people were on the bridge, waving banners, talking and singing,…something called Extinction something or other, could you drop all this world saving business and look into it for me, i’m afraid it could affect my interests…”

“Sure thing Mr X”

Mmmm where to start. Feeling bit lazy this morning a little browse on line, E, X…..Exxon….is that who i want?? what’s this?? A story that this oil company knew about climate change, and it was informing their own policies, but were promoting misinformation in relation to it??*….”Exxon’s Ceo was chosen as Trump’s secretary of State???” What’s was his name? Rex Tillerson??….., Rex T, T Rex?? Oh my God he’s a dinosaur, no wonder he worked in fossil fuels!!) ….well I’m beginning to understand we need to work with others, but this policy of giving jobs to those who are directly denying what is needed,* and in this case what sounds like a dinosaur – who let’s face it don’t have a great record of adapting to climate change, is hideously undermining of the direction we need to go. Scan_20190221 (2)Perhaps it should be exoff and divest, not exonn, particularly if it’s true they are going to deliberately misinform  their customers and share holders in relation to the planet’s conditions**…now if a TRex was appointed in a government, can we trust that government??***

….come on focus Dipper, E, X, T……extinction…..what’s this? “Earth’s sixth mass extinction,” this one evidently caused by humans, up to 50 % of all individual animals lost in recent decades, 40 % of global insect species in massive decline….

hold on a minute if the insects go that effects pollination, and all the things that eat and depend on them, and that eat them in turn, like we do….this could mean total collapse of life, not just human life…

Hold on a minute will that effect football??? If we don’t have even have food how we can play and watch football?…this is looking serious…

Come on Dipper back to the case…

EXTINCTION R, E, B….aah here it is Extinction Rebellion…..my god these people are talking about all the above, well may be not the football.

I’d better report to Mr X…..”morning Sir i thought i’d give you a quick report. It seems Extinction Rebellion are a movement of ordinary people who think not enough is being done in the face of all these well researched calamities that threaten All of Our Lives, not just hoped for future generations….

It seems they’ve trained in non violence so they can make peaceful protest to help everyone wake up to the situation so we can begin to solve it together…..”

“Bally hell, Dipper but do they have to block the traffic, can’t they doing something more positive???”

“That’s an interesting question Sir, I’ll get on to them straight away.”

And so i gave them a call, first of all i shared that me and Mr X (actually i’m not convinced about Mr X) but still that I, having read the information feel right behind them, still as gently i could i broached Mr X’s question….

“Thankyou for asking” was the response. I didn’t expect that usually when you ask such a question you get your head bitten off. Anyway the person i was speaking to who i think was called Elly ( i can be a bit forgetful around names) continued…”Many of us do. As best we can we live close to the land, reduce our fossil fuel use, choose carefully what we consume, and our own family do this more than most, but still as you can tell from the scientific information coming in, it just is not enough. We need others to wake up too.”

In summary from what I understood many of the obstacles to lower impact living, and reducing carbon reside in the way things are done and thought of in Parliament, the city, and even rural corridors of power, where despite the overwhelming scientific information of growing cataclysmic climate change and incredible species loss (eg insects and coral), investments, laws, regulations and policies carry on business as usual as if there were not, even subsidising or promoting and legally protecting counter productive policies (eg fracking) and entities and behaving as if we could eat and breathe money, but we cannot. All our children, like most species (at least the general diversity we favour)****, need healthy conditions to live with in, clean air, water, healthy soils..and the condition of all of these appears at tipping point….it seems for all our sake’s we need to put our heads, hearts and bodies together to begin to make the Great Turning (as Joanna Macy calls it) away from an completely unsustainable industrial growth society to one that cherishes and works with and lives within the bounds of glorious planet which is our home…. It seems many of those within Extinction Rebellion are making enormous positive efforts to live well (and i will be glad to feed that back to Mr X), but considering the severity of the situation our government and many power holding others, can gain from attention drawn to the circumstances so that they too can find the courage to more boldly act, for All our Relations, not just short term selfish self interest. All of us must ask the question, and will be asked it by future generations, what did we do to support a healthy Great Turning towards the Earth and away from actions that destroy our the very conditions that support life??

