Fun with Phacelia

I can’t believe it’s time to post to the blog again, because that means I’ve been at my internship for over a month now. Time flies when you’re having fun!

Last week was the training workshop at the Chicago Botanic Garden. I finally got to meet Krissa and Marian, who are totally awesome. I also got to hang out with all the other interns in the program, which was like being back in college, except where everyone else loves plants as much as I do. The Chicago Botanic Garden was beautiful.  I learned some really interesting things, and we had a ton of fun going into the city Friday night. Basically the workshop was awesome, although the humidity definitely made me appreciate working in the desert.

As for life back in Grand Junction, my most recent excitement was finding a rare threatened plant, the DeBeque phacelia. It’s a tiny annual forb that only grows in a very specific environment, in bare loose soil on southwest or east-facing slopes. I have never been so excited over a tiny dried-out plant.

In other news, I went wine tasting in Palisade last weekend, which is cool since I never would have thought of wineries in Colorado. They actually have some international award-winning wines. Best part was the tasting was all free!

Also I’m covered in bug bites, especially on my feet. Just thought you all should know.

Botanic Garden

What a great week to write my blog post! I just got back from the Conservation and Land Management Internship Training held in Chicago. This week-long orientation/training was filled with learning new information, meeting new people, and seeing new sights. The workshop was held in the Chicago Botanic Garden, which is absolutely gorgeous. Such a variety of plants can be viewed in these 385 acres and I was fortunate to see most of them.

Connecting with the other interns in the program throughout the week was invaluable. I enjoyed listening to their stories and seeing the differences in our jobs, but more importantly the similarities. Being able to see that I was linked to an entire community of individuals spread across the country showed me the importance of this project.

Having the gardens as the backdrop for the week was incredible. I was like a kid in a candy store every time I had a spare moment to go explore the grounds. My all time favorite plant from the gardens was an Allium, pictured below. Their flowers reminded me of a Dr. Seuss Book and how unique each living thing can truly be.

Only 4 months left of my Internship here in Farmington, NM and I am astonished at how quickly time is moving. I had a great time in Chicago and am now looking forward to getting back and gathering more seed collections for the Seeds of Success Program.

Back to Real Life at the Bend Seed Extractory!

Me on my Clipper cleaning some Chrysothamnus viscidiflorus seed

Back from CLM intern training at the Chicago Botanic Garden and I’m having to re-adjust to my regular life.  The gauntlet of botany, monitoring, protocol and safety information we got was intense for sure.  Most of it was great for refreshing all that information that I’ve lost in the three years since finishing school.  Meeting the new crop of interns was awesome and tromping around the city and the burbs was a great way to relax after long days of filling my head with information.  The setting for the training wasn’t too shabby either.

One of the Japanese gardens at the CBG

So, now I’m back in Bend picking up where I left off, cleaning and packaging endless mountains of seed from the 2010 field season.  (Nita keeps telling us that we’re actually making great progress and 2010 will be done before we know it.)

I can’t believe it – This week marks my one year anniversary at the Bend Seed Extractory!

So what have I learned and how have I grown?  I could say that I’ve learned about hundreds of native plant species that are commonly used in ecological restoration all over the western US, which is true…  I could say that I am better equipped to understand the need for native seed availability and what it takes to provide viable native plant material to a quickly growing market, which is also true…    But…

Without a doubt the biggest way that I have grown this last year is through observing and interacting with the people that I’ve worked with.  In this last year I’ve seen one manager retire, a supervisor move into that managers role, learned to co-exist with the most difficult co-worker I’ve ever come across, and had to train a hand full of new employees with a huge range of ages, experience levels and personalities.  I’ve spent lots of time observing people interact.   Tense social and professional situations happen frequently here as I’m sure they do in most professional settings.  I’ve been asking myself how I might handle them if it was my responsibility and what the possible outcomes could be.  This year I’ve gained a confidence in myself that I know is going to push me to places I might never have considered before coming to work at the Bend Seed Extractory.   Thanks CLM!

The Far North

The journey begins. I, Emily Capelin, am finishing my third week in Anchorage, Alaska working with the BLM as well as the Alaska Natural Heritage Center through the University of Alaska Anchorage. Our mission is collecting seeds for restoration of lands damaged by fire, mines, and oil and gas pipeline construction. These past three weeks have been spent in preparation for the grand adventures to come. We’ve been in the office applying for collection permits and calling other regional BLM offices about using their research facilities. We’re planning trips all over the state for seed collection. And, best of all, we’ve been traipsing through the wilds of Alaska scouting around in plant communities, looking at progress of seeds and locations of certain plant species whose seeds we want to collect later.

My mentor Mike Duffy, on the left, and botanists from the Plant Materials Center in Alaska. We're on top of The Butte in the Matanuska River Valley, looking for a rare Pasqueflower.

 

Mike Duffy and a botanist friend looking for plants in the Matanuska Valley. Pioneer Peak looms in the background. We found lots of Chamerion angustifolium, Cerastium, Artemisia frigida, and Oxytropis.

