Common Ground

 

We can send robots to Mars. But can we just get along?

 

During many of my interpretive sign projects I have traveled to project sites to research my topics and meet with my clients. Many of these places are located off the beaten path…close to nature reserves, parks and wilderness areas. It’s one of my favorite things about my business…I get to meet new people and visit spectacular places.

Most of my interpretive work focuses on nature itself—plants, animals, habitat, geology, or geography. But, sometimes there is a call to interpret people, too. The people who live closest to the land have a story that’s worth telling.

A watercolor illustration I did for my Hells Canyon Project, a series of nine interpretive panels. I interviewed several local ranching families and learned fascinating things about their lives and traditions that sometimes went back for generations. Some told stories of driving cattle up and down the steep sides of the canyon every year, others about the long months of isolation while herding sheep high in the mountains.

This is a detail watercolor illustration from my Nevada Wildlife Project, a huge series of interpretive signs I did over several years. I researched a bit about the local ranching history of the Mason Valley, a site that is now a Wildlife Management Area. In the mid-1800s pioneer wagons passed through on their way west, and a hearty few stayed in the valley to raise cattle.

 

Many times environmentalists and ranchers or farmers have taken opposition to one another. It often shakes out into the classic American urban/rural divide. Today, with things like wolf recovery/management or gun control/rights making such prominent headlines, it seems the divide may be deepening…just when it looked like we might be making progress toward common ground.*

The fact is, we need each other. In order to make progress on big issues like climate change, sustainability, or biodiversity, we need everyone to be on board. We have much more in common than not…mostly the fact that nobody wants a future devoid of wild nature (or wild-ish, at least).

Call me a dreamer, but we’re all in this together…we should be able to find common ground. Like any interpersonal relationship, it starts with simple mutual respect.

It’s not rocket science.

 

A watercolor illustration I did for my Nevada Wildlife Project showing a few of the many species that inhabit the local grasslands. I used this illustration on a sign located at the Oxbow Nature Center in Reno.

 

What do you think? Leave a comment in the reply box with your thoughts!

 

*What common ground am I talking about?

Check out the Nature Conservancy: http://www.nature.org/ourinitiatives/urgentissues/peopleandconservation/index.htm

Conservation Northwest works with local communities including ranchers, foresters and farmers to advance sustainability and protect wild areas in the northwest: http://www.conservationnw.org/who-we-are/2012-gaining-ground

A group promoting protection of the endangered sage grouse: http://www.sagegrouseinitiative.com/

Okay, that’s only three…there are others. Do you know of any to add to the list?

 

4 thoughts on “Common Ground

  1. Yes, simple mutual respect and good communication skills, taking time to listen and try to understand the fears, the dreams and the visions of our opposing views. A bit of a politically loaded topic right now, I commend your personal strength in challenging it. As always – you work is fabulous.

  2. SO very true…. Amen.

    Can you imagine what concentrated focus and love towards the natural world will do? It behooves us, as you say, to work towards the same goal in this regard. We’re all in this together. 🙂

    Beautiful work, as always — so very fascinating for me to see your work in action.

    • Thank you, Christina! It’s fun to be able to show some of my interpretive work on my blog, along with my more relaxed style as shown in “sketchbook”.

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