Day 198 1/9/14: Lions: A Digression

UnknownAbove my desk hangs a picture from the front page of the Los Angeles Times featuring a male mountain lion standing on a dusty ridge while behind him the lights of Hollywood spread out in an undulating grid of white and gold. The combination of the seemingly infinite cityscape and this single rugged, wild creature is powerful and sad. The lion is traversing a rapidly disappearing edge of land separating city and nature. As new human settlements zigzag up the sides of the dry hills, more animals are pushed out.

I started the day reading a story about how three cubs born recently in the Santa Monica mountains were inbred, a bad sign for this tiny vulnerable population of wild cats with whom, as the signs in Griffith Park and Hollywood Reservoir remind me, I share the semi-wilds of Los Angeles. Sadly, the marginalized lions of West Africa face the same problem of vanishing territory and inbreeding.

Since the 1990s when the Getty Center was built, wildlife advocates have called for a corridor to be built to help the big cats and other animals displaced by this art complex with its trams, parking garages, gardens and imported marble, make their way across the 405 freeway. Last year, an adult male lion “searching for a home” successfully navigated eight lanes of traffic only to be killed when he couldn’t leap over a retaining wall topped with chain link fencing.

In my neighborhood, I see songbirds nesting in the hollow insides of street signs. I marvel at their resilience. It’s a wonder! I think, how lucky I am to witness such a charming phenomenon. But then I realize that beyond the street sign nests’ poetic value or scientifically miraculous coolness, it’s a symptom of displacement, a forced adaptation to an urban (human) world.

On Facebook, I sign anti-hunting petitions and share infuriating pictures of men (horrible) women (even worse, somehow) beaming and proud or solemn and tough, as they crouch in the snow over dead wolves or embrace enormous freshly-killed lions. If not for the prominently displayed hunting rifles, the lions might be asleep–majestic storybook kings with great, silent paws, their eyes slits of kindness.

A few clicks of the mouse later I find other pictures. At a controversial zoo in South America, tourists smile into the camera as they nuzzle living lions and tigers who appear drowsy, or completely passed out. Zookeepers offer the dubious claim that these big cats are not drugged, but so well-fed, so expertly raised by trainers, who socialize them with dogs, that their natural “wild” instincts are subdued enough to allow for picture taking and cuddling.

I met a mountain lion and her cub in Idaho in 1991. I don’t remember why I traveled to Sun Valley with my boyfriend Michael,  but at the time, we were very much interested in mountain lion conservation. We held a music benefit in L.A. to raise money and awareness. Maybe our trip was related somehow to that project.

The mountain lion I met that sunny winter day was not wild, not like the animals I’ve heard about who have stalked mountain bikers in California, or dragged deer up into the wintry treetops in New Hampshire. This puma had been used in commercials, (she might have been in one of the old Lincoln-Mercury ad campaigns), although she radiated such untouchable self-possession that I could only imagine that even the most chaotic television studio was simply a landscape she had passed through on her purposeful march back toward the wilderness that had given birth to her. The lion’s handler was an older man who seemed to take good care of her. Let’s call him Charlie.  Charlie walked the lion on long lead attached to a very heavy collar, although she seemed not to follow, but rather advance. The beautiful cat, whose name I’ve long forgotten, had an adorable cub who played in the snow nearby. We posed for a group Polaroid, Michael holding the delightful youngster who emitted sweet, odd birdlike sounds and baby growls. Charlie told me I could pet her. I lowered a hand, stiff and tentative onto her back.  Her fur felt thick and coarse, but the sensation I remember most is an energy that seemed to originate in her ribs or belly, both vibration and feeling, electric and terrifying. As she watched her baby leap and tumble in the snow, the lion mother made low, guttural sounds.

“You can pose with her by yourself,” Charlie said, once when we’d taken the group shot. Noticing my frozen smile, he added “She’s just is a little distracted right now cause her cub is here, but she’s okay.”

“I’m fine,” I said. In that moment, I understood my human place, strange lost creature that I was, standing there on the freezing edge between wildness and the world.

Day 191 1/2/14: A Medley of Sea Stories

Here’s a hodgepodge of the odd, sad and inspiring:

19 arrested (including a12-year-old girl) protesting Seaworld float in Rosebowl Parade.

Terrified swimmer chased by fake fin!

Shark Terror Down Under Leads to Indiscriminate Slaughter.

Over 300 Sharks Now on Twitter!Marine Life Image Gallery

Day 176 12/18/13: A Hodgepodge of Cool Shark Stories

(Very Cool) Read this to learn how prehistoric sharks escaped extinction.

I love these guys! Australian Activists Fight the Shark Cull.