We have made our first seed collection this week, gathering some 9 thousand seeds of Viola adunca, a beautiful deep purple violet. Exciting to have and hold something solid! I’ve been lucky, to spend the long days of the Alaskan summer (right now, we have about 19 hours of daylight!) amongst flowers and vast landscapes. My famed Botanist mentor Mike Duffy and I have been hiking along a glacial river bar looking for a rare species of native Clematis. We’ve walked through immense fields of Lupinus nootkatensis (Nootka Lupine) beneath the high peaks of the Chugach Mountains, and climbed a small mountain in search of Artemisia frigida and an elusive Pasqueflower. And I’ve seen Brown Bears and a river otter! All for the mighty purpose of establishing seed banks that provide anyone with the means of revegatating damaged lands with native seeds. A worthy goal. I am honored and elated to be a part of the project.

Alaska's Wild Rose species, Rosa nutkana

Monsoon Season!

We had the first rains of the “monsoon season” last week! I haven’t seen rain in two months so it was a very pleasant sight! The rain has brought an abundance of reptiles. Hopefully I will get to see a Gila Monster before the summer is over!

My knowledge of Arizona plants is expanding! I recognize several more plants than I did a month ago and I’m even starting to remember their Latin names! The past few weeks we have been scouting for Sporobolus airoides, Sporobolus wrightii, Muhlenbergia porteri, Bouteloua eriopoda, and Bouteloua gracilis. Hopefully with more rain things will start greening up and we will have an awesome collecting season.

We have also been working in the herbarium at the BLM office. The plants specimens are gorgeous! I’m still trying to figure out how to press a cactus without getting a million spines in my fingers! I guess it just takes practice!

Arizona

The rains are here in the desert which is a welcome sight for someone who is from the Midwest. You can tell when it is going to rain because the creosote bushes begin to smell good. Hopefully with the rain the grasses that are on our target list will begin to grow, and we might actually get to collect seeds. But for now we have been scouting out different areas such as Araviapa Canyon, Turkey Creek, Bonitia Creek, and Sandraw to name a few. Being here is a great opportunity to learn new plant species, and make some new friends. The transition from riparian areas to desert is abrupt to say the least, especially in the canyons. But if you go higher up in elevation it should come as no surprise that the plant communities change. Looking out across the landscape one can see the different patches of plant communities.

All we can do for now is just wait for more rain, because with rain comes seeds. But there are some amazing plant communities and species out here. To name a few: Schott’s yucca, Parry’s Agave, Devils claw and many others. I can’t imagine what it was like for the first people to do plant inventories out here, but I hope that they were just as awe inspired as I am now.

The Great Basin is a great basin

My appreciation for the Great Basin deepens every day. Everything I do, anything form treating weeds to surveying for sensitive plant species, helps me to understand the landscape and how everything fits together. At the same time, the work has allowed me to spend extensive amounts of time in places I might have just driven by otherwise, places that might not have any dramatic features to draw in tourists but are still beautiful in their own right. For example, I wouldn’t recommend the Constantia Fire burn area as a must-see for people visiting the area, but I really enjoyed being out there in the foothills of the Sierras.

 

Red Rock Canyon, one of our survey sites

Favorite new-to-me plants:

Brown’s peony (Paeonia brownii) with its weird, ground-facing, meaty-looking flowers that sprout green, surprisingly-large, tusk-like pods when in fruit.

 

Clustered broomrape (Orobanche fasciculata): fully parasitic, non-photosynthetic plants that don’t really even have leaves. The entire plant is either yellow or pink. We dug one up and were able to see where it was growing directly out of a sagebrush root–an unexpectedly small root for how much plant mass was coming up.

The parasitic plant known as clustered broomrape

 

A Brief Midwest Interlude

What a whirlwind these past weeks have been! After a brief week working with my mentor in the BLM , I was off to the Midwest to attend the CLM training workshop at the Chicago Botanic Garden.  Arriving in the Windy City, I was one of fifty interns who traveled from their positions out west to attend the weeklong workshop.

I’d like to end with a quote that began our training:

“Always we hope someone else has the answer. Some other place will be better, it will all turn out. This is it. No one else has the answer. No place will be better, and it has already turned out.” -Lao-tzo

Farewell!

It’s time for new adventures in new places. Next Tuesday is my last day in the office, so I am spending this week wrapping up my curation projects and some conservation assessments here at the Portland BLM/FS office. I’ve been fortunate to have two extensions on my CLM internship, and I’ve had quite the range of projects and experiences. Thanks to Krissa and Marian and my amazing mentor for all your help and support!

Hope everyone is enjoying their fieldwork this season.  I have my fingers crossed that I will be in the field again soon!

CABE Recovery

My mentor, Ryan O’Dell and I have been busy mapping out potential habitat for threatened San Benito evening primrose Camissonia benitensis (CABE). CABE is listed as a rare serpentine endemic meaning it only grows on serpentine soil. In 2010 three new habitat types were discovered outside of its known habitat (serpentine stream terraces) including serpentine geologic transition zones, serpentine rock outcrops, and shale outcrops. Finding CABE populations on shale rock outcrops was a bit of a surprise to me because its soil chemistry is so different from serpentine soil.  CABE does not do well agaisnt competitors and the adverse soil conditions found in these habitats greatly reduce competition from other plant species.

Camissonia benitensis

Serpentine alluvial stream terrace

 

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