So though my own leaning is to positive creative living – low impact ways need to be pro-actively supported at a government level not blocked (as is so often currently the case), and when not nearly enough attention is being given to the state of our ecology on which we all depend, though direct protest may not be everyone’s cup of tea (“the frontier is long” as Arne Naess said and i mention in an earlier post), it feels fair enough.

I think I’ll let Mr X know i might be a bit later in to work today…

  • https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/exxon-knew-about-climate-change-almost-40-years-ago/ & also see paper by two Harvard researchers — Naomi Oreskes, a professor of the history of science whose work has focused on the energy and tobacco industries, and Geoffrey Supran, a postdoctoral fellow — published their peer-reviewed paper that “found that Exxon’s climate change studies, published from 1977 to 2014, were in line with the scientific thinking of the time. Some 80 percent of the company’s research and internal communications acknowledged that climate change was real and was caused by humans.

    But 80 percent of Exxon’s statements to the broader public, which reached a much larger audience, expressed doubt about climate change.

  • * Tillerson has moved onnow, but for more on Trump and others deliberate strategy of jobs for the unsuitable, listen or read Naomi Klein’s “no is not enough”
  • **deliberately misinforming us about our planet’s condition is not something i warm too, though we may all warm for it.
  • ***incidentally the uk government did something similar a decade or so ago in relation to the ozone hole….though from what i understand ozone has thickened now, at that time it was particularly thin in March/the Springtime over the Uk, to the extent that the army and perhaps all military personnel were given instructions to wear long sleeves (they already wear hats) to reduce the chance of skin cancer. Ordinary citizens were not given this information…I’m glad whoever had this information looked after the army, but how about us, those the army are surely here to defend and protect?? “Well you look after what you value,” as someone said at the time. I was working free lance at an English Nature reserve at the time and wanted to feel a bit more valued by my government (incidentally English Nature, which is the government arm protecting nature, has been cut 50% since the banks were being bailed out) – I cant remember if I pulled my sleeves down…
  • **** there are some species cock roaches, rats, disconnected speculators which will thrive as the conditions for a more diverse life deteriorate, but as is happening thousands that are more sensitive to environmental conditions – like those who are affected locally by London’s air pollution, and thousands through out the world who are impacted by pesticides, and habitat loss, will not.
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Ever felt in pain and a bit overwhelmed by environmental news??

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Scan_20190215 (3)Yeah me too! Though hearing the state of the world or particular things sometimes fires me up to investigate, and into action, people’s response to the current ecological news  isn’t always welcoming (haven’t they heard not to shoot the messenger)…..to avoid pain one time i put my head in the sand like an ostrich but the sun burnt my bottom ( i decided not to show you a selfie of that) …another time I hit my head against a tree (see image above) but I’m not a wood pecker so it really hurt my beak….

One thing I have learned when I am feeling a bit overwhelmed or depressed about things it can be good to share with someone who will just listen, not to try too to make it better for me or fix it, some things aren’t so easily fixed, however being truly just listened to can be very helpful. I feel we all could do with a listening buddy or ally…..being heard can help one feel more spacious about things and potentially bring fresh understanding….and if you don’t have a person who is good at this, you could, as one wise Elder suggested to me, and i personally have found very helpful, share your troubles with a bush or a tree, or a stream. One could also share with an animal companion (pet), even with a loved cuddly toy or imaginary friend…because they often really know how to listen, without interrupting also!!!

One of my unsung heroines (i think I’ll have a section for these) Joanna Macy looked into the root of the word apathy (“yeah whatever” attitude and inaction) and found at root the word had to do with “fear of suffering”….sometimes I and others, perhaps you also, don’t want to look at things?