Wanna sign a petition banning the import of shark fins to Canada? OF COURSE you do!

A touching story of maternal instinct: Lemon Shark Moms in the Nursery! 9

Day 175 12/17/13: The Truth About Eating Fish

Jonathan Safran Foer’s “Eating Animals” is one of the most compelling, accessible books on factory farming, industrial fishing, “humane” farming and the psychology of eating animals. Foer’s description of “bycatch” belongs in the “great list” hall of fame along with the opening chapter of “The Things They Carried,” and the poetic catalogues of Walt Whitman:

Shrimp by-catch (Location: East Coast of Florida)

Shrimp by-catch (Location: East Coast of Florida) (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

“Perhaps the quintessential example of bullshit, bycatch refers to sea creatures caught by accident—-except not really “by accident,” since bycatch has been consciously built into contemporary fishing methods. Modern fishing tends to involve much technology and few fishers. This combination leads to massive catches with massive amounts of bycatch.

Take shrimp, for example. The average shrimp trawling operation throws 80 to 90 percent of the sea animals it captures overboard, dead or dying, as bycatch. (Endangered species amount to much of this bycatch.) We tend not to think about this because we tend not to know about it.

What if there were labeling on our food letting us know how many animals were killed to bring our desired animal to our plate?

So, with trawled shrimp from Indonesia, for example, the label might read: 26 POUNDS OF OTHER SEA ANIMALS WERE KILLED AND TOSSED BACK IN THE OCEAN FOR EVERY 1 POUND OF THIS SHRIMP.

Or take tuna. Among the other 145 species regularly killed—gratuitously—while killing tuna are: manta ray, devil ray, spotted skate, bignose shark, copper shark, Galapagos shark, sandbar shark, night shark, sand tiger shark, great white shark, hammerhead shark, spurdog fish, Cuban dogfish, bigeye thresher, mako, blue shark, wahoo, sailfish, bonito, king mackerel, Spanish mackerel, longbill spearfish, white marlin, swordfish, lancet fish, grey triggerfish, needlefish, pomfret, blue runner, black ruff, dolphin fish, bigeye cigarfish, porcupine fish, rainbow runner, anchovy, grouper, flying fish, cod, common sea horse, Bermuda chub, opah, escolar, leerfish, tripletail, goosefish, monkfish, sunfish, Murray eel, pilotfish, black gemfish, stone bass, bluefish, cassava fish, red drum, greater amberjack, yellowtail, common sea bream, barracuda, puffer fish, loggerhead turtle, leatherback turtle, hawksbill turtle, Kemp’s ridley turtle, Atlantic yellow-nosed albatross, Audoin’s gull, balearic shearwater, black-browed albatross, great black-backed gull, great shearwater, great-winged petrel, grey petrel, herring gull, laughing gull, northern royal albatross, shy albatross, sooty shearwater, southern fulmar, Yelkouan shearwater, yellow-legged gull, minke whale, sei whale, fin whale, common dolphin, northern right whale, pilot whale, humpback whale, beaked whale, killer whale, harbor porpoise, sperm whale, stripe dolphin, Atlantic spotted dolphin, spinner dolphin, bottlenose dolphin, and goose-beaked whale.

Imagine being served a plate of sushi.

But this plate also holds all of the animals that were killed for your serving of sushi. The plate might have to be five feet across.

Day 167 12/9/13: REO Speedwagon: A Call to Action

It’s been a very long time since I wrote the words REO Speedwagon. In fact, while I admit to a brief but intense love affair with journey circa 1981, I never cottoned to REO. But at age 46, I have written my first URGENT missive to the band and I hope you will do the same. Please sign this petition asking REO Speedwagon to cancel plans to play at SeaWorld. Joan Jett, Willie Nelson and others have already asked the dreaded “park” to stop using their music during lame shows like Shamu Rocks. Let’s keep the tide of protest going.

Speaking of protest, great whites in Australia could use your help too. Shark attacks are a tragedy, but shark hunts or “culls” are no way to solve the problem of shark-human encounters. The “offending” shark(s) has probably long split the scene and sending fishermen out on a mission to find and kill endangered white sharks in retaliation for attacks on humans, will only compound the tragedy. Thanks!

The Essential REO Speedwagon

The Essential REO Speedwagon (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

Day 161 12/3/13: A Small, Good Thing (for the Oceans)

I admit, I stole the title of this post from a Raymond Carver story, but it is a small, but good thing to sign this petition.

We must change the way we’re trawling, long-lining, overfishing and otherwise indiscriminately pillaging the oceans before it’s too late. In other words, Really. Soon.

