SFU professor, activist and Green Party candidate Lynne Quarmby writes about her time aboard a schooner of artists on a trip to the Arctic, mixing memoir, microbiology, grief for the loss of a frozen world and the sublimity of the northern landscape in Watermelon Snow: Science, Art, and a Lone Polar Bear (McGill-Queen's UP, $24.95). Bob McDonald, host of CBC Radio's Quirks and Quarks and Elizabeth May, former leader of the Green Party of Canada both gave testimonials for the book.

Watermelon Snow: Science, Art, and a Lone Polar Bear (McGill-Queen's UP, 2020) $24.95

Review by Trevor Carolan

In the summer of 2017, SFU prof Lynne Quarmby took a sea journey with 28 artists and one other fellow scientist to a remote area, the western Svalbard archipelago, which is far north of Norway and east of Greenland.

Aboard the tall ship Antigua, Quarmby and her fellow travellers were part of the Arctic Circle Expeditionary Residency. It was an unusual trip for the academic, being Quarmby’s first residency after 30 years of attending science conferences. She describes washing up on shore with “nothing but wilderness between me and the next polar bear.”

She’s there, she explains, to find “watermelon snow”—micro-algae blooms “that turn snowfields red.”

There’s total daylight here, midnight walks under sunny skies, but global warming is already causing problems. A late-career convert to climate change science, Quarmby must also confront her own inadequacy in facing up to the enormity of the global warming crisis. Arriving travel weary, she mourns the situation she has come to investigate: metaphorically, the house is on fire and she stands at the interface of planetary crisis and melting polar ice-caps.
Quarmby recounts this trip in Watermelon Snow: Science, Art, and a Lone Polar Bear. Chapters alternate between reports on Quarmby’s odyssey, her academic reflections and her own inner turbulence. She plays on the Buddha’s words in The Dhammapada, declaring “everything we perceive with our senses, and our responses to those perceptions, has been honed by billions of years of natural selection.” It’s a subtle echo concerning interconnectedness, yet she knows there is so much that we still don’t sense, concluding, “climate change is happening so fast it should be terrifying.”

Daily expeditions allow participants to explore, work at their projects ashore and stay alert for polar bears, even as a huge chunk of glacier shatters into the sea nearby, calving a new iceberg. Quarmby searches for her red snow unsuccessfully, but takes pleasure in the creative discoveries of others.

Readers not conversant with the nature of RNA, DNA and cell biology may find some challenges when Quarmby expounds on photosynthesis and cellular boogie-woogie—how cells divide and replicate. However, she also relates how she became a climate systems activist: at a biology seminar she saw photographs of the violently-suppressed protests during Copenhagen’s 2011 climate summit. In response, she began writing letters, signing petitions and attending marches. Her federal research funding soon evaporated. During the Stephen Harper years, the Feds played hard ball.

By 2015, instead of re-applying for funding, Quarmby ran federally for the Green Party. This followed her arrest by the RCMP during the well-publicized Burnaby Mountain protests against the Trans-Mountain Pipeline project owned by Kinder Morgan.
Disclosure: she ran in the riding where I live. We planted her campaign sign out front.

When ‘Golden Boy’ Justin Trudeau won, Quarmby confesses that she was “crushed.” She’d believed the public were ready for real change on climate action; they’d simply wanted Harper out.
“By the time I lost the election,” she recalls, “I was burned out from activism and the negativity of politics.” In her fifties, and searching for answers, why, she asks, is our democratic government not pulling its share of the weight against climate change? Mistrust of our political leadership leaves her bilious.

Wondering if her scientific knowledge could be applied to an Arctic eco-system on the frontline of global warming, she embarks on her Arctic pilgrimage. In meditating on the nature of microbes, she reflects how they, “tie all life on Earth together...we are all functionally connected.” Quixotically, the same long streak of evolutionary fortune that led to polar bears and to us, she proposes, “may be broken” by the end of this century: “Pollution, habitat fragmentation and degradation, and now, climate change...Extinction is nothing new.”

When Quarmby and a photographer spot a distant polar bear that appears emaciated or old, it’s a lonely, disturbing image. Later, challenged to explain her scientific inquiries in lay language, she addresses gender issues in science, relating that recently she’d spent an hour venting to her therapist about the bias and misogyny she encounters in her work. Quarmby also offers her account of what it’s like to stand up on the front lines in a confrontation with “Big Authority,” Kinder Morgan, the company whose bullying tactics and legal threats were thrown out in court. Still, she declares bluntly, “I learned how the cheaters have broken our political system.”
Once back home, Quarmby the dedicated scientist shakes her head at how “Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and [the environment minister] are telling Canadians, ‘If this pipeline doesn’t get built, we can’t meet our climate targets.’ The truth is that we cannot meet climate targets if it does get built.” What’s the takeaway message here?

Quarmby writes intelligently in a style that, for the most part, lay readers will find accessible. Her voyage crystallizes her own inner contradictions. There’s acclaim for the eco-warrior academic, but heroism often comes at a cost. Compassion fatigue is part of the script: she comes to understand that most battles aren’t clearly won, the brawling gets ugly and it’s a long game. Self-justification, well-deserved renown for standing up and making a difference, an existential search for answers, it’s all in here. 978-0-2280-0359-5

Trevor Carolan has a Ph.D. in International Relations and has advocated for conservation issues and Indigenous land claims. He taught for years at the University of the Fraser Valley.