It might hurt, we might have to make a change, an adjustment that could lessen our comfort, challenge our story of who we are and how have thought we might live…so i think I’ll stay on the sofa*…and sometimes if actively reflecting this can be the best action…(deep reflection before action can lead to wiser action), though if on the sofa i’m just web surfing, I’m beginning to suspect a walk may be better for me…

As Environmental Investigators, sometimes we come across hard news, behavior which are impacting not just hoped for future generations, but directly people and other forms of life which we hold dear. Others may also react strongly to our simply wanting to look into things, not realizing that finding less harmful ways of living and doing things is ultimately in all our interests….

Even as we wake up to our total dependence on and inter-relatedness with wider life, the fantasies of an unlimited industrial growth society have been running for a long time, and even as its unsustainability reveals itself and unravels, it is going to take all of us bringing our heads, hearts, good will, imaginations and deep listening together to further “the Great Turning,” as Joanna Macy calls it towards working with and within the bounds of life, for all our relations…..

Together we can do this, and as Arne Naess, who coined the term “deep ecology” said, “the frontier is long,” indicating that there are many different ways to be proactive for our ecological home. For some direct protest will be the way, for others actions in the form of repairing rather than buying something, or how we travel, or what we write or draw, what we give our time to, and one key I will elaborate on more soon is simply listening….

Scan_20190224Till then here is a link to Joanna Macy sharing a twelfth century Tibetan prophecy about the Warriors of Shambala, introduced by Dr Chris Johnstone, author of a wonderful book with her “Active Hope” which could be a very good gift for any ecologically anxious adult in your life!! Perhaps the Shambala Warriors time has come and they are already among us….

  • *also see https://dexdipper.uk/2019/10/16/inactivists/

The case of when Fishing Hits Bottom

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Yesterday I was in Lyme Bay and it seems like years since I was first invited down there by the “Lobster Mothers for the Environment” (LME for short) and I will share with you what happened then, and the fruits of it, for shockingly what happened there on a local scale is happening right now on a global one….

On that first visit I was met by the local woman’s environmental group whose network was obviously spreading . They claimed to have received a message from the Lobsters asking me to visit them, and who was I to doubt?

Anyway they took me out on a boat and from there I had my first ever sea dive. I’d never realised there was so much beauty down there, around our very own coast!

Cup corals and sea fans, red, blue, green, spotted and striped anemones, arms waving in the gentle currents, sponges and sea slugs, sea shrimps and cuckoo wrasse, in a rainbow of colours, scallops and oysters, shoals of sea horses. Wow, wow, wow! The garden of Eden was still here! A true unadulterated wilderness, and this, is home to the lobsters I’d come to visit.

bubbles

“Bubbles” was my contact, so called because of a certain amount of flatulence. She claimed if she didn’t let it out she’d float off, which I confess with my sensitive beak, even under water, I felt a preferable alternative. Anyway I heard from her that this was where lobster mothers had from time immemorial set up Crustacean crèches, protected by this living garden of coral.

It was the picture of maternal bliss, young lobsters playing pinch-tag merrily, the youngest happily watching as they drifted around in the plankton. Over a cup of bladderwrack tea ( I understood the name later on), I heard the reason that the “LME” was set up and why they had called me down there.

Bubbles spoke of wanton destruction on a scale never heard of before; of huge spiked* iron bars raked across the sea bed, destroying centuries of coral garden and thousands of fragile creatures, and as yet they still did not know why. That’s why they’d called me in to try and discover and so put a stop to this madness, and as she spoke there was a gentle rumbling in the distance. Hundreds of fish suddenly flew by, the sea bed began to vibrate and an eerie sound filled the ear. It was the scraping of metal and coral, the shriek of a thousand slowing moving sea creatures, being crushed and scraped and from the looks o fit we didn’t act fairly soon that was going to include us…

I desperately swam upwards taking the few lobsters I could grab with me but my coat snagged in a rock. I suddenly identified with Bubble’s condition – would my investigation end here? My whole life flashed before me and so did a huge meta girder, with inches to spare, dragging behind it a heavy chained rake which, as it passed, threw up lumps of coral and rock and bodies and shells into a net dragged behind.

