The Art of Conservation 2023
Hope & Climate Action
The Writer’s Room
First Place Awards
Consider for a Moment
Claus Smith
The ocean surrounds Martha’s Vineyard,
The dunes protect it from the harsh conditions,
The beach grass sways in the breeze —
Like wind chimes in our ears.
The mist from the waves lights up in the sunshine, creating a wall of rainbows:
This is what makes Martha’s Vineyard special.
The warm golden beaches are not sandy anymore,
Covered with dead fish and plastic bottles.
The dunes are no longer,
The beach grass shriveled and gray.
Instead of a wall of rainbows, it’s a wall of trash.
What happens if we destroy our ecosystem?
Our beaches
Our oceans
The fish and the sharks
The segals and osprey
What is Martha’s Vineyard worth if whatever surrounds it is defunct?
The island community and I rely on the ocean because of what it offers:
Picking wampum
Making rock sculptures
Playing in the waves
Seaweed murals
What is it worth to lose all that?
Lady of the Leaves
Ayla Strom
Her hands reach out,
touch the ground.
the dry, cracked plastic strewn around.
the plastic fades,
through the cracks water spreads
in the newly fertile soil
glimmering seedlings sprout
they reach for the sun,
leaves outstretched like the palms
of a human hand.
She smiles
Her smile radiates against the earth like the
sun on a warm June day.
The leaves on her face.
Scales like a dragon.
Shimmer in the newfound light
She is the lady of the leaves
I am the lady of the leaves.
We Define Hope Differently
Adriana Young
I see that bird carcass on the shore,
Esophagus filled to the brim with plastic.
I see the fish eyes rolled and scaled bellies up,
With black death enveloping their depths.
You speak to me of hope and all I see is their lifeless eyes.
Forever staring up into an atmosphere polluted with your carelessness,
As if to say, you’ve got blood on your hands, just as much as the rest of em’.
You speak to me like you’ve forgotten that fact,
Tossing around words as if your actions and the actions of millions have not condemned lives.
You speak to me like you have forgotten the why to the action,
And why do you do it? What do you see? What compels you so?
I see all those dead because our kind was thoughtless in deeming them less,
And even more thoughtless in how our choices enveloped them.
Where you see hope, I see a debt owed,
A life sentence burned into every generation’s burdened soul,
If hope is the thing to move you to action I challenge you:
Dig your claws into it like the wild things we’ve killed —
It’s always been a skinny malnourished thing,
And you’ve always underestimated the negligible.
With scars along its back,
And hands so bloodied,
You wouldn’t be able to make out its fingers,
But it stands, gripping your soul ‘till
They leave you just as steady as the breaths they take —
And you stand because they won’t let your bones quiver,
Or your head fall,
Even if they have to hold back your scalp in a red-drenched fist,
I believe you’ve forgotten how it is to hope,
Your definition is my evidence.
It is not needed for its soft demeanor,
But for its resistance to all that brushes against it,
And in its grip you will not fall,
Even as we cling to each other,
Tripping in our effort,
For we are not a species that achieves alone.
Special Distinctions
Polar Bears
Grace Cotton
Polar bears are struggling
To live
On rapidly melting ice
In the rapidly warming arctic.
Polar bears are struggling
To find food
To find shelter
To protect their babies.
Polar bears can’t find
What they need
To succeed
In simply living.
But what if we all started to
Recycle?
Save energy and
Even adopt a polar bear,
So they can have a greater chance
at living?
Summer
Jack Gallagher
Summer
A bright, illuminating sunrise,
Pushing away the shade of winter.
Distant conversations,
Calming, warm sunlight,
The cold water of a lake.
A source of light in darkness,
A glimmer of hope,
A saving grace.
Light reflects off of deep blue,
Melted ice cream dripped along the sidewalk.
Summer’s eternal beauty shines.
The beauty of summer is being lost,
Our poor choices, coming with a cost.
Work to preserve its daylight,
Keep our planet upright.
The Forbidden Coat
Nick Merriam
Cedar lives on a small Island off the coast of Maine. He grew up sailing and lobster fishing with his father. He looked forward every summer to sailing down to the Cape, or one day pulling up the cage to see that blue lobster his father always told him about. This was all he knew, and this was all he needed to know as he loved doing it.
