Fielding Schaefer

Meet our Guests: Jon Christensen

Jon Christensen

Environmental Historian (UCLA), Journalist

Sand to Snow National Monument, CA

11/12/2021

 

As a long-time journalist covering the West, Jon Christensen has long reported on and taught about the West’s most archetypal quality: conflict. Whether it’s early settler conflicts, public lands extremism, the rural-urban divide, water wars, or recent megafires, the West has long appeared in media as the American region of crisis.

To challenge the historical conflict-mythos, Jon strives to forefront stories that upend it. To provide the Westies with an example, Jon played his feature-length documentary “Politics and the Environment of the New West,” a depiction of former Nevada Senator Harry Reid’s career. Harry Reid legislated numerous, often collaborative conservation decisions in Nevada, satisfying many, but not all, ranchers, hunters, environmentalists, farmers, and corporations. Portraying Senator Reid as a champion of grassroots representation and bipartisanship, Jon highlighted a rarely heard-of occurrence in today’s politically polarizing climate. He then encouraged Westies to do the same: dig into their collection of field experiences and help create a new, inspiring narrative of the West.

 

By Fielding Schaefer

Meet our Guests: Alexa Whipple

Alexa Whipple

Executive Director, Methow Beaver Project

Methow Valley, WA

9/5/2021

 

         Along the Methow River’s Silver Side Channel, Alexa Whipple, Project Director for the Methow Beaver Project, emphasizes that diversity is key to the stream health. The river channel here weaves through riparian vegetation, side pools, debris, rapids, and two beaver ponds. At the end of the second pond, a large section of plastic tube allows for fish to pass through an existing beaver dam. It is one of many on-the-ground restoration projects that Alexa manages.

Today, beavers have largely been removed from the Methow River watershed by human trapping and their habitat replaced by houses built next to streams. This means that reintroducing the mammal to these parts hinges on landowner cooperation. To Alexa, the short-term goal is to protect current beaver habitat and introduce them in key, manageable locations. The long-term goal is to move people out of the floodplain and allow streams to flood and meander again. Restoration projects like the one on Silver Side Channel are proactive steps toward a beaver-filled watershed, but Alexa recognizes they will not accomplish this goal on their own, saying, “solutions don’t have to be the final option.”

Efforts to restore beaver to the Methow River are slow-moving and face a variety of challenges. Perhaps most severe: the species is not protected in the U.S., so trappers may kill the beaver that Alexa and her organization have invested so much in. Still, Alexa often carries a forward-looking beam on her face as she works.

 

By Fielding Schaefer

Photo credit: Haley Post

Meet our Guests: Nils Christoffersen

NilsChristoffersen_BlurbPhoto.jpg

Nils Christoffersen

Executive Director, Wallowa Resources

Wallowa County, Oregon

8/24/2021

 

     After Wallowa County lost 20% of its jobs due to its sawmills shutting down in 1996, Nils Christoffersen stepped up alongside other citizens to regrow the community. Now the Executive Director of Wallowa Resources, a local environmental stewardship and economic development nonprofit, Nils believes that if people didn’t step up to steer the community in a positive direction, some other boom-and-bust investor would have capitalized on the in-need populace by staking ownership over a new economy in tech, heavy tourism, or energy development.

     What Nils and others had in mind for Wallowa County’s rural wellbeing was a new economic model that balanced the vitality of the community’s economy with its environment. They established a vision for a “stewardship economy” that creates jobs while respecting ecosystems or even actively restoring them. As Nils spoke to Westies on the Goebel-Jackson Tree Farm, the students looked around at an embodiment of that vision: a vibrantly diverse landscape on which the Goebel and Jackson families thinned and sold small diameter, dead, or downed trees to both protect against high-intensity fires and secure their retirements. Wallowa Resources is a collaborative conservation group, meaning that it works with partners like the Forest Service, the Nez Perce Tribe, Wallowa Land Trust, and private landowners to meet intersectional goals while building trust and resiliency at a local level. It’s easier said than done, Nils will tell you. There is no project that wholly meets each goal, and yet the community is empowered to make many important decisions themselves.

     Nils encouraged Westies to look beyond the strict division between preservation and extraction. In his work lies “the third way,” a different strategy that roots itself in the particularities of his region’s peoples and non-peoples alike.

 

By Fielding Schaefer