Showing posts with label The Dynamic Great Lakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Dynamic Great Lakes. Show all posts

Thursday, June 25, 2020

Great Lakes: Mourning the Losses


  

I mourn the loss of what used to be even before I was born. This was my motivation for writing The Dynamic Great Lakes. I care about the environment so much that I had to do something.
When I think of the 500-year-old white pines that used to be where I live, I feel a sadness. White pines were called white gold and used for the masts of ships, and in West Michigan, these trees rebuilt Chicago after the great fire.

When I think of the sturgeon that were killed and burned like cordwood because they fouled fishermen's nets, I want to cry.

Glacial relics remain in the dunes and wetlands such as the arctic primrose. The names of flowers are lovely: grass pink, lady's tresses, rams head lady slipper. The fragrances of these flowers are in my imagination. Very few are really found.
Few are found because many dunes  have been leveled.

When Jacques Cartier reached the Great Lakes, his men had scurvy. The Native Americans taught the French how to get vitamin C by making arbor vitae tea. The tea was made by pouring hot water over the leaves of this tree. They learned of a natural pesticide from the aroma of white spruce.

Now harmful chemicals are found in the air, water and soil and this is really something to grieve. This was my motivation for writing The Dynamic Great Lakes. I care about the environment so much that I had to do something. This book shows what some people working on grassroots committees have been able to do. It is a hopeful book. It is a beginning. Without basic knowledge about the Great Lakes it is impossible to make the right decisions about them.

Monday, November 6, 2017

Where to buy Books by Barbara Spring

The Wilderness Within, Between Sweetwater and Sand   my poetry books and The Dynamic Great Lakes non-fiction are available at the Bookman Bookstore in Grand Haven, MI.  Increasingly these books are becoming scarce on line.  




The Dynamic Great Lakes  is available on Amazon's Kindle reader.

Thursday, December 22, 2016

The Dynamic Great Lakes by Barbara Spring

Everything you wanted to know about this planet's greatest freshwater system.  Available at Amazon.con, bn.com and many fine bookstores world wide.

Saturday, July 9, 2016

Barbara Spring's Amazon Page





Barbara Spring's Amazon page

Click the link to see all of my books.  These books are labors of love.  I wrote the Dynamic Great Lakes simply to show the workings of nature in these majestic freshwater seas.

My poetry books are also labors of love.  Click the link to see what they are about.

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Earth Day is April 22 2015

Think globally, act locally.  This is the way to help our Mother the Earth.  Go to your local city council to persuade them to make good changes.  That is what I did and we got a new municipal wastewater treatment plant.  

Then after reading Rachel Carson's book, Silent Spring, Norm Spring went to the city council and pesuaded them to stop spraying elms in the park in front of our house with DDT.  It took three years of attending city council meetings and then the city of Grand Haven finally stopped the DDT program that was killing birds, and building up the food chains in the Great Lakes near where we live.  

We along with others formed the Michigan Pesticides Council and then DDT and like pesticides were banned in Michigan.  Then in the U.S.  Then in Canada.  He was recently honored for this work by the Michigan Environmental Hall of Fame.

Norm Spring was instrumental in getting  an air pollution ordinance passed and saving  sand dunes in their natural state across the Grand River in Ferrysburg, Michigan.  All these things were done through the democratic process and done with the idea that we must keep the environment viable for now and for our children and the generations to come.

Encouraged by thinking globally and acting locally, I wrote The Dynamic Great Lakes. The book shows how the eagles returned to the shores of the Great Lakes after nearly being wiped out by DDT.  It shows that some bad government policies can be reversed with will and determination by ordinary people like us.

Think of what you could do by thinking globally and acting locally.

Sunday, September 8, 2013

Interview


Betsie: To start this off, why don't you give an idea of what the book is about?

Wilderness Within is about wilderness places in nature and wilderness places within the psyche. The poetry comes from where these two places intersect.


Betsie: Where did you grow up and was reading and writing a part of your life?

I grew up around university towns: Columbia, Missouri and East Lansing Michigan.  The University of Missouri and Michigan State University respectively. I always loved reading and began writing little poems as soon as I learned how to write.

