Internship in a Month and a Half

This’ll be my first and last blog post, as I’m filling in the month and a half of time left over from last summer’s CLM intern, who had to leave early.

Here at the C&O Canal National Park, things are busy, and many projects abound to keep a botanically inclined intern occupied. RTE surveys, Environmental Assessment vegetation inventories, and even a wetland delineation have been crammed into this month, increasing my botanical skills further. Perhaps the most import thing, however, was the search for Emerald Ash borer in the park. This European insect has killed millions of ash already in the Midwest, and has been increasingly spotted on the east coast. For an ash-heavy park such as the C&O canal, such an insect could be devastating.

Though my time here was short, the variety and importance of my tasks made the month and a half here invaluable, experience-wise, as well as providing further a way into the National Park Service.

I leave you with a photo of the wonderful Dwarf Larkspur, a State watchlist species for the state of Maryland.

Greeting From the East Coast!

Hello everyone! I’m Allen, and if the 2010 CLM intern list was any guide I’m the only intern on the east coast. Today marks the 4th week I’ve been a CLM intern with the C&O Canal National Park and I’m glad to have had the chance to do different things almost every week in different places. My first two weeks I worked with the NPS Inventory and Monitoring of DC and learned the identity of many plants as we worked plots in some of the National Parks in central-northern Virginia and central Maryland.

The 3rd week I spent in Catoctin Mountain Park in northern Maryland, marking with GPS and reporting the state-endangered Long-bracted Orchis. Though rather inconspicuous, it was still somewhat exciting as this was the first endangered plant I had seen in the weed.

This 4th week was different yet again. I worked with EA Engineering, Science and Technology employees  at the C&O canal in Hancock (western Maryland) and identified all plants along an unwatered stretch of the canal that is planned on being rewatered in the future. In addition to being a learning experience, this also ended up being a test of my botany skills and I was pleased to be able to keep up with the employees and be a true help rather than just a burden. Unfortunately my only photos are from this week.

If this past month is indicative of the future months to come, I think this will be an excellent summer.  See some of you at the Grand Canyon training in a couple weeks!

Allen Dupre

Hagerstown, MD

NPS