Like a frog in a pot of boiling water

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‘Like a frog in a pot of boiling water’ r1 ... BECOME A MEMBER | SHARE THIS NEWSLETTER The Narwhal's masthead logo People enjoying the unusually low water of the Granby River north of Grand Forks. Last year, it was a dangerously dry summer. This year, it’s a dangerously dry fall.

I don’t have to tell you it’s not normal for B.C. temperatures to regularly reach 25 C in the middle of October.

The flipside to the joy of an endless summer? Drought, wildfires and, as our editor-in-chief Emma Gilchrist writes, “a growing sense of anxiety about how nearly three months with no rain in much of B.C. is impacting, well, all other living things.”

“It’s hard to avoid the feeling that we’re a bit like a frog in a pot of boiling water: slowly dying.”

If we were looking for a red flag to mark B.C.’s record-breaking fall drought, this was it: a viral video of thousands of salmon found dead in a dried-up creek in Heiltsuk territory.

As experts note, the salmon crisis is one that’s playing out not just in Heiltsuk territory but across B.C. and around the world. Rising water temperatures, coupled with extreme fluctuations in water levels, are among the changes species have been grappling with at an increasing rate.
Tweet reads: “It is a tragedy and one that we’re already living,” Andrea Reid, who leads the University of British Columbia’s Centre for Indigenous Fisheries, told Emma. “We’re seeing communities effectively cut off from salmon access all over the province of British Columbia. We’re seeing that play out over the past many decades.”

Drought conditions have knock-on effects everywhere, including western red cedars and Douglas fir trees that are struggling to survive on southern Vancouver Island. And if those trees go, there will be consequences for the birds, bears and other wildlife that rely on them.

Just look to the black bears in northern B.C. that endured a colder-than-usual spring this year. With few huckleberries able to grow, coupled with a drought that left other plants they look to for food all shrivelled up, Nelson, B.C., is seeing an “extremely high” number of bears loitering around garbage bins and backyards with ripe fruit — so much so that it’s becoming an election issue.

While the challenges posed by a warming climate are daunting, there are plenty of smart people working to find solutions. As Reid says: the central role salmon play in Indigenous culture means Indigenous people are at the forefront of a global movement trying to save them.

Take care and be careful what you wish for,

Arik Ligeti
Director of audience
This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.

We did it, Joe!


Whew! Our readers, nay, new members, really made last month a September to remember. In a budget crunch, we needed 182 new Narwhals to join the pod — and boy, did they ever show up in droves. Here’s just a few of the things some of them had to say:

“I enjoy and benefit from The Narwhal’s journalism — really appreciate the Ontario correspondents now.”

“I value the work and honest reporting that The Narwhal does and want it to continue.”

“I want to keep seeing strong reporting on climate and the environment in Canada!”

Thanks to our new members, and our generous matching donors Orca Book Publishers and Leonard Schein, founder of the Vancouver International Film Festival, we will continue to deliver the in-depth reporting you’ve come to expect of us.

If you’ve been on the fence about becoming a member, there’s no time like the present. Will you join our pod today?

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Are you free next Tuesday?


Join our Ontario reporter Fatima Syed at 2030 in Focus (co-hosted by the Canadian Climate Institute) as she moderates a panel called “Making Climate Progress in a Volatile World” with experts from across the globe.

“It’s rare to have a conversation about the climate emergency that is constructive and optimistic. I’m excited to get into how these climate leaders are keeping climate action on the agenda despite the endless stream of challenges around the world, and what we can do to help,” Fatima says.

Go here to register for a lively discussion that’ll look to the next decade, and beyond, of progress toward net zero.


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The quest to protect Hudson Bay’s unique coastline, one of Canada’s last, best wild places The world spends billions to ‘protect’ Indigenous land. Only 17% goes to Indigenous peoples When you want to enjoy the sunny outdoors but you’re not sure if a warm October is the best thing. Don’t worry, our newsletters will let you and your friends know if you should fall for it or not — just tell them to r63

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