For the first time in 15 years, I sat down in my car the other day and broke down sobbing. On the side of a dirt road, surrounded by mountains. Waves of sadness, frustration, rage, and despair welling up.
I鈥檇 spent the day planting and watering seedlings, which I鈥檝e done for half a decade now. We have 300 acres on the north slope of California鈥檚听, between the towns of Julian and Warner Springs. The property got hit by the in 2002, which killed two-thirds of the conifers. I grew up hiking in Cuyamaca, before the fires, and I got it in my mind to restore the conifer forest on the property. It took months to figure out what was what, heading up to the mountain once a week, taking pictures, coming home and trying to identify all the species, reading late into the night about botany, and forestry, and silviculture. I collected thousands of cones. I learned how to get seeds out of them and to stratify, germinate, and pot the seeds. I started growing seedlings in the backyard. I put together a working group with the U.S. Forest Service, U.S. Fish and Wildlife, CALFIRE, and the U.S. Natural Resource Conservation Service. We collected and sent 30 bushels of fresh cones up to the USFS nursery in Placerville, and I eventually got a thousand seedlings from those seeds.
I planted every which way I could, learning something new each time, year after year. The first year I planted in the open. The seedlings baked. Next in the shade. They baked. I learned to water every two or three weeks, which isn鈥檛 easy across 300 acres of steeply sloped terrain. The pocket gophers ate them from below. I caged the bottoms. Rabbits severed them at the base. I caged them above ground. Rodents climbed up and down into the cages and defoliated the needles. I caged the tops. The rodents ate the needles on all the branches that protruded from the cage, and the hardware cloth cages heated up in the sun and the metal killed all the branches and needles that were in contact with it.
And all the time, the relentless heat and dryness killed any seedling left without watering for more than two or three weeks. Winter rains are good, but there鈥檚 no snow-melt anymore, and a winter rain doesn鈥檛 help a seedling survive in October when there hasn鈥檛 been a drop of rain in eight听months (the second half of 2017 was the driest on record here). In spite of thousands of hours of thought, and worry, and work, and care, I鈥檝e lost probably 650 out of the 700 seedlings I鈥檝e raised from seed and planted with my own hands over the last five听years.
That day, after a long, dirty, hot day of planting, I walked to one of my favorite spots, a ring of granite boulders sheltered by a huge, gnarled . There, lying shattered and rotting in the middle of the ring, was half the 60-foot-tall tree. The other half was still standing, but covered in the telltale, tiny D-shaped holes of (GSOB), a beetle that gets into the phloem, xylem, and cambium of our native oaks and kills them rapidly. GSOB arrived in San Diego on firewood from southeast Arizona 15 years ago and has been slowly advancing north, laying waste to our native oaks. It鈥檚 killed maybe 80,000 so far. I wandered around to a dozen nearby trees, all big, ancient oaks. The trunks of every one were spotted with GSOB holes. I stood there stunned. The whole millenia-old forest was dying, as far as the eye could see. I wandered back to my truck, numb.
I sat down in the driver鈥檚 seat, staring out the window. At the oaks, dying in mass. At the stately, 100-foot-tall , towering above the oak canopy. Each bigcone drops maybe 200 to 1,000听cones, depending on size, every three to five years. Each cone has around 100 viable seeds in it. Maybe 40,000 seeds on average per tree, every few years. Times a few hundred trees. An average of somewhere around a million seeds a year fall on our stretch of mountain. And yet there鈥檚 not more than a dozen saplings growing naturally on the entire property, 300 acres. I sat there thinking about what that meant, year after year, a million seeds dropped and maybe one or two survive, and those only on the dampest, darkest parts of the mountain. It meant the days of the bigcone are done.
I sat thinking about those thousands of oaks on all those slopes, and ridges, and hills. Dying. I thought of the Shot Hole Borer, working its way up through our canyons, killing all San Diego鈥檚 coast live oak, and willow, and sycamore, and cottonwood. I thought of the bigcone pushing their way up through the oak canopy. Last of their kind. I thought of all my seedlings. The hundreds I鈥檝e planted over the years and the hundreds filling my patio and yard. I鈥檝e lost too many to count, but I can somehow remember the moment I first saw each one had dried out, or been pulled under by gophers, or stripped bare by rodents, or gnawed by rabbits, or trampled by cattle from the neighboring reservation.
I鈥檇 thought about it all a thousand times. I鈥檝e lain in bed so many nights trying to wrestle with it. I don鈥檛 know why, but that afternoon something in my mind buckled under the weight of it. I thought, 鈥楬ow do I tell my kids?鈥 and I started to cry. They鈥檝e grown up with me storing seeds and acorns in the refrigerator, germinating seeds, potting seedlings, watering them, 500 at any given time in the backyard, working in the greenhouses, unloading all my dusty tools and empty water bottles from the truck when I get back in the evening from the mountain. Their dad working in any spare moment on reforesting is all they鈥檝e ever known. I thought of this photo we took a couple of years ago, sitting in front of all our hundreds of seedlings. So happy. How do I tell them that I don鈥檛 know what to do with the 600 seedlings in the backyard? That if I keep them potted in the yard, they鈥檒l get root-bound and slowly die, and if I try to outplant them on the mountain, they鈥檒l die even faster? That there鈥檚 no place left in the world for these trees they鈥檝e grown up with?

