The People Who Show Up for Trees

BY KIMBERLY MAYER

In mid-May an event at Brickworks, San Juan Island, cosponsored by Friends of the San Juans and Salish Current, was entitled The Trees are Speaking. The speaker was Lynda Mapes, author of a recent book by the same title. Every chair was filled when we arrived, so we quickly set up more. People poured in. As natural history and native cultures journalist for The Seattle Times, Lynda Mapes was speaking to the choir here. We are the people who show up for trees.

When I first moved to the Pacific Northwest I listened to KUOW, Seattle’s NPR news station, every morning while brewing my coffee. It was immediately apparent that legislation in this region tries to be guided by what is best for the salmon. The presumption being what is best for the salmon turns out to be best for us. OK, I thought. I get it.

Trees too have an enormous presence in the Pacific Northwest, more so than anywhere I’d ever lived. Suddenly trees were characters in our lives! I began reading a host of tree-themed or tree-centered books: novels like The Overstory by Richard Powers, and Barkskins by Annie Proulx. Memoirs such as Hope Jahren’s Lab Girl and Suzanne Simard’s Finding the Mother Tree. Peter Wohlleben’s The Hidden Life of Trees (nonfiction), and The Golden Spruce by John Vaillant, an environmental true crime story, to name a few.

What I hadn’t considered was the sacred connection between forests and salmon, a relationship best explained by Salmon Forests. It’s so simple really. “Forests hold the soil and preserve the water and cool the streams; salmon (in migrating inland to their natal streams and rivers to spawn) bring home the nutrients from the sea that feed the forest and wildlife of the watershed,” explains Lynda Mapes. Salmon depend on cool and clean water in which to spawn. Tree canopy shade keeps the temperature cool while filtering various pollutants from the water. Because Chinook salmon die after spawning, their decaying bodies provide nutrients to the freshwater ecosystem, fertilizing the riverbanks of the forest.

And round and round it goes, the salmon and the forests. “If you want salmon, you need to protect the forest,” writes Lynda Mapes. An ancient relationship that falls on us today to preserve.

 

Originally published June 18, 1925 in The Journal of the San Juan Islands

2 Comments

Filed under salmon, Salmon Forest

2 responses to “The People Who Show Up for Trees

  1. Val Gauthier's avatar Val Gauthier

    We need to remember that we are all living beings connected. We depend on nature and nature needs us to remember to protect it. Love how this reminds us of the importance of that connection. 🥰❤️🌲

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