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Climate Change

Every chance I get I head out to check out the spring ephemerals as they will be gone soon. Some are already setting seed. What I see is how much the area has changed due to climate change.

Confederate Violets
Flash floods flooded the upper Meramec River spreading deep sand over much of the floodplain. I was glad to see these lovely Confederate Violets, a color variation of Common Blue Violets, still grew and bloomed in the area. The flooding washed out wide swaths of river bank washing out many big trees. These trees didn’t just fall over into the river, they left, carried off by the flood.

Skepticism

Some of the people I talk to think climate change is not happening. They have various reasons for believing this.

One didn’t realize this referred to global temperatures rising, not just around here. Others use the excuse climate has always changed from time to time not understanding the rate at which it is changing. Of course, there are those who think people are only along for the ride, not the driver of these changes.

What I Have Seen

For me, everything began changing in 2012 with the extreme drought. Now, I had seen summer droughts before and everything got back to normal in the fall. Not after this one.

May had been the month of high water here for years. Now floods come any month of the year.

Big rains came to cause the high water. They were gradual. Now the rains drop in a short time and cause flash flooding that is washing out the creek banks.

As a Gardener

May has been the time to plant okra, summer squash, tomatoes, peppers for years. Some years warmed up faster, some slower, but the month held. No more.

Now I often have to wait until June to plant okra and summer squash. Planting winter squash that late can mean I don’t get a crop at all.

Adapting

I am trying to adapt to these changes. It’s hard. Planting times can move. Crops can change.

Fixing the creek is another story. The creek divides our pastures, two on the west side and two on the east. We had a bridge.

One flash flood destroyed the bridge that had withstood high water for thirty years. The succession of floods has created drop offs into the creek bed making it impossible to get equipment across the creek. Two hay fields are now inaccessible.

So, you skeptics say, that’s just a minor thing, a simple normal change. I say, yes, if it was only here, maybe it’s a normal change. But melting glaciers, intense heat domes, extreme weather globally, say otherwise.

More important: Changing my lifestyle to accommodate the changes won’t matter, if I am wrong about climate change. Can you and the Earth afford to ignore it, if you are wrong?

By Karen GoatKeeper

Karen GoatKeeper loves to write. Her books include picture books, novels and nonfiction for science activity books and nature books. A recent inclusion are science teaching units.
The coming year has goals for two new novels, a picture book and some books of personal essays. This is ambitious and ignores time constraints.
She lives in the Missouri Ozarks with her small herd of Nubian dairy goats. The Ozarks provides the inspiration and setting for most of her books.

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