Water
is a miracle. It is part of our biology; it touches our sensibility;
it nourishes our spirit. We are inexplicably drawn to it. Yet at the
same time, we abuse it, pollute it and take it very much for granted.
Yes,
water is an extraordinary substance - H20 - two hydrogen atoms and one
oxygen. Water is the only substance that exists naturally on our planet
as a solid, a liquid and a gas. Living things depend on all of these
states of water. Thanks to its crystal structure, ice floats. Think of
what would happen to polar oceans and other bodies of water in winter if
it didn’t. Because water absorbs heat slowly and releases it slowly,
it moderates Earth’s temperatures, allowing for life to exist. Because
one end of the water molecule is slightly negative and the other end is
slightly positive, water molecules are attracted to each other, so blood
works its way through blood vessels and water slips around soil
particles and travels through the roots of plants, even against
gravity. Because of something as seemingly dull-sounding as hydrogen
bonds, water is an excellent solvent. Most materials we know dissolve,
at least to some extent, in water. Water dissolves rock to create
canyons and soil. It is the water in our bodies that allows for the
chemistry of life. It was in the watery soup of ancient ponds and
shallow estuaries that life began on this planet. Water is so essential
and so remarkable that scientists look for it in space as a requirement
for the existence of life beyond Earth.
We are drawn to water.
We build our cities and towns near bodies of water for drinking and for
transportation. We desire to build our homes by lakes, streams, rivers
and seas. We go to shorelines for our vacations. But our attraction has
a much deeper meaning.
Think of how we speak about water.
Water cleanses; it renews; we find peace at the waters’ edge. Water
represents purity. There is the symbolism of baptism. We speak of
going to sea to find ourselves. Literature is full of symbolic
references to water. The idea of a “sea change” from Shakespeare’s “The
Tempest” has become a part of our common language. The sea has many
moods and faces. It is the place where we go for adventure,
self-reflection or escape. She is comforting, life-giving mother ocean
or raging, angry father Poseidon waiting to destroy Odysseus and his
crew. Annie Dillard said this of the sea,” The sea pronounces
something, over and over, in a hoarse whisper;
I cannot quite
make it out.” Thoreau knew the healing powers of water, “A lake is the
landscape’s most beautiful and expressive feature. It is earth’s eye;
looking into which the beholder measures the depth of his own nature.”
It was the Lady of the Lake who gave King Arthur his magical sword,
Excalibur. Wendell Berry speaks of water in his poem “The Farmer and the
Sea”. “….But the dark of the sea is perfect and strange, the absence
of any place, immensity on the loose. Still, he sees it is another
keeper of the land, caretaker, shaking the earth, breaking it, clicking
the pieces, but somewhere holding deep fields yet to rise, shedding its
richness on them silently as snow, keeper and maker of places wholly
dark….”
It is no wonder that people are drawn to Florida. Here
is this place, this aqueous paradise like no other. Florida is
practically surrounded by oceans and has seemingly endless miles of
shoreline along rivers, lakes and streams. It is here where one gets a
real sense of the connectedness of all water on the earth, from cloud to
glacier, from seas and rivers to tears and blood. The native Timuquans
had one word to describe all water. No matter where it came from or
where it went, it was “ibe”. There are fresh and saltwater wetlands,
mangrove swamps, cypress stands, all ecosystems defined by water. Water
envelops us. Some days it feels like one could wring it out of the
air. There are afternoon thunderstorms and hurricanes and tropical
storms that recharge and refresh places like the Everglades. And water
is underneath us, too. It bubbles up from the ground. Florida is full
of holes where ancient water trapped in porous rock finds its way to the
surface in the form of springs.
There is a magical, a spiritual
quality to springs. In Greek mythology, springs were the dwellings of
water nymphs that took the form of beautiful young girls, sometimes full
of mischief. In Celtic mythology, the salmon of knowledge is said to
swim in a sacred spring beneath a hazel tree. The fish swallows the
fallen hazelnuts believed to contain all of the wisdom in the world. In
Western Europe, before the Romans brought Christianity, all springs had
their deities, gods and goddesses to be thanked for the life-giving
water. The Romans recognized the value of these places to the people
they conquered. Rather than trying to stop them from visiting their
sacred places, they simply built the churches next to the springs.
A
sense of wonder can be felt in visiting some of our beautiful Florida
springs. Take a canoe or tube trip down the Ichetucknee River and
marvel at the crystal clear water, the many fish and deep blue blows of
the springs. Salt Springs along the St. Johns River is just that, a
vestige of ancient seawater when Florida was a vastly different place
geologically. The water from the spring is so salty, that marine
grasses grow there now, far from the ocean. William Bartram described
Salt Springs in his travels along the St. Johns River, “just under my
feet, was the enchanting and amazing crystal fountain, which incessantly
threw up, from dark, rocky caverns below, tons of water every minute”.
There he observed “the devouring garfish, inimical trout, and all the
varieties of the gilded painted bream; the barbed catfish, dreaded
sting-ray, skate, and flounder, spotted bass, sheeps head and ominous
drum”, clearly a mixture of salt and freshwater species. Visit Blue
Spring or any number of other large springs in winter where manatees
gather in huge numbers. Canoe the upper Suwannee River where one can
see many clear-running springs bubbling into the tea-colored meanderings
of the river. The same is true for the Santa Fe, a river far more
dependent on spring flow. Take an ice-cold dip in the city pool in Green
Cove Springs on a hot summer day. The swimming pool is fed by the
spring!
Florida’s springs and other waterways are in trouble, and
the threats are many. Pollution from industry, nutrient waste from
farms and suburban lawns and the paving over of re-charge areas are just
some of the problems. Many springs are going dry. There are too many
of us using too much. The long-term and unknown effects of climate
change make the situation even more complicated and uncertain. But there
is a groundswell of people calling for action to solve these problems
and save our springs. Like the springs, many voices are joining, rising
to the surface of our consciousness and speaking as clearly as the
waters themselves.
Water is a miracle. Florida’s water, its
springs, its swamps, rivers and streams are worthy of our respect and
our protection. To do nothing is unacceptable. To lose them would be
unforgivable.
By Guest Blog Author - Lee Hunter
Biography for Lee Hunter
Lee
Hunter has worked as a musician, performer, singer and songwriter since
1992 as a member of the critically acclaimed Americana duo, Tammerlin.
She has a BA in Biology from the University of North Florida (UNF) and
studied symphonic percussion at UNF with Charlotte Mabrey, now retired
principal percussionist with the Jacksonville Symphony Orchestra. In
addition to being an award winning songwriter, her writing credits
include poetry and essays on environmental issues for Jacksonville Today
Magazine and Riverside Avondale Preservation, Inc. Newspaper. A
longtime environmental educator, she developed a multi-disciplinary
curriculum for environmental education for teachers in Duval County and
has written and edited environmental education materials for the
University of North Florida and for Simon and Schuster.