Resilience in Winter

As I write this, we approach Spring Equinox but you would not know it looking out my window. The four plus feet of snow are slowly melting, pushed by the four plus inches of rain in the last two days. The surface of the snow is littered with nature’s prunings— tree branches, needles, bark, lichen, feathers, cones, and pitch all brought down by the gales last week. Winter definitely wore her white dress this year.

We’re all dreaming of warm spring days with green grass and flowers blooming, as I’m sure the animals are who hunker down under the trees waiting for something edible to appear. We’ve all had a taste of survival this year when our intricate plans get disrupted by nature’s strong hand. It’s good for us to experience discomfort and hunger for a while, to be forced to slow down and yield control while nature has its way. This is how we find resilience within ourselves. We protect our core heat and energy and wait for a better day.

Likewise, we learn to work together to protect our tribe. We share what we have and gather resources to help others. If we work together, we can survive disasters and move on to brighter, easier days. What a wonderful metaphor for humanity’s plight. We have largely created our own problems which nature harshly reveals while offering us redemption if we will just slow down, pay attention, and change our ways. Resilience is not tinsel on the tree, it’s shoveling the snow off your roof so your house doesn’t collapse.

With that in mind, I’m writing to update you all on our nascent non-profit group, the Northern Mendocino Ecosystem Recovery Alliance. We celebrated our first year of existence and here are some of the things we have accomplished and what we are working on as the year turns:

Visit our website at https://www.nm-era.org to learn more and sign up for our newsletter. Contact us through the website if you would like to help by joining one of our committees.

If the storms of this winter have shown us anything, it’s the truth that we are all in this together.

Note: this post also appears in the Spring 2023 edition of Forest & River News by the Trees Foundation. Check out the whole issue here.