Month: August 2025

Fog: From Both Sides Now

In Carl Sandburg’s classic poem,  the fog arrives “on little cat feet,” sits silently and moves on. But on the Northern California coast, fog doesn’t tiptoe. It billows and pounces. It sweeps over ridges and tumbles down ravines. It slithers up estuaries, rafts on the tides, trundles through the Golden Gate. And like a clueless houseguest, it overstays its welcome, lingering from Gray May through June Gloom into the month known elsewhere as August. We call it Fogust.

I used to resent the hulking thief that stole the summer skies. But after decades in its moist embrace, I’ve learned to look at fog, made of water droplets just like a cloud, from both sides — and to appreciate its unexpected gifts.

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Saving White Abalone–Again

The first time I held a white abalone, its muscular foot pressed into my palm, its shell lifted, and two googly black eyes and flexible tentacles emerged. But even more remarkable than the endearing appearance of this iconic sea snail is its survival.

In the 1960s and ’70s,  white abalone—prized for their tender meat and iridescent mother-of-pearl shells—were overfished almost to extinction. Today, there are more  in captivity than in their home waters off the coast of Baja. But a sudden cutoff of federal funding to the keystone breeding program has put this mollusk  at risk—again.

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