Archive for the ‘Events’ Category
Meet the Trucks on June 26
If your kids are like mine, they’ll go bananas over this …
Meet The Trucks
10 a.m. – 3 p.m. June 26
La Plata County Fairgrounds
Vehicles include, two Dodge trucks, two semitrucks, a Care Flight helicopter, a hot-air balloon basket and burners, Mini F-22 Fighter Plane, a mini excavator and scissors lift, dump truck, tractor, skid steer, motor grater, water delivery truck, beverage delivery truck, school bus, bucket truck, limousine, trolley, wrench truck, roll-off truck, fire engine, police vehicles, mobile command center, search and rescue vehicles, a hearse, mail truck, jeep and tour vehicle and smart car.
There will also be appearances by Smokey the Bear, McGruff the Crime Dog, and Sparky the Crime Dog.
Other attractions include a boucy slide and house ans a barrel train. The charge is $2 per person. Children 2 and under are free.
Proceeds go to benefit Skills for Living and Learning in Bayfield.
UNLESS: the word of the Lorax
There’s just something about watching the slow painful death of a massive ecosystem to make you pessimistic about the future of our species. If a higher power was looking to send a message to the human race about its dependence on fossil fuels, an anvil to the head couldn’t be much clearer. But I wonder, will it change anything?
Over the weekend, I was reading my son Dr. Suess’ The Lorax. I got to this part, which I have always loved, and could hardly keep reading:
And all that the Lorax left here in this mess
was a small pile of rocks, with one word…
“UNLESS.”
Whatever that meant, well, I just couldn’t guess.
That was long, long ago.
But each day since that day
I’ve sat here and worried
and worried away.
Through the years, while my buildings
have fallen apart,
I’ve worried about it
with all of my heart.
“But now,” says the Once-ler,
“Now that you’re here,
the word of the Lorax seems perfectly clear.
UNLESS someone like you
cares a whole awful lot,
nothing is going to get better.
It’s not.
This has always made me feel optimistic about our potential as individuals to affect meaningful change through collective consciousness and action. But this book was written in 1971. I was 1! Forty years later, the bottom line is this: not enough people have cared a whole awful lot because nothing has gotten better.
It hasn’t.
It’s gotten worse.
And it fills me with dread and worry about the world we will leave our children. I have visions of Cormac McCarthy’s The Road, in which father and son scramble for survival in the decimated landscape of a post-apocalyptic world. At my most pessimistic, I can almost see the fatalistic appeal of the argument, made by Princeton philosophy professor Peter Singer in The New York Times, that perhaps we should just stop reproducing:
Most thoughtful people are extremely concerned about climate change. Some stop eating meat, or flying abroad on vacation, in order to reduce their carbon footprint. But the people who will be most severely harmed by climate change have not yet been conceived. If there were to be no future generations, there would be much less for us to feel to guilty about.
So why don’t we make ourselves the Last Generation on Earth? If we would all agree to have ourselves sterilized then no sacrifices would be required — we could party our way into extinction!
But small things still give me hope (perhaps irrationally so). The faces of my children. And movements like this: www.360.org. I heard founder Bill McKibben speak on Alternative Radio and found it profoundly inspiring to hear about participation in the movement from every remote corner of our planet.
The goal of the group was get world leaders at last December’s climate summit in Copenhagen to agree to lower the concentration of carbon dioxide in our atmosphere to 350 parts per million, which scientists say is the safe upper limit.
They failed.
But they’re not done trying. On Oct. 10, 350.org is organizing a Global Work Party. This is McKibben’s message:
In every corner of the world we hope communities will put up solar panels, insulate homes, erect windmills, plant trees, paint bikepaths, launch or harvest local gardens. We’ll make sure the world sees this huge day of effort — and we’ll use it to send a simple message to our leaders: “We’re working — what about you? If we can cover the roof of the school with solar panels, surely you can pass the legislation or sign the treaty that will spread our work everywhere, and confront the climate crisis in time.
Go to http://www.350.org/oct10 to learn more.
For our children, we must do something.
If we don’t, nothing is going to get better.
It’s not.
Musings from the mothership
With uncanny timing, a small insight on motherhood was delivered to me yesterday. After an afternoon out in the yard trying to get our new garden put in, my two filthy boys and I had just settled in for a little mindless cartoon watching when the doorbell rang. Ever since we got chickens, our house has become pretty popular with the neighborhood children. Happy to oblige, I showed them to the back, where our new coop is. With my 1-1/2 year old on my hip, I lingered awhile talking to a neighbor over the fence and watching poultry and small children whiz around the yard like supercharged electrons. It was only when I went to head back in that I heard my 4 year old crying. Engrossed in an episode of Cyberchase, he hadn’t notice us go out and, when the program ended, had searched the house for me, to no avail.
“Mommy, where were you?” he said plaintively between sobs.
I felt awful, of course, but fortunately the scare was soon soothed and forgotten. Later, though, I had this realization about being a mother to small children. It’s kind of like being the starship Enterprise. Surrounded by an impenetrable protective shield, you ferry your charges around the universe, bouncing them from adventure to adventure. Whenever things get a little hairy, you beam them up to the safety of your warm embrace. When circumstances conspire to leave them temporarily marooned on alien soil, they get a little worried. Fortunately, transporter malfunctions are highly unusual and quickly rectified. Though your thrusters may be on the the verge of failure, you give it all you’ve got to escape impending doom and save the day. You take a licking each episode but come back plucky as ever the next show.
So I’ll end my second annual Mother’s Day post (click here to read the first) with these immortal words:
Space, the final frontier. These are the voyages of the starship Enterprise. Its 5-year mission: to explore strange new worlds, to seek out new life and new civilizations, to boldly go where no man woman has gone before.
Hops and Hopes
Here’s a shameless plug for a fundraiser being held this weekend to benefit the Durango Early Learning Center (where my son goes to preschool). The school welcomes moderate- to low-income families and charges tuition on a sliding scale.
Hops and Hopes will be held at the D&SNG Railroad Station. Entertainment will be provided by Ralph Dinosaur, libations from SKA, Steamworks, Carver’s, Durango Brewing, and 3 Rivers, Synergy & Baroness wines, and delectable hors d’oeuvres from Durangourmet.
This is an adults only evening from 6-10 p.m. Saturday, April 24, and the cost is $25.
As always, we will feature a silent auction with items ranging from a fly-fishing expedition to collectible sports memorabilia to goods from Durango’s best shops.
For more information or to volunteer for set-up or clean-up at the event, please contact Justine Adair at jadair@covcs.org.
We look forward to seeing you there.
Power up for the Discovery Museum
Kinsee from Buzztown has this message regarding the Durango Discovery Museum:
Hey there parents,
The Durango Discovery Museum moves closer and closer to opening every day! What might be the last-ever Power Hour is scheduled for 5:30 to 6:30 p.m. this Wednesday, April 7, at Rylee Mac’s Market & Cooking School. Enjoy appetizers, drinks and bring the kids to watch a live “Explosive Science Minute.” Power hours are always fun, kid-friendly and a great way to find out how you can help the museum!
Hope to see you Wednesday,
Kinsee
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