The National Western Stock Show

 

The stock show is a looking glass into a large portion of Denver's population that is often missing from the heart of the city. The deep roots of the wild west get lost sometimes; the annual rodeo is not one of those times.

 

*click*
"Hey wutchu doin' boy?"
Oh just taking pictures.
"You gonna buy one of them cattle?"
There are too many good choices, probably not.
"Well wutchu takin pitchers for?"
Just to document. Everything here is pretty interesting.
"Huh. Alright."



Grizzly Peak, Colorado

At 13,996'
there wasn't a lot of talking.

The wind pulled away your words. Fast and cold.

High up on the Continental Divide, Grizzly Peak rests in the shadows of its better-known neighbors, Grays and Torreys.  It lacks the highly acclaimed designation of a '14er' because it reaches 4' shy of the mark.

In a lot of ways it's like Pluto. Once considered over 14,000' it was stripped of its title with the onset of more accurate instrumentation. In my mind it's still a 14er, Pluto is still a planet and this peak might as well be on it because it feels
out there.

I saw a couple blackbirds and just as many hikers. 

Colorado, USA.
Sure can get the heart rate up.

*edit*
Pluto is not a planet. It is a dwarf planet. A designation more apt for its characteristics after closer investigation using more accurate instrumentation.

Paris Climate Talks

I spent two weeks in Paris documenting life during the Climate Conference known as COP21. The conference came on the curtails of a terrorist attack in the heart of Paris that shocked the western world. 
Tensions were high.
Aside from global leaders from 196 countries, professors, researchers and activists flocked to Paris in hopes to be heard and make a difference.

I came as a fly on the wall and left more confused than one.
To have breakfast with one man hails carbon sequestration as the answer to rising emissions and then dine with a woman who claims sequestration efforts are an utter waste of time ... is one hell of a scramble indeed. They both were seeking preventative action, both hoping to correct the wrongs we have done to our climate and move away from fossil fuels ... but their opinions on how to do so were entirely conflicting.

On another occasion, ignoring the US Travel Bureau's warning, I took the metro across town to check out a rally. An activist group was protesting the conference itself. They were arguing that the government of France didn't actually care about the climate. That the corporate sponsors hosting the conference had ties to gas and oil. And they weren't wrong.

And so it went.
I wish I had returned as an ambassador of truths.
Few answers and many questions later, I did manage to come home with one truth:
Our climate is complex and so will be our solution to managing it. A large shift in the public mindset is necessary. A shift in our priorities. A shift in how we power our homes and businesses. How we travel. How we consume, both products and food. There is not a singular answer to this crisis. What I do know, is that it is coming. In my lifetime we will see the impact of our actions ... and our inaction.

WE are the environment.
For it to change, we must also change.