BioTour.org
BioTour on the Campaign Trail is an educational non-profit of 13 people, aboard two renewable energy powered buses, on a journey of personal and collective self discovery. Our aim is not to cheer for any one candidate or political party over another, but to advocate Sustainability as an essential movement for society and a more active and participatory democracy as one means to achieve it.
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Saturday, January 10, 2009
Reflections from the Tour...A Power Shift in the Air
I remember after reading that article on NYTimes.com looking to the bottom of the page and reading, with a smile of agreement, the comments at the bottom of the page from countless outraged young people. One of them was something to the degree of “Dude, have you even heard of Power Shift?”—that was it. I loved that comment, eloquent in its simplicity, in expressing the seemingly inexpressible indignation at the very idea of calling this generation too quiet. It wasn’t for a month later in 2007 that we descended in force on Washington, so I guess we can cut him some slack, but really Friedman, had you even heard of Power Shift?
He pissed people off because he seemed to know nothing about what was going on, nothing about Power Shift, nothing about the emblematic symbol of raising the windmill and all it stood for, nothing about all the actions, the trainings, the gathering and organizing, the countless things young people were doing around the country, around the world for that matter, to be pretty damn loud.
Fast forward one year. It’s January, 2009. Since Friedman’s op-ed, the volume of noise we’re making has not stopped growing. This past Fall, young voters played a crucial role in the 2008 election across the country. Friedman said that candidates weren’t listening to us, that “they could actually use a good kick in the pants.” I’d say we gave it to them, and then some. And in the wise words of Danny Marx, Energy Action Coalition internet guru, the day before the election, “now when we go to congress, when we get together for Power Shift, we say hey, look here, this is what we can do, be afraid of us because we’re the ones who got you here-- we’re going to hold you accountable, and if you don’t listen to us, you’re not going to have a job next time you’re up for office.”
There was a time in the last year that I actually started to feel like the election was the climax of this movement, that after November 4, we could all exhale a little, that the trek might start to turn downhill. And I think it did—can’t you feel the momentum, the rush of downhill wind making your eyes water? But that certainly wasn’t the climax; if anything, this is just a valley between the foothills and the mountains, the trough of a gentle roller at sea before the forty foot wave that lies ahead. There’s something to Power Shift ‘09 that really feels like the next peak, and whether that’s Everest or merely a rather mighty hill that makes it possible to see the vast range of giants ahead, I don’t know. The latter seems the more likely case.
But I do know that the rush of careening downhill is not so much about the ride and the rush itself as much as it’s about getting steam behind us, gearing up for the next uphill fight.
And I do know that we’ll all yell our hearts out from the top of every peak that we reach on our campuses and communities across the country, and the world. I’m eagerly looking forward to our voices coming together the weekend of February 27th, and I can only imagine the distance that sound will travel.
And in my experiences working with young people all over the country in the last six months, I know for certain that the prospects of us ever being “the quiet generation” have been shattered – perhaps from the piercing cries echoing down off mountain tops— shattered to bits and scattered to the wind.
Friday, October 10, 2008
A new leaf for Appalachia

I pulled up the route from Middletown, OH to Blacksburg VA to get to the statewide PowerShift conference at Virginia Tech. We would pass right through Charleston, West Virginia.
We stopped in Charleston last fall and twice visited Kayford Mountain, an infamous mountain top removal mining site. Our first trip up the mountain came as part of teach in on the deleterious effects of Mountain Top Removal led by Judy and Lorella--two tough silver haired coal miners's daughters now working with Coal River Mountain Watch to stop des
tructive mining and build sustainable communities. Our second trip came in the back of a pick up truck as Jimmy, a retired rail road worker and new friend of BioTour took us in to the site through the back roads. Jimmy, who made his living as foreman in a coal train yard, and spent much of his life bow hunting deer and wild ginseng, gave voice to the paradox--"a man's got to have a job, ya see what I mean, but it's a shame what they done to these mountains". The reality of destructive coal mining quickly dissolves the apolog
Green jobs now. No New Coal. PowerVote
Word.
Ok I should sleep because we just arrived at Virginia Tech a few hours ago, and in a few more hours we will be joined by hundreds of organizers and student activists from all over the state, and we have work to do.
Monday, October 6, 2008
Iowa to Chicago...without a bus
The woman at the hotel desk handed me a map of Des Moines with directions to the bus station, which was too far to walk. So, I called in a favor from a friend living in Des Moines who I had run into earlier in the day.
Christina pulled up in her car with a gift of three slices of Des Moines’ finest pizza, then dropped me off across town. I bought my one-way ticket to Chicago, sat down on a bench, opened my laptop and started typing my thoughts.
“Are you going to Chicago?” a man with a soft Indian accent asked.
“Yes. You?”
“Yes, I am flying home from Chicago after three years in the United States.”
“Where’s home?”
“Punjab.”
“Aman is my name.” We shook hands.
As we spoke, my computer screensaver activated and BioTour photos streamed across the screen.
“What’s that?” he inquired.
“That’s the bayou in Atchafalaya, Louisiana.”
I narrated a photo slideshow of the BioTour. The conversation went on. We shared stories, cigarettes, and pistachios. He told me about his two children, his homeland, and his friends. Before long, we were friends and he invited me to Punjab to stay with his family, even offering to buy my plane ticket.
The plan for Punjab is now forming. I slept all the way to Chicago.
Monday, September 29, 2008
Familiar Trails
We emerge from the corn in Wyoming, black cattle jog past oil derricks atop the grassy hills, and we roll over the deep rolling swells of earth that mark the great plains.
