Friday, July 22, 2011
Coal Trip Day 6- Journey to the center of the earth or at least a little ways under Wayne County
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Day 5- Seeing is believing
Today I was afforded the opportunity to tour mining areas that had been repurposed and mining areas that have been reclaimed. The repurposed mines were transformed into a shopping center and an airport. Both of these businesses would most likely have been impossible due to topography or lack of flat land. The repurposing of land that had been leveled as a result of the mining operations has and will continue to benefit the economy of the community in many ways.
To visit the reclaimed areas we went onto property owned by the CoalMac coal mining company. This company specializes in surface mining operations including mountaintop removal. I had my own ideas about surface mining or I should say I had some ideas that I had half heartedly committed to as a result of media exposure. The first few minutes of the tour of the mining area did little to dispell these ideas. Mountain top removal was as ugly this day
as any other time I had seen it, but then we saw the bird and then we saw the meadow full of different types of plants that held all kinds of insects that scattered as we waled to the edge. From the edge of this meadow and in several more places as the day progressed I would witness land teaming with biodiversity and successful succession. The same coal company which had removed all traces of life as they extracted coal had gone back with forethought and purpose to bring back life to the land. Life that would draw more life and continue as if uninterrupted. This was not what I had seen on the news, but this what I have seen with my own eyes. What I have seen with my own eyes I will tell others including future students they must see for themselves. Telling them will not be enough although I will tell. My plan is to encourage and support their own explorations so that they may weigh the evidence and come to their own conclusions.
Day 4- coal time travel
Today I was given the chance to look into the past and the future of coal in West Virginia. The history found in the Coal Exhibition Mine www.beckley.org/exh was wonderfully enhanced by the richness of our guide's story telling ability and the sound of his West Virginian dialect. You really got a sense of the courage and dedication it must have required for the workers to have crawled into that mine on a daily basis. I don't believe for a second that these men worked the mine out of dispare or lack of opportunity. They could have walked away or found something easier but I believe they were dedicated to their families, their fellow workers, and there was a sense of pride in the work that they were doing. Even Marvin, our guide, responded with that same sense of accomplishment in his voice when he said " I was in the mines for 24 years."
Touring the coal mining camp was one of the highlights of the trip. Seeing how the miners and their families lived, being in rooms that they walked in with things they possibly touched really brought allowed me to
paint a picture in my head of what their life may have been like. However, being a sceptic I believe I saw the best examples of a coal camp minus the layers of coal dust that must have covered everything and I still cling to images of extreme poverty that I previously thought existed everywhere in all coal camps.
From the past to the future of coal in our time travel adventure, our next stop was a company that manufactures highwall mining equipment. This company creates these multimillion dollar machines in West Virginia and ships them all over the world. The use of exclusive technology as well as the pride in workmanship displayed by this company certainly carries on the heritage of coal mining in West Virginia. My chief concern with the innovative technology is loss of jobs for workers since this equipment requires fewer operators.
Tuesday, July 19, 2011
Coal Trip Day 3-
Later in the day we were in Nuttalburg where there was again an enormous amount of diversity among the plants and trees. It is hard to believe that that reclamation all happened naturally, and looks as if it is moving at a much quicker pace towards what it was originally. Meanwhile the Joe Knob area with man's "helping hand" lags far behind the natural reclamation of the Nuttalburg area. However, the Joe Knob reclamation area is a far cry from the waste land of what was at the bottom of the hill in the form of the surface mining taking place. We are at least trying now to reclaim this land, but how long will it take for us to improve this process or educate ourselves so that we each accept personal responsibilty for what has occured and change focus from wants to needs?
Monday, July 18, 2011
Day 2 continued
Testing the waters of the yellow river was also very enlightening. Our group tested the water discolored by the bacteria that changes the pyrite present in this coal mining area to an acid and found the water to be much more acidic than the water in the main stream which lacked the brownish color and thus lacked the bacteria in such great quantities. It is so hard to believe that this beautifully moving water that should be teaming with life is barren of the trout and other fish that would normally frequent a stream that moves like this. It seems like such a waste even though it did appear beautiful.
Coal Trip--Day 2
First day of coal trip
I had my first upclose observation of a
windmill today in Parsons, WV. My first thoughts are about their other worldly appearance. The stark difference between this giant manmade structure placed amongst the natural beauty of the surrounding environment was appealing to my eye. The sound made by the blades reminded me of the noise generated by the space travel machine in the movie "Contact". I am not sure about having one of these in my backyard but it has to be better than the railrod crossing located 100 feet from my home door now.
We also went to the town of Thomas and heard about the history of the area and were able to make some first hand observtions concerning changes in the town. What appeared tobe a bustling coal town back in the day is now filled with several refurbished older buildings that house an eclectic group of artsy craft stores and eateries. Our speaker drew our attention to the differences between northern coal towns and southern coal towns noting the lack of violence in strikes in the north versus the southern coal towns. From what I picked up, it appears that the treatment of the workers by the owners of tbe coal companies had a great influence on the level o violence that history would record for these people. No surprises there. Inhumanity breeds inhumanity.
Tuesday, July 5, 2011
Wednesday, May 4, 2011
Coal Camp Assignment
All the pictures that I saw were of a small collection of very well kept homes. The town that evolved from this camp still exists today, but is so small that it doesn't even have a post office. It appears that the town did not grow after deep mining left the area, but recently Beards Fork and coal has entered the news again as a new coal company based out of India proposes to strip mine and fill the valley that the town occupies.