High Water: Assessing the 2022 Yellowstone Floods
By Traute Parrie
There was direct damage to flora and fauna, concentrated around riparian corridors. Streambanks, where kingfishers nest, were swept away. Riparian vegetation was lost, at the expense of many insect species, including aquatic beetles, damselflies, butterflies, dragonflies, and stoneflies, which utilize the vegetation for a portion of their lives.
Montana Climate Adaptation Story
By Larry Campbell
The suntower is a quixotic Rube Goldberg all-purpose garden tool for irrigation as well as food production, processing and storage. It is a solar powered building of integrated functional design useful for small-scale agriculture, meant to contribute to the goal of local food security adaptation to climate change. I can envision a village built around a suntower.
Wildfires are Intensifying. What can be Done?
By Janessa Chaplin
Research shows that changes in climate create warmer, drier conditions, leading to longer and more active fire seasons. This is something my family has noticed over the years. My mom loves hiking and has been noticing more and more decimated areas of forest that show little signs of coming back. I notice it because I can’t go play tennis outside without feeling a sting in my throat.
The Future is Here and Other Conversations at the Dinner Table
By Constanza
My daughter loves cross country, but last fall she skipped half her practices because of poor air quality. The teenager is still adamant we don’t discuss climate at the dinner table. I agree for the sake of good digestion.
Praying
By Jill Logan
Then one day out of the blue
came an insect that was brand new.
It was huge and brown and seemed to say
"I think I'll just stand here and pray".
Cedars’ Bark
By Nico Lorenzen
On that September morning, as I laced up my worn leather boots in preparation of another day pulling a crosscut saw the distillation of such wilderness spilled itself beneath the boughs. The stillness following the dynamism of bugling elk before sunrise, a restful quiet layered in a way we’ve adapted to know as right in its totality.
Together
By Carol “Kate” Wilburn | Missoula Climate Stories live storyteller
"Join with me to heal waters, air, Whooping cranes, soils. Deliver them from the edge."
Rooted Tension: A Crisis in Missoula's Urban Forest
By Kalle Fox
With respect to the ecological history of the valley prior to white American settlement, I can’t help but root (pun not intended) for a legacy where non-natives and natives work together to adapt and thrive in the face of anthropocentric challenges.