All I could do was watch till the clouds of debris settled. Nothing remained of the centuries old garden that had moments before laid in front of me. A few dazed shrimps and crushed young lobsters swam around in circles looking for home.

Gone were the protective coral crevices, gone the anemones, gone the sea slug, gone the scallop, and gone most terribly for the lobsters in my hand, the crustacean crèche, the vital nursery for the survival of lobsters in the future. As far as the eye could see in both directions, a swathe had been cut ten metres wide, and who knew when that iron monster would be back?

I freed my coat and swam to the surface. Leaping into the boat I urged the woman’s group to speed after the only other vessel in sight – a trawler, which I could only assume was attached to the destruction going on below. From a safe distance I could see they had pulled out whole scallops, but were throwing most everything else away. Damaged crabs and corals have no value, but a whole scallop is fit for a consumer’s table….

Eco Fact: The good news: What I had witnessed was a practice known as Scallop dredging and thanks to the Lobster Mothers, and more particularly the Devon Wildlife Trust and other campaigning groups a 60 square kilometre of Lyme Bay was protected…good news for Bubbles, but according to her welsh cousins this same destructive practice of bottom dredging intensified in their area, and though banned at night the iron peril still came due to insufficient monitoring…. In Scotland there are similar tensions, for instance around the Clyde where in 1984 a century-old ban on inshore trawling was lifted at the industry’s demand, bringing the nets right into the shallow water where the young fish grow up. Even some of the scallop dredgers now recognize a ban should be put on dredging too close to the coast, “for it puts too much pressure on the stock.” It seems there is more work to do in relation to this practice, for there are far less destructive ways to harvest scallops…

As consumers if you’d rather your shellfish preserved the seashore and creche’s for other species, be sure to choose hand caught or dived scallops and creel caught langoustine (scampi) not trawled….

An article in a newspaper April 4th 2019 also pointed to the tremendous amount of carbon locked up in the top ten centimetres of sea bed sediment, trawling in the Mediteranean is said in a report to already have reduced this possibility by 52%….”Closing large parts of the sea to trawling could be a crucial climate strategy. (G Monbiot – the natural world can help save us from climate chaos, the Guardian)

Meanwhile Bubbles had received an urgent sonar from around the world…hearing of the success in Lyme Bay she had been contacted by “the Orange Roughy for the Environment” (the ORE) a rare fish growing increasingly rarer, only eaten by affluent people in places like Japan, Korea, the US and Europe, for according to them, what had been happening around british coasts has been happening on a humongous one in the Pacific:

It turns out some folks have thought to industrialise and bigger a similar technique – they deep sea trawl for fish, dragging long chains of heavy metal discs along the bottom to push them u pinto their nets, and at the same time crushing everything in their path…some are so big, that in a single swoop can destroy an area similar to 5000 football pitches!

Now that is some net – I bet even a bad footballer could score in that one…Now these guys are bad fishermen…this unskilful practice has been compared to clear cutting a rain forest to catch a parrot (and before you think about it I’m told parrots are not good eating), and in the process coral beds are destroyed which are literally thousands of years old…Australia and America have woken up to the long term detriment of such a practice and banned it, yet in the meantime other countries such as Canada, Russia and Spain are not only not regulating it, some of them have evidently even been subsidising it, to the tune of millions of dollars….!

Well Hello folks  – is such short term greed really going to pay off??? Not if you destroy the very habitat and stocks of breeding age fish that creates abundance in the first place!

I need to do more research in relation to this to learn the current state of affairs, but in the meantime with thanks to any of you whether fisherman or consumer who takes the larger and longer term picture into account by caring for our environment – that which cares for all of Us,

Dex Dipper, and Bubbles, of the Lobster Mothers for the Environment.