Please take a small step by signing this petition against industrialized fishing.

The sharks & other finned, gilled, tentacled, shelled, gelatinous and microscopic creatures of the deep send their deepest thanks.

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Day 157 11/29/13: Sea Shepherd’s Shark-Saving New Film

Sea Shepherd Conservation Society

Sea Shepherd Conservation Society (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

It’s true. Sharks could be extinct in 30 years.

Some populations may disappear within a decade.

For the last three years, Sea Shepherd has been working on a documentary in collaboration with the union of environmental lawyers in Latin America to help educate the environmental legal community. This film is the first of its kind designed to educate and inspire environmental prosecutors.We need to not only to create tougher shark finning laws, but to make sure that they’re enforced. We need to keep marine sanctuaries safe from illegal finning and get tougher convictions for ocean-related crimes.

This is is such a good cause, and you can be a part of it for as little as $1.00!

Day 148: 11/20/13: Getting Active for Sharks

I posted this video (I know it’s awful to watch), because it’s necessary sometimes to look at images of atrocity so we don’t forget what’s happening and we don’t stop fighting to end injustice. Beyond the brutality and waste of shark finning for flavorless soup, it is a myth that sharks (or perhaps any fish in this post-Fukishima world) are a health food. Sharks, in particular, are riddled with toxins from mercury to anti-depressants. 

This story talks about three recent deaths in Madagascar from shark meat consumption.

But let us not despair, shark friends! The sharks need us. Badly.

We all have talents, connections, abilities and creativity we can use to help out.

Organize a benefit. Teach a class. Have a letter-writing party. Put on an art show. Host a shark charity yard sale.

As a start, please click here to sign a petition banning the sale of shark fins & shark products.

Click here for some creative ways to help!

Day 123 10/26/13: Shark on a Bus & Other Stories of Creative Conservation

images-5This eccentric Australian diver/environmentalist travels the countryside in a bus filled with marine artifacts including a 5 meter white shark to educate the public about “killer” sharks. Admission fees collected for his “mobile museum” are donated to ocean pollution campaigns.

And on the subject of unusual forms of advocacy, check out this interview with Debbie Salamone of Shark Attack Survivors for Shark Conservation….I also just discovered Operation Blue Pride, a group injured war veterans that have come together to dive with sharks and promote awareness about ocean conservation.

Day 108 10/18/13: On Animals, People & Impermanence

“The physical world is spiritual,” said British philosopher Alan Watts, “because it is impermanent.”

The Buddhists remind us that without some form spiritual discipline or community to remind us of the fleeting nature of all things, we suffer a lot.

As Van Morrison once sang: “How can we not be attached? After all, we’re only human.”

But I propose that there is another task we have in this mortal realm that is even more difficult than accepting change: Human beings are meant to love each other. While it’s fairly easy to find individuals for whom we feel affection, loyalty, and affinity,  what of humanity itself?

Every day in my mailbox, on Facebook, in my e-mail box, in my news feed, in documentary films, and on the streets, I see the horrible things human beings do not only to each other, but to animals. A leopard is caged and set on fire in India, a boy kicks a cat to death for fun, ducks are force-fed to the point of liver explosion, foxes caught in snares chew off their own feet, hotels carve up endangered sharks at banquets, horses and donkeys are starved and whipped even as the packed carts they pull have tipped over, whales suffocate on plastic, orangutans on palm oil plantations burn to death when their habitats are lit on fire or sold to cretins who drug them and train them to perform in X-rated entertainment shows. Farmers rip calves away from their distressed mother cows and chain them in crates. All of this for what? Creamier sandwich spreads? The joy of ice cream?  To satisfy our frustration,  boredom,  our love of glamor, our constant, driving emptiness?

Here is another philosophical challenge: How are people whose hearts aren’t made of marble supposed to witness these things on a daily basis and not believe that people are fundamentally awful?

To put it another way, how did Anne Frank do it?

When people die, when friendships end, I am devastated. Yet although I mourn these individual losses, I wonder how much I will, when it’s time for me to die, miss “the world.” This maybe is akin to the old joke, “I love people! It’s humanity I can’t stand.”

The impermanence of life is a blessing as well as a burden. Suffering, both human and animal, is ultimately temporary. But why does it feel so endless? If I didn’t believe that animal souls go on to another, better world I don’t know how I would deal with the myriad cruelties we as a species inflict on other creatures both actively and passively. This is not a fairy tale I tell myself in order not to go insane, but a deeply held belief. The more I look at animals, the more I see how evolved they are in ways we rarely acknowledge, I understand how deserving and ready they are to go on to a higher plane when their long, painful work here–with us–is finally done.