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Realty Meets Climate Reality

Climate Change's Rude Wake-Up Call to Living the Dream

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eye level view of clear water and stones of Smith River in summertime
Summertime on a river in northern California. (Kat Kerlin, 做TV)

My husband and I fell in love a couple of months ago. It was with a house by a river. This is the river that was a stones throw away when we were engaged 13 years ago. The river weve brought our children to every summer of the past decade. The river I love to paint, paddle, swim in and stare at. This place could be our forever home.

The house is where I spent my first night after moving to California 15 years ago. It belonged to my boss, the editor of the towns daily newspaper. He left years ago. When the house popped up for sale, my husband and I started to dream, penciled out some numbers and were stunned to realize we might just be able to make it happen.

One of the reasons we love the place is how close it is to the river. Looking at the realtor site I thought, Hmmm, maybe that river is a little too close. But my former boss had never had flooding issues and I didnt recall it being a problem. I shrugged and went back to searching cabin d矇cor on Pinterest.

A couple weeks later when we visited the place, we stood on the gravel bar below the property, my husbands eyes all wild and dreamy looking across the water, and he said to me, You know, I think our biggest concern with this place is that well never want to leave it.

man beside river
(Kat Kerlin, 做TV)

He was wrong.

The biggest concern is it is smack dab in the middle of the floodway. Not just a 500-year or 100-year floodplain. The. Flood. Way. Like, if a flood were to occur of any significance, this is where it would go. I found this after doing what I should have done immediately: looked at the  for the homes address.

Granted, the neighborhood hasnt flooded since 1964, before it was even a neighborhood. But it did flood. And if theres anything Ive learned by writing about the environment for 20 years, and accompanying 做TV flood experts like Nicholas Pinter to rivers across the U.S., its that if its a floodplain, flooding is a matter of when not if and it will likely happen sooner than expected.

Expert advice

I used an already scheduled coffee chat as an opportunity to show Pinter a printout of the FEMA map of the property, hoping beyond hope that I had somehow misread it, or that he would tell me it probably wasnt that bad. Keep in mind, Pinter is a man who has spent the better part of his career guiding people away, not toward, living on floodplains.

Me: So, Im considering buying riverfront property.

Pinter: [Grimace]

Me: I know, you thought you taught me better. Heres the map. [Map shown with hash marks running right through property.]

Pinter:  Kat [Shakes head in dismay. Furrows brow.]

Me: Im in that in love stage where heart is overriding head. We probably wont get it, but I thought Id show you while I have you here.

Pinter: [Pauses.] Look, you have to ask yourself, are you ready to drop everything and move everything to the attic whenever a big storm is coming? Are you willing to go up after a flood and muck it out, with all the mud and the stench? Are you ready to lose the house?

Great questions. Ones that made me even angrier at climate change than I was before. Even without climate change, that house would be risky; with it, wed almost surely be mucking it out of the mud eventually. Atmospheric rivers that bring large amounts of rain at once are among the many weather events expected to intensify with climate change in the coming years.

Mapping risk

I started to look at just where I could live in this state that has the beauty and nature I so strongly crave in my suburban household existence but that 勳莽紳t&紳莉莽梯;vulnerable to disaster. I overlaid maps of Californias ,  and  and the answer was: Not many. Certainly very few places I could afford.

Still lovestruck, my mind went into a rather whiny rationalization and validation mode: Well, if all of these people live in these risky places and arent agonizing over it, why shouldnt I be one of them? (Yes, I hear myself.) Should all the people of Miami, Houston, the Caribbean, every coastal city on the planet just not live there? Or maybe we could raise the house? Or if it floods, maybe we could build a cool, livable treehouse and Airbnb itdoes flood insurance cover that? (This is called grasping.)

I went online and found exactly zero stories, threads or tweets of people saying it was totally worth it to buy property within a floodplain. Meanwhile, there were hundreds of comments warning against it.

My sister and her husband just bought a home in the Bay Area. Its a renovated A-frame in the hills, surrounded by trees. Lovely. And totally at fire risk. But given they both like and want to keep their jobs and friends, they dont have much choice but to buy insurance and hope for the best.

Luckily, I dont have to buy our dream house by the river. Its a choice. But we all need a place to live, and the choices are becoming more limited in this state and others especially vulnerable to climate change.

As you may have guessed, we decided not to buy the river house. I havent given up on the idea of living within earshot of a river someday, but my home will have to be elevated and out of the flood zone.

Impermanence

The proposition did make me think in a very personal way about climate risk, resiliency and how I feel about impermanence.

I just need it to last 50 years, I found myself thinking when the realtors documents for an offer were still on my kitchen countertop. But really, there is no way to guarantee permanence for anywhere I can imagine living. Not my current home and certainly not my dream one.

 

woman looks up at live oak in New Orleans
(Kat Kerlin, 做TV)

I recently stood under an 800-year-old live oak in New Orleans, a city slowly sinking back into the ocean. That tree emerged while Genghis Khan was coming to power. It lived among the native Chitimacha people, held strong as the French, Spanish and Americans laid claim to its land, and grew within earshot of a new musicjazzrising out of the French Quarter. It absorbed the waters of Katrina and patiently watched as people started taking selfies in front of its curving limbs. Its as permanent as anything my eyes can take in and yet it, too, will be gone soon.

The Earth will go on forever, in one form or another. But it is changing, and well somehow need to be both open-eyed and resilient to where it wants to take us.

 

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 is an environmental science writer and media relations specialist at 做TV. Shes the editor of the What Can I Do About Climate Change? blog. 

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