![]() During her years in the Fish and Wildlife Service she had acquired a network of connections with researchers and policymakers in Washington's environmental bureaucracy. She had a first-rate scientific education, including three years of graduate study in biology at Johns Hopkins, and a deeply spiritual love of the natural world. Her biographer describes her, in what seems like a triumph of understatement, as "emotionally as well as physically constrained." Still, when the environment needed an advocate, few were better prepared than Carson. She spent most of her working life inside a government agency, the Fish and Wildlife Service, editing technical studies and writing booklets publicizing departmental preserves and programs. Time has proven him right: Silent Spring changed our thinking, our society, our world.Ĭarson, at least superficially, seems an unlikely prophet. Carson's study of the dangers of pesticides, said White, was a work that would "help turn the tide" of environmental degradation. White of the New Yorker both compared the impact of the book to that of Uncle Tom's Cabin. Sign up here to receive the RCC E-News and other RCC newsletters, information and alerts.When Rachel Carson's Silent Spring was published in 1962, Supreme Court Justice William O. The Rachel Carson Council depends on tax-deductible gifts from concerned individuals like you. Kaylee Rodriguez is a rising senior at Duke University pursuing a major in Public Policy, a minor in Environmental Science and Policy, and a certificate in Policy, Journalism, and Media Studies. Kaylee Rodriguez, RCC Stanback Presidential Fellow I bend down, in wonder at the kaleidoscope of color that opens up to me. I breathe deeply, smile, and head outside to my new city. ![]() I smell the fresh aroma of freshly clipped pink peonies ( Paeonia lactiflora) from my family’s backyard. The sweet and delicate scent of peonies fills the dining room. Their calls blend into a symphony of rustling wind, whirring cars, and bouncing basketballs. I hear the sounds of birds chirping on a late spring afternoon. I feel the grass and small twigs making small indentations on the soles of my feet as I run through grass to catch a football. The blends of light pink and yellow should have been a warning that they were not ripe yet. My lips pucker as I taste a sour cherry right off the tree. The colorful buds shine in contrast to the gray skies this week. And I encourage you to do the same!Īmid the buildings, row houses and gravel roads, small pops of color adorn the streets. I am connected to the flowering dogwoods and Potomac River, even though they are new to me.Įach week, I will capture and share the small moments that inspire wonder in me. “We are nature seeing nature” -Susan Griffin, EcofeministĪs I observe the world around me, I will remind myself that I too, am a product of the living environment. I am challenging myself to feel, to use all my senses I hope that you will join me. So, my goal for this summer in the nation’s capital is to be intentional about appreciating the glimpses of nature’s beauty throughout this city. But it is harder to imagine cultivating this same sensation in a heavily built environment. I often feel this sense of wonder while hiking in the mountains or snorkeling through vibrant coral reefs. “ It is not half so important to know as to feel.”-Rachel Carson, Sense of Wonder Carson encouraged us to feel and be filled with wonder for the natural environment. However, as I reflect on Rachel Carson’s call for us to tune into nature, I cannot help but feel that I miss an opportunity when I choose to tune out. There is nothing inherently wrong with this scenario. Instead of listening to what Rachel Carson called the morning chorus of bird song, I plug in my earphones and listen to Bad Bunny’s newest album. No time, no need, to look up at blooming trees or down at budding flowers, to pause, breathe, and see the sky. ![]() Yet, I am already realizing how quickly I can get sucked into the frantic morning rush, sending a text, or checking who is emerging from the White House. I grew up in one, so this feeling is not entirely new. It is easy to get lost in the bustle and grandiosity of a city. But I am surrounded by a Capitol and cathedral domes, neo-classical government buildings, a Beaux Arts train station, and lines of Victorian rowhouses, rather than blades of grass, dirt tunnels, and nests that store bunches of ghost-white larvae. As a first-timer in D.C., I feel like a tiny ant, my antennae navigating a new environment.
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