In Rawlins, Wyoming we circle the wagons, or rather the buses, for dinner. Marisol took whatever was in our cupboard and put together a wonderful meal. We share pad thai on the rooftop and look out over the little motorist's oasis amid the dry mountains.
We climb up and over the Rockies, coast past Salt Lake City, across the great salt flats and into the Nevada desert.
I understand the ‘proud to be American’ sentiment of many of the truckers and bikers and others who roads and trails of this vast and beautiful swath of earth. Despite all the billboards and chain restaurants, the petroleum addiction and the government that spends more in a week on the military than it does in a year on public education, there is a land and culture that I love too.
We are atop the Sierras now and will reach San Francisco sometime before sunrise, spend a day gathering grease, food, water, and other supplies and then head back into the desert for Burning Man.
Sunday, September 28, 2008
On the Road to San Francisco-- August
Only a couple days after leaving the farm, we found ourselves on the road just over the border in
Marisol was just finishing up cooking when we got back and we all started congregating on the roof of the new bus (where Ethan found his reading in solitude interrupted, though likely happily so). Dinner was well worth the wait, and we had a fun, happy, good spirited dinner together on the roof and listened to Nando and Ethan tell some good BioTour stories from the past.
I started driving out with Keith and Adam on board only to get a phone call from the other bus just minutes after having navigated a particularly windy detour to the highway—“Hey..Maggie…Can you come back? We just found a ton of grease.” I turned around and drove back to the other bus, and fell asleep in the process of greasing, so Alan took over driving for me. I woke up several hours later to the fiery light of the sun rising over the desert mountains in
At a rest stop in
I sit on the hood, listening to the carefree anecdotal chatter between KB and Dubs
bouncing down from the roof as the sun sifts
through the dusty golden air with its rays,
while long shadowed humans trek back and forth
to the restrooms in the sandy brick building.
The rest stop parking lot is full of the dramatic elongated lines
of sign and light post shadows climbing
over the orange extension cord that does its part
to help pump our grease.
Our three shadows reach out and plant themselves on the whiteness
of the truck parked alongside
I look across from where I’m sitting to see, pasted onto the cab of the truck,
an American flag and
“Love It or Leave It…”
The truck rolls away, barreling back onto the freeway and
for a moment, its shadow flattens us into darkness.
But the dark cloud passes
and we’re left to bask in the soft morning light again,
With an empty space
where the roots of our shadows had been settled.
(8/22/08)
Back on the road in
I’m feeling so grateful to be seeing all these different landscapes. And overwhelmed. And wishing we could slow down. Wishing we could stop and find out where all these tiny little roads lead that meander off the highway into the desert. But
Wednesday, September 17, 2008
Camp Ettrick
We drove the 41-foot yellow school bus down the winding country road between rows of corn and soy, searching for the dirt driveway that leads to Marv and Janice’s farm. Three dogs greeted us with barks and wagging tails. I shut down the engine beside Zinatala To (“Bluebird” in Lakota), the old blue bus that has carried us across the continent for the past year and half.I stepped off the bus. Alan and Taavi were wrenching bolts and pulling hoses from a water-damaged fuel injection pump. After a brief greeting the conversation shifted to the task at hand.
“Welcome. We are removing this pump,” Taavi said.
“It disconnects here,” I said pointing to two plates where the gears from the from the engine belt link with gears on the fuel pump.
“We shouldn’t underestimate how much easier a task is when doing it for the second time. You wanna remove the pump?” Taavi asked, knowing I had replaced the pump once before.
“I should say hi to Marv and Janice first,” I replied.
“Yes, of course, go say hello, then take this pump out, and we’ll take it to Madison for repair.”
Tiny needles tickled my scalp as I ducked underneath the low hanging limbs of the big old spruce trees that greet entrants just before the house. There, Marv and Janice wait
ed with their unending smiles. I couldn’t think of a more pleasant place to build another BioTour bus than the on this farm. So I thanked Marv and Janice and walked back to remove the fuel pump.We chipped away at a long list of tasks. Maggie grabbed a paint roller and took to the rhythm of the music coming from speakers connected to Alan's Ipod while she covered pale brown walls and ceilings wit
h light blue paint. Maggie and Alan later tossed our belongings out the back doorin order to clear workspace to rebuild the interior of Zintala To. With the deliberate steps of a Buddhist monk, Jeremy took his time designing and building the interior of the new bus. He then took on wiring the AC electrical system.I gave Keith a hand welding storage barrels underneath the rear of the bus that would soon hold recycled vegetable oil. My first interactions with Keith were uneasy. I mistook Kei
th’s sardonic questions and comments as complaining. I soon learned that with a simple joke, his expression fades into a smile and work went smoothly. After we finished installing the storage barrels, Keith turned the old bus seats into shelves along the walls of both buses.Nando divided his time between computer work and bus construction. H
e decided to give metal work a try. Cutting, welding, fastening, he built the new roof rack. As he cut a piece of steel, I commented on how lucky we were to find cheap Mexican labor (we are all volunteers). He smiled and swore at me in Spanish.I was bouncing around directing the building process, shopping for parts, and lending a hand where needed while waiting for a few key components for the vegetable oil conversion to arrive.
Work days have been long, but at sunset we walk past the faded red barn to the gently rolling hills of freshly harvested hay. From the summit of the first hill we gaze into coulees below where deer graze. While other crewmembers sleep inside the bus, each night Maggie and I pull mattresses, pillows, and sleeping bags into the roof of the bus. Our ceiling is the night sky, the thick bright stripe of the Milky Way and the August shooting stars. Coyotes howl. Deer cry. Tomorrow morning we will wake, our sleeping bags wet with dew, fresh for another long day.

