An abstract “tree of life” design with African folk design motifs by Meredith Eliassen, 2020.

News of fire in the grove of towering conifers in Big Basin Redwoods State Park in August 2020 and images of smoldering red flames inside the base trunk of a beloved ancient redwood offer no comfort in Northern California’s oppressive heat and smoke of the last week. However, as a native Californian, I am optimistic nature’s intelligent design means these groves will be reborn. The ecology of the Redwoods is resiliently designed by a higher power. The thousand-plus-year-old ancient Redwoods, or “the Ancients,” have a dense fire-resistant bark that can be a foot thick. The Redwood groves hold particular significance to local California Indian tribes who harvested basket-making material from the sacred forest floors for function and ceremony. Indigenous Californian have been great stewards of the region’s natural ecology as ethnobotanists. Native Americans understand the need for planned burns to maintain groves and manage ground-level growth during long cold seasons so in times of drought, there is no excessive fuel for fires.

Lightning strikes caused this fire. Nature may not be convenient to us humans who are set in our ways and live and build homes in densely wooded areas with little humility for their dominant ecology, but Nature takes care of us even in our ignorance. As the Ancients of the Redwood groves reach to the sky, branches are few near the forest floor. The Ancients as Redwood ancestors watch over the passing of generations from above. The largest redwoods seeming stand alone. When the fogs return with moisture from the nearby Pacific ocean, we may, if we watch over time, see how life is naturally renewed. In familial clusters within the redwoods, the oldest surviving trees scarred by past blazes stand in the middle, a few younger giants will support the center Ancestor, and a circle of younger trees will eventually emerge in a beautiful chain of life. Let us be hopeful and humble as nature does her best work.

Amendment XIX was ratified a hundred years ago today. It asserts the right of citizens of the United States to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any State on about of sex. It is a work in progress with every generation as democracy remains a political experiment. Let’s give this amendment the power it deserves and needs… women vote women vote women vote… design by Meredith Eliassen, 2020.

When my workplace responded to the pandemic, we thought it would be for a few weeks. Nobody imagined we might be wearing masks for a prolonged time. This was the last drawing on my board done around March 15, 2020. “Be not afraid of sudden fears.” Proverbs 3:25. Wise words, indeed. I am also thinking that we should not be complacent in these surreal circumstances. I am picturing lots of flowers in the coming weeks as I return to the drawing board after a working summer. I look forward to more frequent posts as I gain my rhythm again. Drawing by Meredith Eliassen, 2020.

Remembering Zorro…

August 10, 2020

Zorro seemed to think that he was a little fox hiding when visiting me in a dream and tugged on my sleeve to get my attention, but I see you and remember you. Each decade emerges like a fox camouflaged as just another year with the hint of winter but no sign yet of the new growth of spring. When I posted this image at the New Year, I had no idea what the new decade would bring. My dear family friend is gone, but he is never far away. Design by Meredith Eliassen, 2020.

Thanks to my new friends who sent messages of encouragement. I just today submitted a book manuscript I have been working on since April 2019, so I hope to pull out my beloved Micron pens and return to the drawing board soon. Blessings to you all, MME