Eugene Friends Meeting

Eugene Friends Meeting

of the Religious Society of Friends ("Quakers")

Posts filed under unity with nature

The Problem with Plastics

On January 22, 2023 Eugene Friends Meeting approved a Minute on Reducing Plastics in the World: Eugene Friends Meeting acknowledges that plastic waste in the Earth’s environment adversely affects wildlife, wildlife habitat, and humans, and that reducing plastic production, consumption, and waste is crucial if we are to overcome the problem of plastic pollution on our planet. Reducing the production and… (read more)

Planting Native Gardens

Native pollinators need appropriate native plants, those that are indigenous to our specific geographic area: Here in the Willamette Valley, we live in the Pacific Lowland Mixed Forest ecosystem (same as the Puget Sound Valley). Before cultivation, we had dense coniferous forests, prairies that supported open stands of oaks, and wetlands with swamp or bog communities. The original, natural… (read more)

A Wild Garden

“What if each American landowner made it a goal to convert half of his or her lawn to productive native plant communities? Even moderate success could collectively restore some semblance of ecosystem function to more than twenty million acres of what is now ecological wasteland. … we can create this country’s largest park system. It… (read more)

Unity with Native Bees and Butterflies

The concept of ‘unity with nature’ is still unsettled in Friends’ minds. Our commitment to the exploration of this concept … is alive and growing. But how to nurture it? Where will it lead us? Is it an aspect of our deepest spiritual selves, to be integrated into our whole being by quiet contemplation of wilderness and… (read more)

Pollinators Are In Trouble

“We are at a critical point of losing so many species from local ecosystems that their ability to produce the oxygen, clean water, flood control, pollination, pest control, carbon storage, etc, that is, the ecosystem services that sustain us, will become seriously compromised.” ~ Doug Tallamy Bees, butterflies, birds, bats (and more) are critical to… (read more)

Forests and fires

Forest fires are natural and important. They shape our ecosystems. Meadows and grasslands often exist because past fires kept trees and shrubs from growing there. Many species are dependent on fire’s natural role. Fires shape plant and animal communities and ecological processes, including water and nutrient cycling.  Fire on the east and west sides of… (read more)

Forests and Climate

When it comes to reversing climate change, trees are a big deal. Globally, forests absorb nearly 16 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide per year, and hold it in their branches, leaves, roots, and soils. This makes them a valuable global carbon sink, and makes preserving and maintaining healthy forests a vital strategy in combating… (read more)

Federal Advisory Committee Recommendations to the U.S. Forest Service

Last week I wrote about the Northwest Forest Plan of 1994. While the Plan was innovative at the time, it didn’t consider some important issues we now face, such as global climate change, the role of Tribes and Indigenous knowledge in land management, and the need to protect communities from uncharacteristic wildfires. The Forest Service… (read more)

The Northwest Forest Plan of 1994

As I said last week, President Biden has signed an executive order on Strengthening the Nation’s Forests, Communities, and Local Economies, which calls for a review of forest management practices on federal lands, especially the mature and old-growth forests. This executive order pertains to National Forests, not state or private lands, and specifically calls out the… (read more)

What is Forest Management?

Last October I wrote On the Importance of Forests: “Our world’s forests are one of the most effective nature-based solutions to climate change and the wildlife extinction crisis. Forests are home to 80% of all land-based wildlife species. They function as a massive carbon sink for Earth and are also key to maintaining regional rainfall patterns. Despite this, forests are undervalued… (read more)