|
Today's Question What's the most reliable tool for starting fires? answer
Today's Question Why do you drive a grease-powered car, and should I do it too? answer
Online FavoritesSpecial IssuesPhoto Galleries |
The Water Issue: Restoration Dreams Without a Paddle Journey with us through the watery heart of the largest subtropical wetlands in America: the Everglades. Why? Because it's thereor used to be. By W. Hodding Carter
A six-foot-six-inch redheaded monster stands over me. Without hesitating, he starts swinging his arms in full circles like an irate baboon, rocking our makeshift canoe campsite. The monster's name is David Conover. He's a 42-year-old documentary filmmaker, and he's been swinging his arms all night long for two nights straight. Something's gone wrong with his wrists and hands after six days of poling a canoe through the Shark River Slough, in Everglades National Park. The windmilling makes his arms feel better, and under different circumstances I might feel happy for him. "Up yours," I snort. "It's not even morning yet." A half-opened eye reveals the lie in this. I'm dazzled by a sparkling array of fairy poops strung across a never-ending expanse of man-tall saw grass set afire by the earliest rays of the sun. From a foot away, another of my companions chimes in: "If we don't find a way through today, I really
My mind quickly starts to ask the hard questions: Where am I? Who are these people? Why won't they let me sleep? And why am I surrounded by water? Oh, yeah, now I remember. About three years ago, in the midst of a personal quest to locate an adopted manatee, I stumbled across a not-too-surprising fact about Florida: Its environmental programs are poorly run. Take the manatees. They've been on the endangered species list since 1973, and that makes it a federal crime to feed the animals, let alone touch one. In one part of the state, environmental officers would barely let you look at the beasts; in another, people were practically humping them. And more get killed by boats every year. This got me thinking: If they're mismanaging something as simple as a bunch of John Goodman-size sea cows, how might things be going with the bigger environmental projects? That's when the word everglades popped into my head like one of those fluorescent-orange South of the Border billboards. The Everglades has been a nightmare for decades, even before the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the federal government's go-to guys when it comes to massive hydrological projects, took over managing South Florida's water system in 1948. The Corps hit the gas pedal, drying up much of the Everglades in an attempt to balance the ever-encroaching needs of the cities with those of the farms. As a result, the Everglades has shrunk to less than half its original size and has been pushed to the brink of ecological collapse. So here I am, stuck on the southern tiptoe of America, floundering in the watery outback in a desperate bid to learn if the state of Florida, the federal government, and the Corps have, in fact, figured out a way to turn the clock back and save this place. But what isor wasthe Everglades? A glorified swamp? A pristine landlocked water world? A polluted cesspool? "Hodding! See if you can plot our location on the chart, would you?" the monster growls. "It'd probably help to know where we are before we get lost." Right now, whatever the Everglades may be, I just want to get the hell out.
|
TODAY'S NEWS UPDATE!
America's Best Races: Vote Now! Outside is looking for America's Best Races, and we want your input. This survey has only two ... ![]()
Obama Names Richardson as Commerce ...
President-elect Barack Obama named New Mexico Governor Bill Richardson as his choice for ... ![]() advertisement
advertisement
Vacation PackagesMore Travel Deals |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||