Summer arrived late and seems to be finishing early in west Michigan. The big yellow school buses are once more running in the morning and again in the afternoon. Some workers are setting aside sandals and short-sleeve shirts and donning their cool weather clothing. For the coldest mornings, outerwear is coming out of storage again, too. Meanwhile the plants and wrapping up their growing season and offering the fruits and vegetables in the harvest time. Seldom seen birds are just passing through on their cold season migration. A few people come to the fish ladder to see the migrating fish homing in on their nesting places upstream; other people want to eat the fish. (
click photo for larger view)
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two dozen fishers near the Grand River fish ladder angling for steelhead trout in migration |
Insects, too, are getting ready for the shift from hot days to cool nights and temperate daytime temperatures. Some will escape from the killing frost by moving south; others hibernate or their eggs and larvae remain dormant until the Earth is ready for them to emerge again in the spring.
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katydid collecting sunlight on dark windshield ahead of the cold season |
Meanwhile, in the society of 2019 humans the habit of consuming and discarding continues. While a few people hoard things with a view to repurposing them, many more simply dispose of the unwanted item, as in this photo of an inflatable water toy. As a friend once remarked about solid-waste landfills around the country: these are not places of final disposition, but rather "long-term storage solutions" that relocate unwanted purchases, gifts, debris and refuse. The things may be "out of sight & out of mind" for the person who sets out a bag or bin for the collection service, but the cumulative clutter does not vanish in any final sense, it just moves from the consumer's curb to the city's pyramid of rubbish.
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soon after the Labor Day weekend this yellow-top recycle bin shows water toy at end of its lifecycle |
Tracing the lifecycle of this water toy, it began with an idea, then once a decision to produce and distribute the thing was made the next step was to design it (with or without reference to competing products already for sale), then come up with production lines of tools and workers and inputs (plastic or vinyl raw materials for molding). The stream of items coming out of the production site then needs to be packaged, promoted, distributed, and all parties involved need to be paid. Once a consumer makes a decision to own this one instead of the competing ones, then there is the packaging to dispose of, the owner's manual to study or download (for things more complicated than inflatable toys), the storage of the thing when not in use, and once no longer required, there is the matter of loaning, gifting, or discarding the thing, as illustrated here. A similar sequence can be described for food, clothing, cars, electronic products, and so on: use and discard, buy anew and discard.
Eventually there will be no place to put discarded solid-waste. When that day comes, but hopefully long before, people will find ways to extract all possible value from unwanted materials in order to reduce, reuse, or recycle unwanted things of one's own, or of one's neighbor.
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