Betsie: Who were your earliest influences and why?
My earliest influences were my parents.  My mother taught me to read since I had a serious case of pneumonia in the first grade.  My father understood good literature, so there were always good books to read around the house.  He was a scientist and did original research.  He let me observe what was going on in his lab when I was quite young.  He also took me on nature walks and explained a lot of natural phenomena to me. When I had a question, my mother would say, “Go ask your Dad.”

Betsie: What would a typical day be like for a writer?

I receive my inspiration from many sources: dreams, people, observations of nature.  Sometimes I wake up and write down something that has arrived through a dream.  It may take years before I understand the meaning.  My poem, “Bear Woman” was inspired by a nightmare.  A grizzly bear was battering at my front door in the dream.
The poem took a few years to write because I did not understand it fully right away.  People touch me, especially children.  My grand daughter hated to go to bed when she was small.  I believe it was because she was afraid.  That is the origin of “Bedtime
Story.”  It begins, “Bako, tell me about the pterodactyls.”  A big scary dinosaur that flies embodies a primal fear.  Fear is the idea behind the poem.  Sometimes I am moved and amused by nature.  My haiku about frogs is about their courtship in the spring.  They get pretty noisy.



Betsie: How long have you been writing and in what capacities?

I have been writing for many years.  I wrote feature articles for the Grand Rapids Press  and other publications for a number of years and I really enjoyed interviewing people.  I liked older people especially since they have had life experiences and wisdom that was worth noting.

I also wrote a great many travel articles.

My first book, The Dynamic Great Lakes, is non fiction.  I interviewed scientists, and naturalists in different disciplines such as geology, fish biology, limnology and the like to get the information I needed.  These people are generous and like to share their knowledge.  I enjoyed going out on a research vessel on Lake Michigan to observe and learn.  I was an adjunct professor at Grand Valley State University at that time and I wrote some articles about the research vessel and those were published.  The department appreciated that.


  
Betsie: Which is more difficult to write - Poetry or nonfiction and why?

Writing non fiction is difficult because you must get your facts and document them. Then you must make the writing engaging to the reader.  Poetry is challenging because you are working with the language in a way that will be pleasing to the ear and eye as well as meaningful.  I have written some fiction, but I have not published any of it yet.


Betsie: Has there ever been a time when you wanted to throw in the towel and give up? And if so, how did you defeat those instincts?

While working on my book about the Great Lakes, I nearly gave up since I had too much material and I had to put it into some kind of format that would be easy to understand for the readers.  The Dynamic Great Lakes is about changes in the Great Lakes and so if the material didn’t fit the concept of changes, I cut.  I cut and cut again until I had something I believed would be useful and readable.

I never gave up hope on The Wilderness Within because poetry is something I love to write.



Betsie: What is the hardest part about being a writer?

When I worked for the newspaper I hated being edited.  I still hate being edited.  Sometimes an editor can really help, but not very often.

Betsie: Do you have any hobbies? What are they? How do they enhance your writing?

I like the exercise of yoga.  It keeps mind and body limber.  I like to play the guitar and sing.  This helps me to hear.    I like to dance. Dancing helps me to feel.   I like to paint watercolors and work in other art mediums. This helps me to see.  But since time is limited, I have chosen to write over the other arts.

Betsie: Articles and media alike make it sound as though the only way to rise to the top is to sacrifice. What do you find to be good sacrifices?

I have not sacrificed and so I have not risen to the top.  I know others that have paid their dues, but this sort of thing does not appeal to me.

Betsie: What question do you get asked more than any other?

Is it o.k. to eat the fish?

Betsie: What’s the coolest thing a reader has said to you?

Several people have said, “I loved your book.  I am buying more for friends.”

Betsie: What has been your feedback from readers? What do they say to you about their interpretations of your book?

Both men and women like The Wilderness Within.  They laugh at the poem Vernal Equinox—about the part where men stand up to pee in the water. Responses vary depending upon the reader’s experiences. A few liked Easter Morning. A few have said my book is comforting to them.

Betsie: Do you think that as a writer you are more prone to watching what goes on around you and observing behaviors than most people are?

Writing trains the ear and the eye.  But you don’t have to be a writer to make these sorts of observations. My grand daughter Rachel does great imitations of people.  She’s an actress.

Betsie: Who are some of the authors you consider to be "don't miss"?