With thanks for initial information from the Devon Wildlife Trust, added to by more recent writing from from Science Direct, “developments in Aquaculture and Fisheries, and https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/feb/10/scallop-wars-on-britains-west-coast and internationally, and in relation to international developments Avaaz.

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Excitement as Jungle Rock released as an e-book

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Excited to share the release of Jungle Rock as an e-book

So many of the themes which Dex explores within it still so relevant today, particularly with Brazil’s new President’s rhetoric implying less protection for the indigenous and greater support for agriculture (the greatest current taker of virgin rain forest land, both in South America and Asia), Japan once again picking up whaling…and Pepe, the penultimate parrot, who Dex is helping back to his homelands, species v sadly recently declared extinct*.

Scan_20180226

You can it find here on Amazon: https://www.amazon.co.uk/Jungle-Rock-starring-Environmental-Investigator-ebook/dp/B07BQKGTD8/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1537370055&sr=8-1&keywords=jungle+rock+jay+thres

Or by typing in:  Jungle Rock and Jay Thres.

There will soon be some softback printed copies available, hopefully via this blog once we’ve sorted out the tech’ side of that.

*(Nb for your interest please note Jungle Rock, written in the early nineties and first published in 2003 brings to the fore Pepe “the penultimate parrot’s/the Spix Macaw’s situation  – there being only one left in the wild, many many years before a film Rio picked up in some way on this same theme.

 

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Just received this musical blog feed from the Ocean.

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Scan_20190122 (10)Song of the Tuna Fish: hope you can pick up the tune, if not ask a Monty Python fan:

Tuna: I’m a tuna fish and I’m ok,

I swim all night and I swim all day,

I swim in shoals, I like to jump

And most of all like fish for lunch!

Middle man: He’s a tuna fish and he’s ok,

He swims all night and he swims all day,

He swims in shoals and here’s the crunch,

He makes lots of money and he’s good for lunch!

Tuna: Great shoals of me, graze oceans free,

We are the Buffalo of the Sea,

Along comes man to take his share,

It’d be ok if his methods were fair.

Middle man: Great shoals of he, graze oceans free,

He thinks he’s the buffalo of the sea!

Well we’ll harvest him, just like them

And then we’ll make a pile of yen.

Tuna: I’m a tuna fish and time to say,

the ways you fish are not ok.

long line and FAD’s to lure us in,

levels of bycatch are a sin.*

The only fair way’s pole and line,

And then we can feed you till the end of time.

Middle man: But that would eat our profits,

we’d have to change our ways,

we’ll leave it to the consumer

after all it’s them that pays.

Tuna: So dear consumer it’s over to you,

Fish in the future or a penny or two.

Just look on the tins for caught Pole and Line,

(Dolphin friendly’s not enough sign**),

We’ll be grateful,

and the blessing you know

is we’ll be there for your children

and they’ll thank you so!

Ecofax: The tuna you choose makes a difference, pole and line is the only way that eliminates massive “bycatch” and also can be kind to local fisherman. “Bycatch” is the term for other fish and animals also caught by a method of fishing. Though campaigning has reduced the number of dolphin caught and killed, methods used, fads (fish attraction devices) purse seine and lethal longlines (multiple hooked lines, some as long as London to Brighton) catch numerous other creatures, including sharks, turtles and sea birds.

**It has been estimated that saving one dolphin, by using fads, costs 16,000 smaller or juvenile tuna, 380 mahimahi, 190 wahoo, 20 sharks and rays, 1200 trigger fish and other small fish, one marlin and “other” animals.

EcoAction: Check the tin – if it doesn’t say pole and line, trust it hasn’t been!

Also check out Greenpeace’s current campaign and support them to turn the tide…it seems they have even influenced Tesco’s!!!

*”Dolphin friendly- what does it mean,” fish 4ever website.

With thanks for the info’ to Jane Turner for her article in ethical consumer magazine.

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