111 Faces of Klamath Falls - Photography Project, Week 12

Hello!

The next three subjects in “111 Faces of Klamath Falls” are Joseph, Ed, and Nicole. 

I consider Joseph a friend, but our connection is unusual.   We’re not connected on any social media, and we don’t have each other’s phone numbers, but we see each other around every so often, when it’s time to see each other around every so often.  I had JUST been thinking that I would like to include Joseph in this project and was hoping to run into him soon, and just like that…I ran into him at the park!   A few weeks or months will pass and I’ll think, ”I haven’t seen Joseph around,”  and then just like that… I’ll see him!   

Ed and Nicole aren’t complete random strangers, but I hadn’t actually ever met them.


Joseph - 34

Joseph - 34/111

Joseph - 34/111

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Communing with nature.”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m an easy-going guy."


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: For the problems we’re facing now, with division and divisiveness, Joseph said, “we’ve got to bridge the gap to bring each other together as one untied family.  We’re one human family that is being divided by everything…we need to be more loving towards each other.”


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: Joseph is a filmmaker and for as long as I’ve known him, he’s been dreaming of, and working toward doing a project with Netflix.  (A film called, “Smile and Be Afraid.”)  He continues to persist, and he’s optimistic that he’s getting closer to someday making this a reality! Best wishes and all the good vibes that this comes to fruition soon!

Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I would like to be remembered as a good person, as a kind person, as a happy person, and as an honest and reliable person.”



Ed - 35

Ed - 35/111

Ed - 35/111

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “My Grandkids!”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m 71 years old and I’m still alive!”  

Ed also added that he climbs Mt. Shasta every year!


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: “I don’t have solutions, I have a few ideas…dialogue solves a lot of problems, but it’s not a strong trait in a lot of our leaders today.”


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “At this point in my life, my goal is to pass some of my knowledge and my business to my children, and give them the same opportunities that I had.”


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I want to be remembered as fair, and that I listened to other people and helped to guide them with calmness and serenity.”


Ed is a farmer.  I spotted Ed doing some spring cleaning with fire.  (Burning to clear weeds.)  I pulled off to the side of the road to observe his process and then walked over near him, careful not to catch myself on fire, and  explained that  I had stopped to watch and ask a few questions about burning and other tractor options.

Ed and I visited for quite a while.  It would take well over a thousand words to explain to you the significance of our encounter.  It was a meaningful exchange, and important to me.  I’ve spent the past week considering just how I would try to adequately explain this if you’re not from around here.  Someday, I’ll write about this topic at length, but this photo project isn’t the right place. Instead, I’ll give you the super condensed explanation of some background, so you’ll understand just how special our visit was to me.  

Please understand, this is an extremely over-simplified explanation. (and the explanation is coming from my point of view, and opinion.)   I’m only sharing it because meeting Ed and talking with him has made an impact on me.  I meet people in my photo projects who will stick with me forever, and Ed is one of those people.  

One of the biggest issues in all of Klamath County, is our ongoing water crisis.  Agriculture is a main industry here.  Another important part of our community is our Indigenous People - The Klamath Tribes. We’ve been battling severe drought conditions for over two decades.  In the most concise explanation I can give, there’s too many consumptive users and not enough water to sustain our ecosystems and agricultural industry.  Remember, I’m over-simplifying this!  Our water crisis has resulted in an ecological crisis and a crisis within our community, or communities. We must fight to preserve species and prevent fish from going extinct, which are culturally significant to the Klamath Tribes, and also protected by both the endangered species act, as well as protected by a nation-to-nation treaty with the US Government.  Basically, by law, and by law of nature, we need to protect species from going extinct.  Because the Tribe has Senior Water Rights, and because our Irrigators also have water rights, and of course, crops can’t grow without water and fish can’t live without healthy water and the endangered fish are of critical cultural importance to the Tribe, and were once a subsistence food source…the result is a divided community because there hasn’t been enough water to sustain thriving fish populations (because of poor water quality and a host of other reasons) and enough for irrigation needs.

If you don’t know me personally, I’m a Klamath Tribal Member, but I also ventured into farming.  Well, I can’t make that claim any longer, since this will be the second year in a row that I’m not going to farm.  What I desire more than anything — are solutions that will prevent our endangered fish species from going extinct, solutions that will save our fish and sustain agriculture, for regenerative agricultural practices to become part of the solution, and for our divided communities to heal and thrive.