Later Cedar grew up and followed his father as a lobster fisherman. He was still searching for that blue lobster he had yet to see. He heard about a large oil deposit that had been found near the Island. He ruled against the construction of an oil rig off the coast. “It will only harm the wildlife,” he said.
Although many on the island stood by him, his words were meaningless to the big company owners. The rig was built, and Cedar grew older. He has now gone many years with the noise of the rig and the giant oil ships that pass by. Although his hatred for the rig has never faded, he has grown accustomed to it, he has to.
The rig aged, and its neglect was becoming more and more apparent. Cedar had a son of his own now, and he was teaching him how to sail and fish as his father did to him. Soon the rig’s wear had taken its shape, and it burst open.
The ocean turned a dark brown, as thousands of gallons of oil spilled into the once vibrant ocean that surrounded the island. Cedar could only watch as what he has been doing for his entire life faded away. He walked the beaches only to see pools of oil filled with dead animals. Birds, fish, and what he lived off of, lobsters were all being washed up on the shore. He walked for hours, thinking of what was, this is all his son would know, the ocean coated with black death that killed all that touched it. Cedar noticed something that stood out in the pools of oil. He got closer, noticing the shiny glint it gave off. He picked up none other than the blue lobster he had been searching for all those years, but it was dead and decaying, along with everything else on the beach.
He came back home to find his son writing, a letter it seemed. He got closer to read what the scribbled writing said.
Dear oil people, why did you do this? I want to swim but I cannot swim, I want to fish but I cannot fish. Why did you ruin our lives for money? Help us fix this.
The Field
Karla Robadel
The little girl prances
along the wide open field
hidden behind old homes and beloved neighborhoods.
She is filled with wonder, dreams and adventures,
She escapes from a reality.
Late afternoon
The field awakens.
The little girl places,
Her feet on gold.
The field is a home,
an addition to the neighborhood,
a place that feels like a big hug,
soothes the soul,
relieves the mind,
allows the sadness to fade,
heals the body and clears the mind,
A home.
The little girl, am I
The little girl, we all are.
The field.
A playground that sparkles.
Shines bright.
A treasure that holds a deep deep meaning,
The field.
The little girl wishes to not let go,
Longing for her treasure,
Her happiness,
To stay forever.
Her home.
Her gold.
Her dream land.
The field.
VCS Staff Picks
Our Home
Matilda Backus-Clement
Hope runs quickly
from those who don’t see
Their eyes glued
With oil
Their vision blurred
With smog
Hope flies freely
In the minds of those who dance
On the visions of springtime
On the memories of home
Hope is running quickly
Down the tears of those
who crack
Under the pressure
of the fallen
Under the weights of who’s to come
Hope is flying silent in the summer winds
That pull us
Far from the screen doors of reality
From the cage of fleeting time
But Time will fleet,
Doors will close,
The eyes glued with oil
don’t deny
They don’t bargain
For one last scrap of snow
For one last patch of grass
So they can fly
With feathers drenched in tar
They know they will fall
As the weights of reality remain,
Pulling our memories far beyond screen doors
Beckoning us into flames
Stealing from our children
Blinding them at birth
To the place we used to call
Our Home
Summer Camp
Penny Haddad
‘Neath the Pines
lie bunches of needles,
air filled with sweet grass,
and girl’s laughter is
carried on the lake breeze.
A pristine forest
littered with cozy cabins
nestled between towering pines,
overlooking sky-high mountains
that stand stagnant
above the cerulean oasis-
This is the Lake.
Hope.
Algae blooms cover the rich color
of the water below,
wrappers litter the
sweet green grass,
ominous clouds envelop the
clear horizon.
Less.
“Climate Change,” “Global Warming,” “Global Weirding”
Emissions blanketing our reality.
Twisting our picturesque biosphere,
into a shell of its former self.
Hope
Less.
Ronan Kelly
(untitled essay)
As I look back on the early 21st century, it’s difficult to imagine how people could have been so blind to climate change dangers. The evidence was there all along – rising sea levels, more frequent and intense natural disasters, melting glaciers, and Arctic sea ice – yet people seemed more concerned with their own short-term gains than our planet’s long-term health.
