Editorial Note: Weather
GUTS editors reflect on writing about the weather in a changing climate
GUTS editors reflect on writing about the weather in a changing climate
Drawings and words from cool months spent monitoring fish farms with wild salmon protectors in Musgamagw Dzawada'enuxw territory
New fiction from Francesca Ekwuyasi traces the ups and down of long distance friendship, from Lagos to Halifax and back.
In the aftermath of the 2016 fires in Fort McMurray, morels flourished. Carley-Jane Stanton foraged alongside mushroom hunters, discussing the future of the oil sands, our changing climate, and how the economy effects workers' choices.
After Kaley Kennedy's miscarriage, she decides to swim 100 times in 2017. In the water and out, she reflects on queer family-making, increasing the terrain of kinship, and using your body to show up, even when it's hard.
Estraven Lupino-Smith walks through the history of urban wilderness in Montreal, Toronto and Victoria, finding both cruising spots and coyotes.
In this photoessay, Maya Weeks logs the weather, marine debris, gendered violence and so much more against a backdrop of anthropogenic climate change.
Quill Christie-Peters writes about how, as an Anishinaabekwe, masturbation is a revolutionary process of falling in love: with her body and her homelands.
Following a depressive episode, Anne Theriault grew plants, and it forced her to rethink tenderness, failure and self-care.
Rebecca Jade asks: what would the future look like if gender were something infinite to grow into, instead of another form of anti-Black domination?
"You have to work hard in this city if you want to see the land": eyos reports on living in the city as an Indigenous person, creating new worlds through old relations
'go on take everything': new poetry from Andrea Abi-Karam on climate change, queer collectivities and Courtney Love