Ed sort of figured out who I was after I stopped to ask him questions about burning vs. tilling, but I hadn’t realized that I also sort of knew who he was until after we had talked for a while. We just visited.  We had a dialogue.  We talked about the problems in Klamath County, about agriculture, about fish going extinct, about what could have been done differently in the past so that we wouldn’t still be in this situation, and we touched on racism and white privilege, and what that means to Ed. We just talked. Ed shared his knowledge with me, we laughed, and at times, I even got a little teary-eyed.  I lost track of time.  I don’t know if we talked for 20 minutes or if it was closer to an hour.  Our conversation was honest, respectful, and at times, a difficult one. We started out talking farmer-to-farmer. Our conversation then evolved to one between a farmer-to-Indigenous woman+environmental & social justice activist. Eventually, our conversation evolved to a HUMAN-to-HUMAN conversation.   We were having a dialogue.  Together, we were dreaming of better days and better ways…to a future when we’re united, collaborating, and thriving.

Ed is right…open dialogue and actual human-to-human communication is critical to solving so many of our problems.  He showed me right there, with calmness and serenity, just how much can happen when we have human-to-human dialogue.

I appreciated Ed’s time, knowledge, and conversation.   If you’re from around here, know of our ongoing crisis, or know me personally, you understand the significance of our conversation. You also understand just how rare this sort of dialogue is, and just how much it’s needed. I stopped just to ask Ed a few farmer questions but left with so much more. Once again, a subject I met has refilled me with hope and optimism.


Nicole - 36

Nicole - 36/111

Nicole - 36/111

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “My dog!”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m a Grandmother of three.”


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: For the problem of racism, Nicole’s solution is, “killing people with kindness.”


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “My dream is to be rich in love.”  “I have Shawn,” Nicole added, when describing how she’s working towards it.  (Remember VaShawn?  You met him back in week three!)


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I want to be remembered for always giving a helping hand, and as a great friend, mother, and girlfriend.”




Sincere appreciation to you - Joseph, Ed, and Nicole! Thank you!


Thanks for following along. Wishing you another great week, and some great dialogue. Let’s solve some problems together.  

111 Faces of Klamath Falls - Photography Project, Week 11

Happy Spring! Thanks for checking in!

Our next three subjects are Ireland, Dave, Tasha, and a bonus person…Layla! 

Ireland is a recent acquaintance.  Dave, Tasha, and Layla are strangers I met at the park, and they saved this week’s post from being just a one-subject week!  I’m not being overly dramatic when I say that I was *this close* to giving up and only sharing Ireland’s photo for the week.   It’s a challenge to find strangers who are up for letting another stranger photograph & “interview” them.  I now know that I can’t let myself get in the position where I don’t have at least a subject or two lined up for the week. 


Ireland - 31

Ireland - 31/111

Ireland - 31/111


Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Sunbathing!”

I share Ireland’s delight in sunbathing, especially in Klamath.  Have you noticed the sun shines differently, more intensely here?  There’s something pretty special the way the sun shines in Klamath Falls…when the sun shines down on your face and hits your cheeks, it can warm you to your center unlike anywhere else you’ve ever been.  It’s an instantaneous mood-boosting, spirit-lifting, life-affirming warmth. 


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m resilient.” 

Ireland has had to deal with some life-altering health issues, and it was only fairly recently that she finally received a diagnosis.  She’s become resilient because she had to for her own well-being.  She remains optimistic, and she knows her own personal life experiences will help her to help others in the future, but it’s been difficult at times.  She’s young, ambitious, and she aspires to help others, but she acknowledged that at times, she’s felt discouraged by having to cope with so many health challenges at such a young age. 

I’m hoping for the day to come when Ireland is well, and doesn’t have to be so strong & resilient.  


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: Ireland envisions a new way of allocating how our federal tax dollars are used. She would like to see a system where we get to choose how to solve our societal problems, specific to the community where we live.   “We vote with our tax dollars,” Ireland said, “taxes would be used democratically.” She imagines a system where federal tax dollars are directed back to the communities from which they came, and we, the taxpayer, get to specify how we want that revenue to be distributed.  We would decide where we want our income tax to be allocated, whether it be toward environmental health, the military, border security, or anything we choose.  Ireland wants us to be able to see our tax dollars at work in the communities where we live. It’s Ireland’s vision that a completely different system of tax revenue distribution would enable us to build the local communities that we desire, by being able to fund the programs that are important to us each individually, and locally. 