I have enjoyed reading Joseph Campbell, Carl Jung, Rachel Carson, Diane Ackerman,
Barry Lopez.  There are too many to list.

Betsie: If one were looking to start his/her own career as a writer, what would you suggest his/her first step to be?

Keep a journal because you want to, not because you have to.

Betsie: What kind of movies do you enjoy?

The Cohen brothers have some good ones.  I like their regional approach.  I liked Fargo because the people from this region were so convincing, especially the woman police officer.

Betsie: What is your favorite city to visit, but one that you wouldn’t want to live in?

I was born in New York City but did not live there very long.  I must have some early memory of it though since I feel wonderful when walking around Central Park.  My mother used to push my baby carriage on those sidewalks.

Betsie: What’s the strangest question you’ve ever been asked in an interview?

If you were czar(ina) of the Great Lakes, what is the single most important thing you would do for them?

This was a good question and I enjoyed answering it but the czar (ina) part was rather strange.


Betsie: What’s the best part of being a writer?

The best part of being a writer is writing something that means a lot personally, and then sharing it with everyone who reads the book.

Betsie: Thanks to Barbara Spring for taking the time in interviewing with us and we wish her much success!


Monday, April 22, 2013

Celebrate Earth Day

The Great Blue Heron is celebrating Earth Day in a wetland.  Read about how to care for the Earth in The Dynamic Great Lakes

This critically acclaimed book is available at Barnes & Noble, Amazon.com and many independent bookstores.

Wednesday, April 3, 2013

The Dynamic Great Lakes a non-fiction primer about the five Great Lakes and their connecting waters

The Dynamic Great Lakes has been critically acclaimed.  It is a green book that encourages people to learn about the Great Lakes and then to do what they can through the democratic process.  It encourages us to think globally and act locally.




Reviews of the Dynamic Great Lakes by Barbara Spring

Great Lakes Hold Surprising Information   
Peter Wild    (5/6/2002)        U. S. Water News Co -Published by The Freshwater Society
Are dinosaurs cruising the benthic depths of the Great Lakes even while we go about our daily tasks? Not exactly. Yet sturgeon, fish weighing up to 300 pounds and similarly plated with armor,are nosing around down there. Occasionally you can see the monsters appear, making their spawning runs up rivers and surfacing like submarines in the pools beneath waterfalls... The five Great Lakes, holding nearly twenty percent of the earth's fresh water, are quite young. Gouged out by glaciers, they assumed their present shapes a mere 3,000 years ago. For that, they are a dynamic shifting system, still changing and exhibiting surprising differences. Lake Ontario, for example, the easternmost, although smallest of the bodies, holds more water than Lake Erie, its shallower nearby sister. Here's a handy primer for all such things, from the interaction of phytoplankton and calcium carbonate that gives a white cast to these inland oceans come August and helps clean the water to the charming ice volcanoes spouting chilly "lava" in the winter. This is intriguing stuff for adults, but the straightforward presentation also lends itself to use in schools, beginning about the sixth grade and up. And yes, we get the latest news on the zebra mussel, the tube nose goby, and other threats to the natural scheme of things. Also good news; how since the banning of DDT in the 1970's, the bald eagles have come back.


The Dynamic Great Lakes   
BOB GROSS , Of The Oakland Press USA  (3/19/2003)        This is an impressive little book. Not quite 110 pages long, it's a read of about an hour or so. The author has, however, managed to jam it full of facts and information about the Great Lakes. It's the kind of book that you might keep on a desk, ready at hand when you need to know something like the native fish population of Lake Superior. OK, so maybe not everyone has that need. The point is that you'll probably learn something about the lakes that you didn't know before. I, for example, had never heard of the whiting effect whereby the lakes regulate the balance between acid and alkaline and also cleanse themselves of pollutants, including metals - and that's coming from someone who has lived along the shores of Lakes Michigan, Huron and Superior. The author also sprinkles a strong environmental ethic throughout the book, coupled with a belief that the democratic process can make a difference.




Very Informative   
Lisa Y NJ  (1/30/2003)        The Dynamic Great Lakes was full of information I never knew about our Great Lakes. The lake chapters contain basic facts about each individual lake, yet the author never lets you forget they are a system. What happens to one, happens to the others and the entire ecological niche.