This is my very first spring in California, and so far it has been wonderfully full of wildflowers. I was lucky enough to be able to go on a guided wildflower trek several weeks ago, and took a copious amount of notes and photos so that I could begin to learn the names of the wildflowers here. I think one of the reasons I love wildflowers so much is because they’re a constant in my life. In Michigan and Vermont, spring meant beautifully delicate ephemerals, like bloodroot, Dutchman’s breeches, and trout lily. In Montana and Idaho, I found rabbit brush, bog gentian, larkspur, and arrowleaf balsamroot as I worked in remote wilerness areas. And here in California, I find myself driving along rural roads, distracted by expanses of poppies, and wally baskets. Fields of lupine remind me of The Sound of Music. See the below photos for wildflower sightings of California!
.
Thursday, April 28, 2016
Friday, December 18, 2015
Fungus Foray
This past weekend, I attended a Fungus Foray, organized by a local watershed council. There were several different foray groups to choose from, depending on previous mycology experience. I chose the beginner group, and we spent our time in and around a Toyon tree grove. We rambled through the woods in small groups, stopping often to examine various mushrooms, lichens, berries, moss, etc. It was my favorite type of outdoor day, because it felt like we were on a scavenger hunt for mushrooms, but we were also excited about anything else we found.
The weather was perfect for mushroom foraging: chilly and damp, but not actively raining. After a few hours, we returned to the lecture hall and pooled our discoveries. I was amazed by the variety in the different mushrooms: the richness of the color scale and the textures (bloblike, slimy, gilled, or spiky) made me realize how utterly odd and otherworldly mushrooms are.
Although I took notes during the lectures that were held after the foray, one of the main things I learned was that identifying mushrooms is very involved and challenging. It will certainly be a long but fascinating process of learning to identify even the most common/basic species.
I also enjoyed going into the darkroom to see phosphorescent mushrooms displayed under blacklight, and I learned that yarns and fibers can be dyed using mushrooms.
Check out the photos below to see some of the "treasures" of the scavenger hunt!
![]() |
These little mushrooms grew atop a mossy log |
![]() |
One of many finds near the Toyon grove. |
![]() |
Purple Bolete mushroom (I think) |
![]() |
After spending a couple of hours at our respective foray sites, we all came back together to examine, admire, and attempt to identify our discoveries |
![]() |
These types of mushrooms were almost translucent! |
![]() |
Insect galls on oak leaves (spined turban gall on Blue Oak leaf) |
![]() |
People of all levels of mycology applied their knowledge to try to identify our discoveries |
![]() |
Examining phosphorescent mushrooms under blacklight |
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Greenhouse Gas Monitoring in the Sierra Nevada
![]() |
Signs of a healthy meadow (from caltrout.org) |
![]() |
Signs of an unhealthy meadow (from caltrout.org) |
![]() |
Sometimes birthdays fall on field work days, so we bring cake and candles and celebrate in the snow! |
![]() |
We use a needle and syringe to collect gas from each chamber. |
Wednesday, December 9, 2015
Burning Murphy Meadow
As a newcomer to the Sierra Nevada, I am learning a lot about what types of restoration work and environmental issues are relevant here. Below is a blog post that I wrote for the American Rivers blog, which you can check out here.
Fire and water: two elements necessary for life, remedies
for one another, and contradictory. And in this case, important factors for
improved downstream water quality.
American Rivers staff recently helped organize and oversee a
controlled burn at Murphy Meadow. After a few years of hard work to align
schedules and obtain burn permits, “Burn Day” was upon us and, cameras in hand,
we chattered excited as we drove to meet the contracted firefighters.
Murphy Meadow, high above the South Yuba River Canyon, is
located in the Sierra Nevada foothills and hosts a variety of interesting
creatures—I spotted a Sierra Alligator Lizard and a bobcat in the half-day I
was there watching the burn. In addition to providing invaluable wildlife
habitat, meadows sequester carbon and improve the water quality of rivers.
Performing prescribed burns of these areas can be traced
back to the Native Americans of the region, who would systematically burn small
patches of land in order to clear brush and understory growth. Ron Goode of the
North Fork Mono tribe describes why cultural burning is one solution to the drought.
But with development of rural areas and changes in fire
management policies, setting fire to any area has become more and more
challenging.
