|
Salton Sea
The sea’s surface is like a mirror.
It perfectly reflects the pale blue sky
above, and contrasts sharply with the
parched, sandy landscape that surrounds
it. Here in the middle of one of the
world’s most hostile desert environments,
the sea seems like a mirage, and for
all practical purposes should be. At
35 miles long and over 10 miles wide,
it is California’s largest inland
body of water. But all this water in
the middle nowhere seems wholly unnatural.
Nearing the shore of the vast desert lake
I drive along blanched and broken asphalt,
passing by a few abandoned motor homes,
their faded facades peppered with shotgun
fire. Across the valley the Chocolate
Mountains reflect off the water, and
the whole scene shimmers in the morning
heat, which has already soared above
90 degrees Fahrenheit. I park in front
of a vacant motel with shattered windows,
alongside a row of dead palm trees, their
stumps dried-up and sad looking. I exit
the car and the heat accosts me. A short
walk takes me to the beach. The bone-white
sand crunches strangely under my feet.
As I approach the water the air thickens
with a rancid, swampy stench. At the
water’s edge, dried to petrifaction,
lie thousands of dead fish, their mouths
agape and cartoon-like. They line the
shore like soap rings around some stagnant
bathtub, stretching off as far as the
eye can see.
The scene is a strange one, to say the
least. It’s as though I am witness
to a disaster of epic proportions, some
form of ecological holocaust. But to
know the history of this forgotten body
of water is to ponder one of the most
puzzling environmental paradoxes known
to man. At the heart of the matter lies
one of the most vicious and silent battles
in the history of Western expansion,
a battle driven by white man’s
greed and a desire to conquer nature,
a battle fought over the desert’s
most precious resource: water.
This series of photographs represents
the fruit from five separate trips to
the Salton Sea. I have spent weeks camping
along its edges and contemplating its
problems and grim future, all the time
in awe of its abundance of wildlife and
lack of human presence. It is one place
which better embodies the conflict of
man and nature than any other in the
world. It is a living example of all
of the mistakes we have made while trying
to manipulate this planet to meet our
needs. The Sea’s surface is like
a mirror, I often think to myself, and
in it we see a grim reflection of ourselves. |