The little patch of earth I steward
today opened its mouth to gratefully
receive what might well be the last
precipitation of the season,
living, as I do, in the land of little rain,
which makes me thankful, too,
for what humans do to collect it
and protect it,
makes me think of the finally
free-flowing Klamath River
far north of my home turf,
wrangled into submission
by the water-hungry occupiers
more than a century ago,
dammed in more ways than one,
at last set free, now recovering
as its indigenous defenders
have wanted for a hundred years,
salmon swimming ever farther
upstream to spawn,
the baby salmon now starting
their journey to the ocean in
water that those who know
it best once called putrid.
Now, they’ll tell you,
the river, at long last,
smells sweet.
•••
I’m grateful to have heard this story featuring Amy Bowers Cordalis
of the Yurok Tribe and the author of “The Water Remembers”
describing the recovery of the Klamath River since the last
of its four dams was removed in October 2024.











