Thursday, December 20, 2007

The following two video posts (10 min's each) pose two views on global warming. Attacking Gore and his charts, the second video (Global Warming Hoax) pokes holes in the belief that we have entered a time of climate crisis. Some of their arguments are convincing, and I'm certain there are many missing links coming from the mouths of the climate doomsayers.

And yet.

It's puzzling. Many who say we are not in a time of climate concern enter the argument from a standpoint of right versus wrong or us versus them. It smacks of standard bred politics where there is no middle ground or open discussion. One digs his heals in the ground facing one way, another stands opposed. Together, they tug o' war.

I appreciate the first video (The Most Terrifying...). It is a good argument to act and make change no matter what your view.

Crisis or not, making changes in how we live and interact with our world makes sense. We are called, each of us, to be responsible with what we have been given. Should we wait until the final jury is in? Or, why not act as if there is a climate crisis even if there is no climate crisis? Reducing waste, cleaning up our air, living with less that others might have just a little, slowing down our lives, living more simply, and ... and ... and ...

Someone once said to me that the world will be destroyed by God because of sin. Therefore, let's cast off our responsibility in the present, shall we? Even if Tim LaHaye is your theology, we are still not removed in the present from caring for what is God's. I've been given a body. If I believe I'm on that heavenly road and will receive a new body when I arrive, it doesn't mean I am allowed the freedom to eat to my heart's content and abuse my body in the present.

Planetary diabetes, here we come.

Maybe.

Most Terrifying Video You'll Ever See

Global Warming Hoax

Wednesday, December 19, 2007


Wednesday, December 12, 2007

lone tree hill, west face
lone tree hill, near peak

lone tree hill, peak




Tuesday, December 11, 2007

Friday, December 07, 2007

run off, china beach

Thursday, December 06, 2007

Wednesday, December 05, 2007




ice and snow

Tuesday, December 04, 2007



grey day


setting sun from dallas road, downtown victoria

Thursday, November 29, 2007

mussel shell and rain, china beach

Wednesday, November 28, 2007


"Let me think here for a minute... hmmm... Should I use the cup holder in my car and then toss my trash into an appropriate container? What are my other options? Think, think, think. I know, I'll open my door and place it on the street. Paper is biodegradable. This rainy season will surely return it to earth. Dust to dust and all that. As for that long-lasting plastic top, it's the same color as natural earth. The wind will blow it into a special spot no one will ever notice."

Thursday, November 22, 2007


Wednesday, November 21, 2007

b & w morning sun

Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Sunday, November 18, 2007


Friday, November 16, 2007


Thursday, November 15, 2007

east sooke park

Wednesday, November 14, 2007

reflection - alders, firs and grass

Tuesday, November 13, 2007

alder reflection, leaves on surface

rain catching light

Friday, November 09, 2007

tall ship reflection

bridge reflection at McKenzie Bite

descending storm

Wednesday, November 07, 2007


Friday, November 02, 2007


Thursday, November 01, 2007

Albert Head Lagoon

Wednesday, October 31, 2007

one more for the reflection category

My mind is held this time of year. Yet, it's not the amazing Fall colours painting the landscape or the clouded mountains across the Straight, it's also the subtle dances and images on hidden waters.

There are countless shots of beauty. Yet, if you look a little more closely you'll see beauty's reflection on water in the shaded areas of dense forest. Depending on the sun's height, these reflections may appear to lay across the water or they may go straight into the water. Small pools in streams are choice because you can walk around them and find that just-right angle that will display these hidden-gem images.

I am drawn to the unknown and changing quality to them. A tiny ripple from a breeze will cast a different view, and they alter as quickly as the slightest unseen movement of the sun. A picture of them will rarely turn out as intended.

They remind me to tune into God and his movement and action in the - often - subtle and small, similary hidden spaces of life. The excitement on my child's face as he helps carve a pumpkin, his anticipation of a granola bar, the warmth of a fire, a clean pair of pants. All the things I take for granted or overlook in my search of bigger plans and better things.

Tuesday, October 30, 2007

Wednesday, October 24, 2007


This shot was taken at Esquimalt Lagoon.

I love the flattened appearance of the dead tree mixed against the coloured scrub brush.

Tuesday, October 23, 2007

reflection - maple and licorice ferns

Friday, October 19, 2007

autumn stream




What is the What

I picked up a copy of the book What is the What at Costco, that bastion of local wares and goods.

Written by Dave Eggers, it retells the story of one young boy who made the great march in the Sudan. Thousands upon thousands were orphaned as the government attacked many villages, killing family members. The boys were often in fields, herding, and were able to escape into the jungles hiking, sometimes for years, to Ethiopia or Kenya. So, this book retells the story of one boy and his long hike. It's very informative regarding the social injustice of this 2nd Sudanese Civil War. Moreso, it's deeply personal. It also provides a window into this guy's experience coming to America. (Around 4000 Lost Boys came to the U.S. and were given relief, but the "relief" was short-lived and resulted in significant social difficulties for them.)

Wow, that all sounds pretty depressing, yet it is really a triumph of a read.

more autumn

Thursday, October 18, 2007

reflection

Wednesday, October 17, 2007


reflection of maple and autumn forest

Tuesday, October 16, 2007


This was taken at Gowland Tod park. GT is a large space with many trailheads. This section is on Wallace Rd, near Butchart Gardens. As you begin down the path, you will follow a stream. Within 5 or 10 minutes, there is a large tree that crosses the stream. Crossing it and carefully, you will find a trail that follows the stream on the other side. Beautifully hidden and unkown.

and here is today's word, boys and girls

Ah, I have been out of touch with this blog, my cyberspace coffeehouse. I'm not sure who all reads this thing, looks at the pics, etc. Life has been busy, lately, and this became low on the priority scale. However, I do have some pics from this wonderful time of year that I will begin posting.