And then the question that was probably there the whole time, waiting to surface: How do I tell myself? I think of all the love I鈥檝e put into saving that forest. All the years. All the thousands of hours. All the thought, and worry, and hope, and faith. How do I tell myself that it鈥檚 all gonna die? I鈥檝e spent so long among those trees. It鈥檚 not like trees in a park you visit. I don鈥檛 go to a different trail or campground or mountain every week. I go to the same mountain, every time. I know every corner of those 300 acres. I can see the whole forest when I close my eyes. Those trees are like friends to me. I know their peculiarities, their personalities. I can identify some of those trees by their acorns alone. It鈥檚 honestly too much. To know they鈥檙e all doomed. And if my forest is dying, the same thing is happening everywhere on Earth. My mind leapt back 20 years to when I was doing fieldwork up in Kenai, Alaska. I remembered driving past hundreds of miles of conifers dying from spruce bark beetle, which had exploded without the cold winters to keep its population in check. I must have blocked it out for 20 years. But it was right there, just below the surface of my consciousness, foreshadowing.
I think of all the love I鈥檝e put into saving that forest. All the years. All the thousands of hours. All the thought, and worry, and hope, and faith. How do I tell myself that it鈥檚 all gonna die?
The sadness, the fear, the despair comes over me in waves when I think about it. The whole biosphere, 66 million years of adaptation and speciation, is dying. I took personal responsibility for repairing, conserving, stewarding my half-mile square of it, and it finally hit me鈥攚hat I鈥檇 been wrestling with unconsciously for a long time鈥攖hat I can鈥檛 save it. No amount of wisdom, or sacrifice, or heroism is going to change the outcome. It鈥檚 been wearing on me for years, but when you鈥檙e raised on Star Wars and unconditional positive regard, you think that no matter how long the odds, you鈥檙e somehow gonna pull off the impossible. It鈥檚 been years of working, day-in, day-out, against odds that were unimaginably long. Only, they weren鈥檛 long. They were impossible.
And at the crescendo of sobbing and loss, the saddest thought I鈥檝e ever had came to me: I wish I didn鈥檛 know. What else can you say, when faced with a catastrophe of such vastness, with the unravelling of the entire fabric of life on Earth? I mean, we need to fight to save what we can, but the web of life as we know it is done. All the beautiful things we saw as kids on the Discovery Channel. The forests I grew up in. The mountain lions, and the horned owls, and the scat and the tracks in the washes. We鈥檙e so early in this curve, and the changes that are already baked in will be so profound. I don鈥檛 think humans are headed for extinction. We鈥檒l survive, though many of us will suffer and many die. But all this life with which we鈥檝e shared the planet, much of it won鈥檛 make it. I wish I didn鈥檛 know. I wish I didn鈥檛 know those ancient trees dying up there on the mountain. I wish I鈥檇 never hiked through Cuyamaca before the fires. Wish I鈥檇 never looked beneath rocks for lizards in the canyons before the bulldozers came. Or heard the frogs singing.
Some of us have seen what鈥檚 coming. Some of us feel, deeply, the oneness of all life, feel its fabric fraying. On April 1, 2019, just after 3 p.m., some faith鈥攕ome fantasy inside me鈥攄ied, and I felt despair for the world I鈥檝e known and loved. We will not save what was. The world, the systems, the interrelationships, the densely woven tapestry, the totality we were raised to love will collapse. My responsibility now is to my children鈥攖o all our children鈥攁nd the world that will remain to them. To rescue as much as we can from that global conflagration, from the catastrophes of famine, and flood, and fire, and conflict, and exodus, and extinctions that await. To end our dependence on fossil fuels, immediately. To dramatically change our food production, our transportation, our land use. Our way of life. To defeat anyone and anything that opposes or hampers that work. If there were ever a truly holy war, this struggle鈥攖o save the whole of life from ourselves鈥攊s it. There can be no compromise. No increments. No quarter. There is nothing left, but to go forth鈥攚ith the grief, and desperation, and granite-hard determination鈥攁nd transform the world. Utterly. Immediately.
Dr. Cody Petterson is president of the San Diego County Democrats for Environmental Action. He currently serves on the Boards of the San Diego River Conservancy and the Resource Conservation District of Greater San Diego. He lives with his wife and two children in his hometown of La Jolla, California, where he enjoys his passion for native habitat conservation and restoration. This essay originally appeared on his .
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