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Water Story: Swimming in the River

by Christine Finlayson

The Smith River runs through Jedediah Smith State Park in northern California, just over the border from Brookings, Oregon.

Our first glimpse of this oasis came after six days of camping on the foggy Oregon coast, trapped in a tent with a toddler and a preschooler. When the sun finally broke through, we couldn’t wait to jump in the Smith River and swim.

Although the memory is years old, seeing this photo always brings me back to a place of peace-and it’s why our family treasures clean water.

Christine writes mysteries that are set in the Pacific Northwest, and each one includes a river, lake, or beach. It’s just too hard to stay away from water! Learn more about her by checking out her website.

Posted on June 29, 2012 in Memory, Photo, Water Story · Comments { 1 }

Water Story: Time Travel

by Rowenna Miller

Fetching water the time traveller's way.

The pump is perhaps an eighth of a mile away.

I’ve made the trek three times today already, once for a fire bucket to keep by the fire for safety, and twice for washwater. So, all tallied, I’ll have walked a mile for water when I return.

The bucket is light as I set out, just scarred metal hanging from a thin metal handle, but full it pulls at my arms. They’ll be sore tonight and screaming tomorrow, because I’m not used to this.

“Ha, don’t you have enough boys in camp to make those water runs for you?” a friend in a blue Continental uniform calls, teasing.

“They’re drilling,” I answer, smiling patiently. Perhaps I should make the guys do the heavy lifting—but I need the water now, and I can manage.

I fill the bucket at the pump—a modern pump that only asks you to lift its handle and it willingly produces clean, potable water—and try not to splash my shoes. I mostly succeed. I hoist the bucket and begin to walk back to our camp. It takes a few paces to find my balance with the sloshing bucket and I leave a sodden spot on my petticoats.

The handle digs into my hand. If I didn’t know better, I would think it was grinding directly into the bones of my fingers. Water is heavy for something you can see through–I’ve estimated that, full, the bucket weighs over thirty pounds. I try wrapping the handle in my apron, and this helps. The spot where the handle meet my skin, however, is still indented and angrily red by the time I set the bucket down next to the fire and fill a kettle to heat water to wash dishes.

And let’s keep in mind—I’m doing this for fun. Revolutionary War reenactment is my hobby, a weekend pastime, not my day-to-day life. In the end, I’m choosing to make the trek and haul that water—and it’s still a more convenient way to get water than many of my forebears enjoyed. Of course, we expect that from the world two hundred years ago—but when I return to the 21st century, I fill a glass of water from the tap and draw a piping hot bath from safe water sources. Not everyone living in this century can claim that.

I’m reminded every time I roll my sore shoulders and flex my bruised fingers.

Rowenna writes, sews, and sometimes finds herself in other centuries. Mostly she lives in the Midwest with her husband and incredibly persistent cat. They are expecting their first child this fall (though they haven’t broken the news to the cat yet). Find out more about Rowenna by following her on twitter (@rowennam), or check out her blog!

Submit a water story! No donation required, and it’ll enter you for a great, water-themed prize drawing that goes to support charity: water the organization. Water stories are accepted any time, from now to June 28. Two more giveaways to win!

Posted on June 10, 2012 in Memory, Photo, Water Story · Comments { 0 }

Water Story: Fountains

Fountains by Sarah Nicolas

When I was a kid, I was absolutely floored to learn there were places in the world where people died from not having clean water to drink. Almost every mall, office building, and housing community in the US uses clear, sparkling water as decoration. It doesn’t make sense. It reeks of injustice. Even to a six year old.

Sarah Nicolas is an aspiring young adult writer living in Orlando, FL. Learn more about her by visiting her website or following her on twitter (@sarah_nicolas).

Submit a water story? No donation required, and it’ll enter you for a great, water-themed prize drawing that goes to support charity: water the organization. Water stories are accepted any time, from now to June 28. Two more giveaways to win!

Posted on June 6, 2012 in Photo, Water Story · Comments { 0 }

Water Story: Mizu Nomihodai

Some of you may have heard this story before. But it impacted me in ways I feel to this day so. I guess that’s okay.

Happy World Water Day

 

In November of 2009, as I neared the end of Mizu Nomihodai (All you can drink Water, my first charity: water campaign), I got this phone call at my base school.