I really wish I had used a recorder or voice recording app.  I’m just barely scratching the surface of Ireland’s vision for a new tax system.  We could have talked at length about her idea, and I hope I’m conveying it in such a way to do it proper justice.  

 

Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: Ireland’s goal is to become a Naturopathic Doctor.  She’s currently a pre-med student and will attend naturopath school after she graduates in a couple months! “I’ll continue to broaden my understanding of health and continue to learn and grow,” Ireland said.  “My dream is to have a successful career and to be well known for what I do, and help as many people as I can in life, with their health,” Ireland added.  

 

Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I want to be remembered as someone really intelligent.  I want to discover something groundbreaking…and if that doesn’t happen, that’s fine too.” 


Ireland will soon be graduating and leaving Klamath Falls. It was important for me to include some OIT students in this project because Oregon Tech is such a critical & valuable part of our community.  Wishing Ireland all the best of luck and success, and I can’t wait to read about your groundbreaking and life-improving, possibly life-saving, discovery someday.  


Tasha (left) and her daughter Layla (right) - 32 

Tasha (left) and Layla (right) - 32/111

Tasha (left) and Layla (right) - 32/111


I got a little teary-eyed after meeting this little gem of a human, Layla.  I just wish you could see the way Layla passionately and whole-heartily wants for a better planet for us all.  She gives me hope. 

Tasha’s answers are immediately below, and then Layla’s answers will follow beneath.  

Tasha’s answers:

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Jesus.”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m about to get my GED!”

Congratulations, Tasha!

Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: Tasha wants to be able to help kids, youth, and teens early so that they can make good choices. 

Tasha is clean and sober today, and her life experience has inspired her to want to be able to reach our youth early in life, before they have problems or troubles, so that we can help to shape their paths to a bright and successful future. 


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “My goal is to help get people to heaven by spreading the news of God.”


Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I want to be remembered as a great evangelist.” 


Layla’s answers:

Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “Helping nature.” 

Layla couldn’t contain her excitement as she went on to explain to me just how much she loves nature and animals!  

Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I’m doing well in science.  I’m a good science student.  I’m in the 4th grade, and I love science.”


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: For the problem of littering, which impacts fish, wildlife, water and the environment, Layla said, “the solution to help parks is a law requiring you to throw your garbage away when you go to the beach or park.”  Layla added, “I just want to make the world better.  Nature is beautiful.”  

(We wouldn’t need litter laws if we could just be a little more like Layla. )


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: “My goal is to become a forest ranger or something that helps nature.  Nature was given to us and we need to take care of it.”

 

Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I want to be remembered as a person who helped everyone and helped nature,” Layla answered, “and I want to bring peace.”  Layla also added, “I don’t want things to be bad. I miss how the world used to be when it was kind and sweet.”  

Same, Layla.  Same. 

Wow!  This young lady is out to do big things for us all.  Good things.  

Tasha and Layla, thank you.  Best wishes for your bright futures.   (and ours.)


Dave - 33

Dave - 33/111

Dave - 33/111


Q: What’s something that brings you delight?

A: “I’m a Christian…I love nature and everything the Lord made.”  

Dave added that he’s a farmer and a gardener and he loves to work the ground and work with plants.”


Q: What’s something great about yourself? (a trait or accomplishment)

A: “I love good things, I like righteousness, peace, rest, and truth.”


Q: Is there a problem for which you have a solution?

A: My note-taking was slower than Dave spoke, but I hope I’ve adequately summed up his answer. Dave sees many problems in the world such as abuse of powers, inhumane treatment of people, and millions living in poverty.  He sees the solution as being when the Lord returns to end it.  


Q: What’s your life’s dream/goal, and how are you working towards it?

A: Dave answered that he has no earthly dreams, and added, “my dream is to go to heaven.” 

 

Q: How would you like to be remembered? (personal legacy statement)

A: “I don’t have a plan on being remembered, I don’t plan on coming to an end.”


Thank you Ireland, Tasha, Layla, and Dave!  


And thank you for following along for another week!