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Showing posts with label Katrinka Moore. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Katrinka Moore. Show all posts

Saturday, July 15, 2023

OTTER 841

by Katrinka Moore


For the past few summers, numerous surfers in Santa Cruz, Calif., have been victims of a crime at sea: boardjacking. The culprit is a female sea otter, who accosts the wave riders, seizing and even damaging their surfboards in the process… “Due to the increasing public safety risk, a team from C.D.F.W. and the Monterey Bay Aquarium trained in the capture and handling of sea otters has been deployed to attempt to capture and rehome her,” a spokesperson for the California Department of Fish and Wildlife said in a statement. Local officials call the animal Otter 841. The 5-year-old female is well known, for both her bold behavior and her ability to hang 10. And she has a tragic back story, with officials now forced to take steps that illustrate the ways human desire to get close to wild animals can cost the animals their freedom, or worse, their lives. (Photo by Mark Woodward/Native Santa Cruz) —The New York Times, July 12, 2023


She has a true name, of course, that
we’ll never know.  But we can give her
a nom de guerre—maybe Greta (as in
Thunberg) or Harriet (as in Tubman) or
Lolita (Lebrón)—women warriors
fighting for their people as 841 is doing,
trying to beat back the invasive species
endangering her endangered habitat.
California Fish and Wildlife, there’s
a simple solution and it’s not to REHOME
this sea otter who’s living in her home.  Ban
the surfers.  Contrary to popular belief,
humans don’t really get to go wherever
they please and do whatever they want.
 

Katrinka Moore's latest book is Diminuendo

Thursday, October 01, 2020

ASH

by Katrinka Moore


Smoke rises over a vineyard as the Glass Fire burns. Calistoga, CA, September 28, 2020. Credit: Noah Berger/AP via The Washington Post, September 30, 2020.


Slow-dying ash    still mostly
thick and green    though now                        
the leaves are yellowing                                 
 
The high bare limbs     a haunt
of choice for goldfinches    who
facing east     warble as the sun
 
appears     a deep red sphere    
crosses the sky shrouded
in haze     Come night                        
 
the stars and even Jupiter
are dim     Three thousand
miles away     wildfires
 
rage another morning     Here   
bright singing birds    the glow
of early     color-shifting     fall


Katrinka Moore's latest book is Wayfarers. She lives in Schoharie County, NY.