DT Next

Acknowledg­ing link with nature, key to human sustenance

- MARGARET RENKL

Iam no ornitholog­ist, or even a veteran birder. As a rank amateur, all I have going for me is attention, curiosity and a willingnes­s to research whatever I’m puzzled by. Fortunatel­y, attention, curiosity and a good field guide are really all that’s needed for me to figure out which creatures are visiting my yard and how they’re faring here. I find all creatures fascinatin­g, and have ever since I was a little girl, but I pay more attention to them now because I know how much harder my species is making life for all the others.

During my childhood in the 1960s, it was common to see people casually throwing trash out of their car windows, but these days human indifferen­ce to the natural world tends to be better hidden, even from ourselves. Market forces have worked hard to make sure we don’t notice the depredatio­ns we’re complicit in: the microplast­ics that pollute our waterways every time we wash a fleece jacket or a polyester blouse, the toilet tissue that’s destroying the boreal forest, the poisons we spray on our yards — up to 10 times as much, per acre, as farmers use — because they are marketed to us as benign “applicatio­ns.”

As I waited in line at a garden center last week, I listened to the store owner telling another customer about a “treatment” she could spray on every bush and tree in her yard to “take care of” any kind of bug that might be feeding on them. He didn’t tell her it would also kill butterflie­s and bees and obscure bird grasshoppe­rs. He didn’t tell her she would also be poisoning the songbirds that would feed on the poisoned insects or the predators that would feed on the weakened songbirds.

Perhaps she’ll remember making a “lantern” from a Mason jar when she was a child, and then maybe she’ll wonder why there are no lightning bugs for her own children to catch. But I wouldn’t bet on it.

Many people no longer feel a connection to the natural world because they no longer feel themselves to be a part of it. We’ve come to think of nature as something that exists a car ride away. We don’t even know the names of the trees in our own yards.

Nature is all around us anyway, and I’m not talking about just the songbirds and the cottontail rabbits in any suburban neighbourh­ood. I’m talking about the coyote holed up in a bathroom at Nashville’s downtown convention center; the red-tailed hawks nesting in Manhattan; the raccoon climbing a skyscraper in St. Paul, Minn.; the black bear lounging in a Gatlinburg, Tenn., hot tub; the eastern box turtle knocking on my friend Mary Laura Philpott’s front door. These encounters remind us that we are surrounded by creatures as unique in their own ways as we are in ours. And our delight in their antics tells us something about ourselves, too. We may believe we are insulated from the natural world by our structures and our vehicles and poisons, but we are animals all the same.

Thursday is Earth Day, and even if you can’t observe it by planting trees or pulling trash out of nearby streams, this week is a good time to remember that it’s never too late to become a naturalist. And the first step is simply waking up to our own need for the very world we have tried to shut out so completely. For we belong to one another — to the house finches and the climbing raccoons and the door-knocking turtles and the bathing bears. Recognizin­g that kinship will do more than keep our fellow creatures safer. It will also keep us safer, and make us happier, too. Renkl is an opinion writer for NYT©2021

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