I'm happy to share a featured story I wrote for Muse Magazine, Nevada County's art magazine.
"Shining Light on Dark Skies Above Nevada County: A New Initiative"
When I lived in the Rocky Mountains high on the Western slope of Colorado, I was thirty years younger than I am now. Many nights I would venture out to walk for miles in the dark with my Border Collie beneath a shining expanse of stars. One could get dizzy looking up at the white froth of the milky way spilling out above.
Now when I walk my dog at nighttime along the streets of Truckee, I look up to seek the Big Dipper, and in December, my birthday month, Orion’s bright belt hanging above our downtown lit up for the holidays. Occasionally, I’ll see a bear wandering beneath the stars alongside me. While time and geography create change in our lives, the night sky is a record of both familiar certainty and the vast unknown, of seasonal change and astronomical phenomena.
Why is our view of the night sky—stars and planets and moons—so moving? What is significant about access, nightly, to our relevance within this solar system, this galaxy? And what would we be missing if, when we walked in the quiet dark of our neighborhoods, we could view above only a pale unmarked screen reflecting back the electric lights of human development?
You can read the rest of the article here. Muse is a guide to local art and culture in Nevada County. Look for a copy of this glossy beautiful magazine in galleries, at the airport, and in theaters and many artsy venues around our county.
No comments:
Post a Comment