But now, as a member of a future generation, I live with the consequences of that shortsightedness. Our world is much different than it was a few decades ago. Weather is unpredictable and extreme, with droughts, floods, and heat waves becoming the new norm. Entire ecosystems have been destroyed, leading to the extinction of countless plant and animal species. And the ocean, which once teemed with life, is now a graveyard of bleached coral reefs and plastic waste.
As a result of these changes, we have had to adapt in ways that previous generations could not have imagined. In some parts of the world, people have had to abandon their homes as rising sea levels and more powerful storms have made it impossible to live there. Other areas struggle to access clean water due to droughts and desertification. And as temperatures rise, the threat of famine and disease will become ever greater.
But perhaps the most devastating aspect of climate change is its impact on social and economic inequality. The poorest and most vulnerable people in our society are the ones most affected by climate change. However, they have the least resources to deal with it. Developing nations suffer as wealthy nations burn fossil fuels and pollute the atmosphere.
It’s easy to look back and judge past people for their lack of action. But as we confront the challenges of our own time, we must remember that we are also part of a larger system that perpetuates inequality and injustice. We must work together to create a more sustainable and safer world for all people and living beings.
The good news is that it’s not too late. We still have a chance to make a difference. We have time to slow down climate change’s worst effects and create a more just and sustainable world. A massive collective effort will need to go beyond individual action to enact a systemic change. We need to shift our focus away from short-term profits and toward long-term sustainability. We need to invest in renewable energy and clean technology. We ought to hold corporations and governments accountable for their role in creating and continuing the crisis.
As a member of a future generation, I hope we can look back on this moment in history as a turning point. A moment where we came together as a global community to confront the greatest challenge of our time. We created a brighter, more sustainable future for all. The time to act is now before it’s too late.
The Face of Our Island
Nola Savard
Our oceans
Wild and wavy
Crash against ancient red cliffs
Washing the history of our island away
The antiquity of our home
Rapidly fleeting
Swiftly depleting
Wind and rain whipping
Battering bright earth
Red argil dripping
Like blood from a nose
We must plant new roots
In our island home
To preserve the life that resides
Behind
The face of our island
Coconuts
Taz Strom
Waves rise and fall upon
soft shores of broken rock:
coconuts strewn upon the
carpet of stone as if thrown with abandon,
a feeling of unkempt unrest upon our shore in the ombra of the moon.
A breeze blows with abandon by a force shrouded from the naked eye,
as the black sky opens its eyes staring down upon our pitiful planet with blankets of tears.
Then as if sent from the heavens,
the tempest of night descends.
A strong gale toppling waves as fast as it can forms,
stripping the bleak littoral of litter and leaving
a fresh coating of flotsam and jetsam.
Seaweed and sea life long deceased decorate the freshly
polished coastline,
dotted with newly felled coconuts
strewn upon the rocks,
as if thrown with abandon.
Garden girl: The home I long for
Kamar Dehaney
I am a small part of it
And it’s a big part of me.
All I’ve ever known.
As my feet are firmly planted
on the ground I hear it breathe
In and out so softly
like it’s asleep.
In the day, when there is no wind
The dahlias, holly bushes and lavender
In my garden slowly rustle and sway
As the earth engages in peaceful slumber.
My mother used to say the earth
has a bride so we must protect it.
When I was but a babe I
Would lay awake at night thinking
of that story and I made a vow
To Have a special relationship with
What I hold so close to my heart
As if I were its bride.
I depend on the earth for it
Presents to me a beautiful sunrise.
The pink and deep orange of a morning sky
Never seen before and never to be
Seen again.
In the twilight realm of night
Where her majesty the moon shines
Her brightest, her light dancing
In the Ink black pond of the forest,
At the break of day
when the birds are flying through
The trees serenading each other,
The sun’s gift spill through the
leaves like honey, awakening me
With its magnificence.
I could never bring myself to hurt
This earth, my home.
MV Climate Action Award
Help Us Be Heard
Hannah McCormick
Leaves start to wither on the ground,
We don’t know how much we’ve lost,
Or how much we’ve found.
This cloud of pollution that passes by,
Let’s think of a solution before we create a lie.
Little do we know how much this affects us,
Little do we know how much this could break us.
Our only hope is to share the word,
So everyone can listen and we can be heard.
This climate crisis needs to stop now,
But I don’t know where, or when, or how.
You need to help me fix this mess,
Before our planet calls out in distress.