And, as I have time, I will post a few thoughts regarding a Christian response to earth-stewardship. I've been slowly working on what I intend to be a book about this topic. Some of the posts in the past have connection to that project. Here and there, I'll drop a few new lines.

Thursday, September 20, 2007

Fighting the Bear

Between work, family and a never ending home project, last week was full. Yet, I still engaged something close to my heart. Bear Mountain owns a huge expanse of land in Langford. Virtually all of the land up thar yonder hill is filled with all things new and luxurious to the expense of flora and fauna. I had to see first hand and did some exploring a while back. Some of the pics in previous entries give an exceedingly small glimpse of land takeover at its finest. I was lucky, I guess. I heard that the security routinely patrols, on the make for folks like me. Had they seen me, I'm sure they would have wondered what I was doing as I hithered myself here and there with my camera. No, they would not have wondered. They would have just done their job.

That's Langford. They have zoned for the likes of BM. Fine. Yet, the Bear wants more.

Bear Mountain owns considerable acreage just over the border and into the Highlands. So far, they have been given approval for a wilderness golf course and a certain amount of housing. Not enough, apparently, because they have been pushing to change the urban containment boundary beyond Langford into the Highlands. This change will allow them greater opportunity to develop their land within the Highlands. More homes, less trees and all the problems that will create.

There was a public hearing last week offering folks the opportunity to speak their minds about the new expansion. I had the opportunity to voice my thoughts. (Actually, I voiced many thoughts since my speech included about 15 people's opinions.) All went well, I believe. At the regional level, it almost certainly will be defeated. Yet, BM will take this to the provincial level where they will have more sway. Their lawyers will kick in at this point and the province is more open to big business like BM. It's a wait and see at this point.

It's hard not to take their fundamentalist approach to development personally. It hurts. And a lot. It seems that there is so little that can be done. What is done, is usually reactionary. They do something over-the-top, and a group steps forward to stop it. Good, but how do you proactively stop a beast like the Bear and its advance? Even more, so much of it is driven by hunger for more money. How do you stop greed?

It's interesting to ponder. Is there a way to engage and stop a group like the Bear before it advances? Is it possible to change hearts?

I'm a Christian and not environmentalist. (That's my wife speaking, and I like it.) So, I'm compelled to be involved in this type of thing. I believe we are each called to rule this land. Rule is a neutral term and can be good, bad or neutral (meaning nothing is done). It's all what you do with it. How are we doing as earth-keepers? Tending this garden called earth means we each think about our impact and the promotion of care for all that God has made.

It also means stopping uncare, doesn't it? If we see an abuse to a human or a dog, we would act.

Is mass development an act of uncaring that we need to stop? Is it possible that land destruction today is a little like the many abuses to humanity that have occured over history? Looking back, over and over there have been harms done to people groups that were barely realized until well after the fact. There may have been a few key people who attempted change. Yet, by and large greater humanity slept until years or centuries later when people finally said, "Oh, how could that have happened?"

Trees aren't people, granted. Yet, for those of us with the title Christian, we believe that all things created are God's. We therefore can't sit.

I'm not sure if fighting BM is worth it or the thing to do. Certainly, earth-keeping goes well beyond this or any kind of fight. Yet, it's a piece. Somehow, we need to stand up to greed and destruction. Christians can't just leave it to people with the title environmentalist, and, as if was just a lengthy four-letter word, make fun of them.

What's done is done on Bear Mountain, Langford. Yet, the Highlands?

So, I will fight. I will do so since the Highlands is not just my home but was created by our greater region as a place to be kept green for all of Victoria.

The following is not my shot - I don't own a helicopter. This is an aerial of BM. Green space to the north is highlands and the proposed encroachment of urban zoning.


Friday, September 07, 2007

reflection

Thursday, September 06, 2007


Remember when this had trees?

Bear Mountain. Actually, this is the Highlands. Yet, BM bought land in the Highlands and have begun work on another golf course. It is intended to be a wilderness golf course. I have been lost in the wilderness, but I don't think that is possible with this layout as it stands.

Not all development is bad. Yet, I am struck by the brazen style in which this has been done. Trees were levelled before they were even given approval. Why? The fines are less than the profit made in clearcutting.

This picture shows the beginning of the green space of Victoria. Victoria was originally designed to have a green belt, a space to contain growth and keep an element rural and wild. This open and cut-down space is the beginning snake into protected space.

What's a tree to do?
Bear (Bare) Mountain, Victoria

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Sunday, September 02, 2007


Friday, August 31, 2007

I sit on the shore.
A chorus line of mist moves center stage,
meeting the main character, morning sun.
I feel the tiniest drops of rain,
hardly noticed by my bare legs and
not even seen on these still waters.
And now they are gone.
Are they?
No, still here but even smaller.
Now, they are gone.

A stand of hemlocks shade the incoming morning sun.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

During certain times of the day - usually early morning and later in the afternoon - the rays of the low-hung, yet strong sun will cast deep shadows from solid objects like trees but will brightly fill things softer and more transparent. Sometimes referred to as backlighting, you need to be facing the sun to really see this picture show. There are long shadows from the dense forms of life and their own appearances as mysterious silhouettes in the midst of light-filled plants and leaves. A golden, highlighted weed or blade of grass will standout in the backdrop of these black silhouettes and shadows.

This intense type of backlighting only lasts for a few moments. It's as if nature says, "Look at me! Now, quickly!"

When I glimpse it, what I see is about what I feel.