When Carol Van
Strum moved to Five Rivers, Oregon, in 1974, she thought she had found the
perfect rural idyll.
Surrounded by
National Forest, her four young children could grow up close to nature. They
loved fishing and playing by the river, fascinated by the little ‘dipper’ birds
that sat on the rocks.
‘They knew everything that lived down there,’ she recalls. ‘There were beavers and otters in the river, and all the fish and herons and ospreys. So they just were part of that.’
Then one day
the children fell sick, choking and gasping.
Down at the river, Carol found a scene of devastation — dead ducklings, crayfish and trout. The cause seemed fairly obvious: a U.S. Forestry Service helicopter had been flying overhead the day before, spraying something over the land.
Nobody knew
what it was but, ‘a lot of people assumed, “Well it’s the government doing it,
it must be OK,”’ says Carol. ‘We called the fire service and they said: “Oh no,
it’s perfectly safe.”’ But it wasn’t.
The chopper was
spraying a herbicide known as 2,4,5-T — the highly toxic main ingredient of
Agent Orange, the notorious chemical defoliant used to blanket swathes of
South-East Asia during the Vietnam War.
A helicopter in
Oregon in 1974 was spraying a herbicide known as 2,4,5-T — the highly toxic
main ingredient of Agent Orange, the notorious chemical defoliant used to
blanket swathes of South-East Asia during the Vietnam War.
The U.S.
military had stopped using it in 1971 because of growing public health concerns
— but here it was being used in the U.S.
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