Increased wildland fire suppression has inevitably led to
meadows slowly being overtaken by conifers, turning into forested landscapes,
rather than open spaces that offer unique habitat. Better management of river headwaters sites
can mean improved response to climate change and increased water supply
reliability—both major benefits for drought-ridden California.
Clear of invasive species, pine needles, and dead, woody
debris, the meadow is now a canvas of potential for new growth. In just several
months, the meadow will show signs of new life: the beginning shoots of the
many native grasses and wildflower seeds that we planted will add greenery and
color to the charred mounds of deergrass.
Controlled burning is just one way American Rivers is
working to restore meadows, which are often sites of river headwaters. Fire
will bring life to this landscape again. And I can’t wait to see what it looks
like.
Murphy Meadow before burning |
Sierra Alligator Lizard |
The burn started at the top of the meadow and progressed downslope |
The burn toward the end of the first section. |
Deergrass mounds that have been burned |
Sprinkling native grass and wildflower needs on the newly burned meadow |
Saturday, January 24, 2015
Winter Ecology
On this beautifully sunny, mild winter day, I am reflecting on a very special experience I recently had. This past winter break, I signed up for a course entitled Winter Ecology. Bernd Heinrich, renowned biologist, book author, and UVM professor emeritus teaches the course on his property in Western Maine. For one week, ten UVM students (a mixture of undergraduates and graduates) lived in a log cabin without electricity or running water, and only heated by a wood stove, which we took turns getting up to stoke every couple of hours throughout the night. Every morning, we would rise as the sun rose over the mountains and illuminated the frost-covered windows. Bundled in many, many layers, we visited with one another quietly as water boiled for oatmeal. After breakfast, we rambled through the woods with Bernd with several hours, each day visiting different areas. Bernd teaches in the same way he learns--from the land itself, without plans, letting his daily discoveries dictate his curiosities. He has been learning from this one particular piece of land for many, many years, and it made me think quite a bit about what an honor it would be to know one place so well. Some of the highlights included using an axe to chop through the thick ice of Alder Brook and sampling benthic macroinvertebrates (this also turned into my individual research project for the class); finding nests from the Red-eyed Vireo, Chestnut-sided Warbler, Cedar Waxwing, and Robin; watching Bernd chop down trees and climb trees; making homemade bread in the wood stove; listening to a visiting scientist discuss her research on chickadees; and hiking to a lookout over Webb Lake to enjoy the sunset. I loved learning from and also teaching the graduate students, and I thought it was really valuable to have people from so many different academic backgrounds in the course. After cooking a hearty meal for dinner, we sat around the large table and pored through Bernd's collection of field guides and reference books. It was refreshing to be in a group of people so motivated to get outside and learn, even in the face of -24 degree temperatures!
Check out these photos, which help illustrate the nature and structure of the course, and also how much fun we had!
Bernd climbing a tree to retrieve a red-eyed vireo nest. |
![]() |
The resident barred owl waits for a snack offering. |
Sunrise through the frosty cabin windows. |
View looking up into the center cavity of an old yellow birch. |
Balsam Fir vs. Spruce |
![]() |
Exploring every sense of winter--in this case, the aroma of a spruce tree. |
Red-eyed vireo nest painstakingly procured by Bernd. |
Moving a chopped ice chunk out of the water in or |
Sampling for benthic macroinvertebrates along Alder Brook. |
Stoneflies, mayflies, and dragonfly nymphs galore! |
![]() |
A single bit axe, sled, water jug, and hearty souls--all tools of the trade for water runs. |
A sunny, frozen crystalline view of Alder Brook, looking downstream. |
Saturday, October 11, 2014
The Art of Noticing
Happy autumn, everyone! Here is a piece of writing from the LANDS Field Semester that I'm currently in.
The first week of readings brought up both familiar and foreign concepts to me. As I reflect on my incredible and fulfilling summer experiences working on a snorkel field crew in Idaho, I find myself thinking a lot about my group’s dynamics, and how magical it was to spend time living fully in the present, enjoying the outdoors. I am hopeful that my fall experience with LANDS will continue along that vein; I feel ready to absorb and engage, and gain as much as possible.
The first week of readings brought up both familiar and foreign concepts to me. As I reflect on my incredible and fulfilling summer experiences working on a snorkel field crew in Idaho, I find myself thinking a lot about my group’s dynamics, and how magical it was to spend time living fully in the present, enjoying the outdoors. I am hopeful that my fall experience with LANDS will continue along that vein; I feel ready to absorb and engage, and gain as much as possible.
