SPECTRUM OF CYCLES

Issue 10, Winter 2020
Photo by John F. Williams

SPECTRUM OF CYCLES

Issue 10, Winter 2020

WELCOME TO THE WINTER 2020

ISSUE OF SALISH MAGAZINE!

 

What happens when something disappears?

Did it disappear because a stream took it away? Or because it was eaten? Perhaps it decomposed? Did a tree absorb it, or did it transmogrify?

Or are we finally learning that things don’t disappear, they change and perhaps enter into different relationships with their surroundings.

With Salish Magazine, we’re trying to give more attention to the relationships between things that we see in nature. And this issue showcases some special relationships: ones that form cycles.

This theme of cycles actually attracted some quite diverse content: articles, poetry, and artwork from all over the cycle spectrum.

In addition to this initial batch of 6 articles, we have several more exciting articles in the wings, to be released through the course of the Winter. These first ones include cycles related to vegetable gardens, swallows, stream bugs, forests, and even water. We have some articles, some poetry, and some artwork — a spectrum of representation to match the spectrum of cycle personalities.

Photo by John F. Williams
Artwork by Jeff Mihalyo

Pacific Northwest artist Jeff Mihalyo attended Otis/Parsons in Los Angeles. His credentials include production artwork for the media, entertainment, education, and information design industries for over thirty years.

His paintings are inspired by an interest in history, travel and the plight of the contemporary human condition. He creates colorful surrealist compositions that utilize humor and drama in a multi-layered commentary of the present moment.

Mr. Mihalyo has exhibited internationally in Beijing, Berlin, Moscow, Santorini, and Wuppertal while his works are collected in London, Rennes, Santiago, and Tel Aviv. His West Coast representation has included Los Angeles, Portland, San Francisco and Seattle.

The artist’s works can be viewed at www.mihalyo.com

 

Table of Contents

Woodland Witness

Woodland Witness

by Zoe Wadkins
Winter 2020

I have seen things grow here; bud, flower and fruit here. I have seen them struggle here, die here, and then — in what seems to be inexplicable — revitalize here.

Restoring Forests

Restoring Forests

by Dan Hintz
Winter 2020

Despite the ongoing pandemic, one cycle remained unbroken for the Issaquah Salmon Days Festival: our native salmon returned to Issaquah Creek to spawn in their birth-waters.

Salish Sea and Dinosaur Pee

Salish Sea and Dinosaur Pee

by Sarah Lorse
Winter 2020

When you turn on your faucet, the water you drink is essentially the same water a salmon swam in, a seal splashed in, and a stegosaurus slurped up.

See the Salish Sea by Saddle

See the Salish Sea by Saddle

by Jessica C. Levine
Winter 2020

From the saddle I see sunrise shift through the seasons, and I feel the sun on my face or the rain drops on my cheeks. That means being under the weather is a gift.

Many Cycles of Nature

Many Cycles of Nature

by Leigh Calvez
Winter 2020

One of the images of natural cycles came to me: how could bits of salmon be found within the very tissue of the long fronds of cedar or the tallest firs high up on the mountains?

Swallow Season

Swallow Season

by Donna Bunten
Winter 2020

Our house, known to the neighborhood as “the bird house,” is home this year to 17 pairs of barn swallows, their mud nests under the eaves on all sides of the house and garage.

Sacred Stream Insects

Sacred Stream Insects

by Gavin Tiemeyer
Winter 2020

Learning about natural cycles that govern the health of the Salish Sea starts with peering into your local stream. There you’ll find the world of benthic macroinvertebrates.

Issue 10 Poetry

Issue 10 Poetry

by Multiple poets
Winter 2020

The theme for this issue is cycles in nature. Some water and carbon dioxide cycles exist all over the globe, but these poems visit them in ways characteristic of our region.

The Many Lives of Tree

The Many Lives of Tree

by Pat Kirschbaum
Winter 2020

As I sat alongside a nearby stream, I observed a beautiful Tree with long branches. I pondered how many lives my Tree has. Not as many as a cat, but still more than one!

Community Gardens

Community Gardens

by Alison Ahlgrim
Winter 2020

I craned my neck to stare at the prolific sunflowers, vining squash, rock walls, corn stalks, and other vibrant, colorful plots juxtaposed against the industrial Everett waterfront!

Salish Magazine

Publisher: John F. Williams

This magazine is a nonprofit project of:

SEA-Media

P.O. Box 1407 Suquamish WA 98392

info@sea-media.org    www.salishmagazine.org

Copyright SEA-Media, 2020

All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without consent of copyright owner is strictly prohibited.
SEA-Media is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation

 

Extra special thanks to: Adelia Ritchie, Sara & Tom Noland, Grant Blackinton, Susan W. Merrill, Sheila Kelley, Kathleen Thorne, Phillip Rosaaen, and all of the credited authors and image contributors.

Sincere thanks also to our Patreon patrons: Babara Wilhite, Carolyn E Hart, John A Wiles, Sara Wade, Barbara Brooking, Melissa Fleming, Beverly Parsons, Phillis Carey, Tena and Earl Doan, and John Willett

And sincere thanks to our other donors: Beth Berglund, Diane and Steve Landry, Diane Moser, Elisabet Orville, Fris Campbell, Gene & Sandra Bullock, Janine Moss, Jayne Larson, Jeffrey Adams, Jeffrey Duda, Margaret Cole, Michelle Humphrey, Nancy Taylor, Philene Vaivods, Regina Spoor, Sherry Cordiner, Wendy McClure

COPYRIGHT

Copyright SEA-Media
All rights reserved. Reproduction or distribution, in whole or in part. without consent of copyright owner is strictly prohibited — except for brief quotations in critical reviews and other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright laws.
SEA-Media is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation

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