The weather around the world this summer is likely to convince a lot of people that climate change is serious. That it is changing the conditions of living that we have simply taken for granted and assumed would continue.
LA Times reporter Hayley Smith, started this story talking about covering disasters including floods and wildfires, but the heat at Death Valley
". . . was a different kind of beast, something most people alive have yet to experience. One park visitor described it as like an open oven; another like a blow dryer to the face . I imagined it was more like the surface of the sun, or like someone had left the lights on in hell.
It was in those circumstances that I met Steve Curry."
She was interviewing tourists at Zabriski Point. Then she caught my attention:
"Suddenly, my colleague, photojournalist Francine Orr, spotted a lone figure scrambling up a nearby canyon and snapped his photo."
Francine Orr sounded familiar. I checked my blog to be sure. Orr spoke to this year's Alaska Press Club Conference in April about photographing COVID victims inside a few LA hospitals during the pandemic. She had gotten permission to photograph patients inside a hospital just as COVID was about to start and she took striking photos.
I posted them on my COVID page (You can scroll down to April 18, 2023, but I'll repost them here since I never put them up here in the main part of the blog. The photos and the presentation were powerful.)
Francine Orr, LA Times at AK Press Club Conf |
Francine Orr, LA Times at AK Press Club Conf |
Francine Orr, LA Times at AK Press Club Conf |
Francine Orr, LA Times at AK Press Club Conf |
But back to Death Valley and Steve Curry.
"He was from the Sunland neighborhood of Los Angeles, he told us from beneath his wide-brimmed straw hat. He was 71."
He was on his annual hike there in Death Valley and they offered him more water (he had one water bottle), a reprise in the air conditioning of their car, even a ride back to the trailhead.
"The park service advises visitors not to hike in the park after 10 a.m. during extreme summer temperatures, but Steve was chipper. He said he was an experienced outdoorsman, and he was determined to finish his round-trip solo hike to Golden Canyon.
"Already, a scalding wind was blowing through the park, overheating our electronic equipment and turning metal door handles into hot irons. Francine and I could bear only a few minutes of it before diving into our cars for the relief of air conditioning, but Steve was persistent. He said he had completed extensive training and was getting ready for another hike in August.
"What we now know is that Steve did finish his journey, but just barely. He collapsed outside the bathrooms at Golden Canyon at about 3:40 that afternoon and died shortly after. Though the coroner has not yet confirmed his cause of death, officials said they believe it to be heat-related."
Smith tells us she ended up meeting Steve's widow and wrote his obituary.
"He said he was an experienced outdoorsman"
The world is changing. Our experience of the world as we have known it doesn't necessarily prepare us for the world that is here today and the one it is evolving into because oil companies and their allies have been spreading and continue to spread misinformation to continue making money. Foolish venal people are not a problem if the consequences of their folly only affects them. But in this case the world is suffering and will continue to suffer because of them and the people unwilling to stand up to them.
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