I really enjoyed rereading Aldo
Leopold’s “The Land Ethic”. I think that I have read it for several different
classes, but it’s amazing how quickly some ideas can fade or be forgotten in
order to absorb new information. Leopold writes “One basic weakness in a
conservation system based wholly on economic motives is that most members of
the land community have no economic value” (6). I found this passage helpful in
my efforts to mentally transition for summer work mode to school and to
Burlington. My summer experiences taught me to appreciate the rivers, the time
I shared with my crewmembers, and hard physical labor, the kind that made my
eyes shut so easily and gratefully at the end of each day. I feel fortunate
that I have had so many experiences to go outdoors and actually have the time
and resources to notice stones,
butterflies, bugs, riffles and pools, and flowers—I treasure my time outdoors
with all of my heart, because it never fails to bring me pure tranquility and
happiness. But it got me thinking about people who haven’t been in the
circumstances to have such treasured memories outdoors—do they share the same
appreciation for little details of nature as I do, or not? Can a person who has
only ever known the concrete sidewalks and buildings of the inner city see the
beauty and value in a single wildflower, the sight of open spaces and the joy
it can bring to the human heart, or even the bittersweet changing of the
seasons? Do these people appreciate
nature more, because they have such limited access to it, or less, because they
simply haven’t had much exposure? These are questions that I’m currently
grappling with, and an answer that I’ve come up (based on my current thoughts,
which are of course subject to change and improvement) is that it really is
based on each person’s individualized experience. I can’t put a monetary value on seeing an
adult Chinook salmon for the first time, or the taste of a ripe wild
blackberry, or the feeling of mud dried on my legs after a hard day of hiking
to snorkel sites. In “The Land Ethic”, Leopold articulates the importance of
creating a land conservation system that incorporates these “priceless”
values—values that do not have economic value but hold memories, peace, health
benefits, and joy.
In my mind, attempting to
understand values that do not have a specific label is also connected to group
dynamics. The introduction of the “This American Life” piece spurred me to
think about making sure that I put effort into connecting with my LANDS peers
and professors. During my summer work, I found that the best way to connect
with my crew leader and fellow crewmembers was to do two things: listen, and
practice empathy. When I listened to their stories and their ideas, I began to
realize that it was not always necessary to completely understand as much as it
was to put effort into trying. As I look ahead to the LANDS semester, I think
it will be important to maintain a positive, supportive attitude so that our
team can accomplish our work with excellence and efficiency, and we can fuel
ourselves with a cheerful momentum. In creating a land ethic and in group
dynamics, it seems more important to recognize and value the process and value
in both the individual and the system in the detail: having an end result is
meaningful, but the journey or the process should not be overlooked.
Skeleton found while snorkeling |
Near the main Salmon River and Riggins |
![]() |
Warm Lake Creek |
"The Plunge"--South Fork Salmon River |
Trout fry vs Chinook zero |
![]() |
East Fork South Fork Salmon River |
Collared bighorn sheep |
Monday, June 30, 2014
Summer on the Salmon
The summer is going so fast--I can hardly believe that June is ending! I wanted to post some photos of my summer experiences thus far. Right now, I am helping monitor a Chinook salmon sport fishery on the South Fork Salmon River. I am camping in a beautiful area close to the river, and in my free time, I'm swimming, biking, and learning to fish. Work has been pretty busy and basically entails driving up and down the road near the river, counting vehicles and anglers, and interviewing anglers to see how long they've fished, and check their fish if they've caught any. All of the data we collect goes into an equation that helps estimate how many total fish have been harvested, so that we can work towards our harvest goal quota. The work is a little tedious, but the scenery is beautiful, and I find myself snapping photos of flowers, birds, and the river. It has been interesting learning about salmon fishing and all of the statistics that go into managing a sport fishery. I'm looking forward to finishing up fishery monitoring and getting back to snorkeling the rivers of Idaho for the rest of the summer!
I want to write more soon, but my internet time at the library is almost up, and the sunshine is calling to me...enjoy the summer!
Pretty sky at camp |
Warm Lake |
On Rice Peak Lookout trail |
![]() |
Rice Peak Lookout trail |
Tule Lake |
View of Warm Lake from area near Landmark |
Bald eagles along the South Fork Salmon |
Avocet |
South Fork Salmon River |
Confluence of the the South Fork Salmon and East Fork South Fork Salmon rivers |
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)