Category Archives: environment

Monster Trucks and Midsized Regrets

Drawing by Hunter Blum

BY KIMBERLY MAYER

The year-round population of San Juan Island is a little over 8,500. In summer it swells to twice that, which makes it harder to get around the town of Friday Harbor and find parking. But it wasn’t summer yet when, in a parking lot, I witnessed an accident in slow motion. A large pick-up truck, attempting to park, dented the side of a shiny new luxury SUV. The driver hopped out of the truck and looked bewildered. Are parking spaces too small? Are vehicles too large? Are we all not trained truck drivers? The answer to all that is yes. 

Years ago the tabloid website outlet TMZ broke the story of California’s First Lady Maria Shriver caught on camera holding a cellphone to her ear while driving in Brentwood. Just one year earlier her husband, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, had made the use of hand-held mobile devices illegal while driving. The story was then picked up by mainstream media. (“Shriver and her cell phone,” by Meghan Daum 10/15/2009 Los Angeles Times). People were abuzz. 

 “There’s going to be swift action,” said the governor. But the big crime to me at the time was the largeness of her car, a black Cadillac Escalade. 

In the years that followed, the American appetite only grew for ever larger SUV’s, pick-up trucks, and swollen vans. Demand for the sedan dwindled. Today, nearly half of the U.S. population owns a truck, and trucks became supersized.

“The consequences of this vehicle growth trend are far from benign. Cities and infrastructures designed for smaller vehicles are now grappling with oversized vehicles,” according to The Finn Blog 2025. Parking, road congestion, and most critically, the increase in size is more dangerous to people walking, biking, wheelchair users, and children. Blind spots are created when the driver sits higher and the front of the truck is higher. And while cars with lower hoods might have struck pedestrians in the legs, the supersize truck strikes torsos and heads.“ To put it simply, pick-up trucks and SUVs are two to three times more likely than smaller vehicles to kill people in the event of a crash,” writes Steve Davis 4/12/2021 for the nonprofit organization Smart Growth America.

These giants have finally become too much vehicle for us to handle. I know, I drive one. Not as massive as Maria Shriver’s black Cadillac Escalade, but a midsized SUV, which I consider huge. Mirrors help in the back, but not in the front. As I come over a rise to our drive, for a breathless moment I see nothing at all before me until the car levels out. My heart has always been in something smaller.

At age six my grandson is obsessed with Monster Trucks. He collects them, plays with them, draws them, wears them proudly on tee shirts, and is super excited whenever he spots one. He will get over it, but will we?

Originally published July 16, 2025 in The Journal of The San Juan Islands

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Filed under road safety, Supersized trucks, full-size SUVs, Monster trucks

A Dirty Word No More

Two images have struck me of late. One, a sign at the entrance to a children’s playgarden at The Northwest Flower and Garden Show which read “Go Play Outside.” I can’t remember whether it was punctuated with an exclamation point, but it very well may have been. That age-old admonition to go outside and play being almost extraordinary in our day.

The second image was a recurring scene in the film “The Cure” which I recently viewed in which two neighboring boys in the small town of Stillwater, Minnesota play imaginatively in a garden. Despite the fact that their play was bent on violence utilizing action figures and staging mock attacks and wars, I found it remarkably reassuring and I knew just why. Hey, it wasn’t a computer game.

One boy in “The Cure” was infected with the AIDS virus. The mother of the other boy forbid her son to associate with him. But by being engaged in the natural world the boys forged a remarkable relationship. They worked with what they had: dirt, rocks, water and plants. Digging, sculpting, imagining and creating they found that they could forget all their troubles. There isn’t a gardener on earth who hasn’t had that experience.

“I started to understand something about plants by handling them,” noted landscape designer Russell Banks in his memoir, The Education of a Gardener. “It was on one summer holiday when I was perhaps fourteen that, bored with the riding and jumping competitions at a local agricultural show, I wandered off to the flower-tent…  (Thereafter) all my pocket money went on rock plants. All my holidays were given to my own personal corner of the garden. I would bicycle for miles to get a basket of leaf-soil, I would steal grit, sand or gravel from roadside heaps and I would borrow a horse and cart to collect stones which were hard to come by in our stoneless countryside… I was seventeen when I was given a grass slope, a few cartloads of the local ironstone, a few bags of cement, some plants and a piped water supply with which to make a small rock and stream garden. For three months I really lived in and with this miniature world as I struggled with my pocket landscape. Each stone represented the possibilities of a cliff or a mountain top, my dribble of water could be a lake or river or cascade and three pigmy junipers were a forest. A few moist and shady inches on the north side of a stone were a Himalayan bog… a handful of grit on the sunny side of the same stone stood for a hot stony hillside… a six inch fall of water was a Niagara and my friends who came to visit me at work I saw only as giant feet and legs, so immersed was I with my Lilliputian problems.”

It is interesting to note that the boys in “The Cure” were approximately the age of Russell Banks when he began shaping his surroundings. The important point here is that for all of them the contact was physical, the experience was real, and they all saw themselves as part of the natural world.  It is in going outside to play that we first bond with our environment, and this is essential. Children who are taught first that the rainforests are endangered, global warming is upon us, and the environment disastrous before they have had a chance to engage with it and enjoy it can hardly be expected to become the earth’s stewards. My guess is these children will stay firmly wired to the television and computer. We are far more inclined to love and protect what we know to be ours.

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Filed under environment, gardening, playing outside