“[Unintelligible Japanese] water [unintelligible Japanese] newspaper story [unintelligible Japanese].”

I assumed this someone–a very old, grumpy man, judging by the crackling voice and potent use of Iki’s dialect–wanted to donate, but my Japanese was not that good. So I handed the phone to one of my English teachers, Michiko, with an embarrassed, “Can you please help?”

The old karate dojo on the way to Mr. Wakamura's house.

Once she’d hung up, Michiko said, “That was a Mr. Wakamura. He’d like to donate to the campaign, but he can’t drive. Shall we go to his house together tomorrow during lunch break?”

I nodded. “Of course!”

Iki roads can be narrow, barely enough for one car, and twist up and around with no apparent logic. When Michiko and I went to Mr. Wakamura’s, it was raining like the dickens. The windshield of my clunker of a car kept fogging, so I drove at about 20 kilometers an hour–plenty slow enough to crane my neck with interest upon seeing an old karate dojo, plants growing up its side.

“Ah!” Michiko stabbed the map. “That’s the dojo. We’re very close. Take the next right.”

I drove us down a long driveway, past autumn-blooming flowers, to a traditional Japanese house. Michiko rang the doorbell, and after a couple minutes, the door slid open.

“We apologize for intruding,” she said in Japanese, and we both bowed at the stooped old woman in the entryway as her husband hefted himself out of the tatami room nearby. He wore a brown jacket with professor-patches on the elbow, had wide shoulders, and a long yet abrupt face.

“Are you the Wakamuras?” Michiko continued. “This is Kat Brauer. We’re from the junior high school.”

“Yes,” the man said, shoving a white envelope at me. “Here’s the donation.”

The white envelope that contained Mr. Wakamura's donation, set against all the other donations I received through the campaign.

“Thank you very much!” I bowed again. “You are a very kind man! Uhm. Thank you for your hard work!” I didn’t know how to say much more.

“It wasn’t kindness.”

My brow crunched together, and I eyed Michiko. Did he want us to leave?

But Michiko said, “Of course you are very kind. What do you mean?”

What followed was a blur of Japanese I’ll never forget, even though–at the time–it took a few minutes for it to process. I caught words like “Nagasaki,” “World War 2,” and “child.” Then I heard “hot” and “water.” He finished with, “I don’t want anyone else to feel that.”

At the end of his short speech, he snapped, “Thank you for coming, goodbye.” We bowed again, and Michiko and I left.

Once we were back in the car, his words lightbulbed. My jaw dropped. That couldn’t've just happened…could it? I gripped the steering wheel, stared with wonder at the plain white envelope.

I turned to Michiko. “Did he…did he say…”

“Yes. He said,

‘I came to this island after the war. I’m originally from Nagasaki, and I lived there as a child during the war. I survived the atomic bombing. I remember the heat from the bomb. I remember walking for hours each day to get water afterward. When I heard about the charity, I decided to donate. It was terrible after the atomic bomb. I don’t want anyone else to feel that.’”

Michiko and I were quiet. I grabbed a nearby towel and wiped at my fogging windshield. Then, “Wow,” I murmured.

Michiko made this quintessential Japanese noise that says, Yes, that was amazing. I can’t believe it, and I’m so touched right now, too. But all that came out of her mouth was, “It was a good story.”

I swallowed. “Yeah. It was.”

Anyway.

I still get teary-eyed, thinking about that.

Feel like celebrating World Water Day? Donate to a charity, tweet or blog about the Crits for Water campaign, or even write/photograph/draw/what-not your own Water Story.

Autumn flowers near Mr. Wakamura's house.

Posted on March 22, 2012 in Memory, Photo, Water Story · Comments { 4 }

Water Story: Kyoto Rain

It rained every day my friend Danielle and I were in Kyoto. The mosquitoes were out in force, too–I got over twenty bites in one day. But I love the way the world changes, shines, even glitters, when it rains.

Photo by Kat

Want to submit a water story? No donation required, and it’ll enter you in a drawing for a great prize. Water Stories are accepted now through June 28.

Posted on March 19, 2012 in Photo, Water Story · Comments { 0 }