Urban Perspective

Native to the Mediterranean, now considered a noxious weed in the Pacific Northwest.

Geranium molle – Native to the Mediterranean, now considered a noxious weed in the Pacific Northwest.

Spring is happening! All the color leafing out on the trees and the weedy flowers covering those patches between the sidewalk and road have my heart singing. I arrived in DC in December and I’d never spent any time on the east coast in winter. I knew the woods were dominated by deciduous trees and that they would be naked, but I did not realize just how different it would look compared to all the other places I’ve lived. Gray trunks and branches, brown leaves littering the ground and not much middle or understory to speak of – monochromatic, vertical lines intersecting the horizontal horizon. Beautiful, but a bit dreary and very Blair Witch Project.

Veronica persica - Native to Eurasia, its distribution spans the continental US except North Dakota according to the PLANTS database.

Veronica persica – Native to Eurasia, its distribution now spans the continental U.S. (except North Dakota according to the PLANTS database).

Being in an urban environment during this time of year has me thinking about invasiveness, perspective and the definition of nature. Photographing all the cute little weedy flowers blooming along my city walks, I assume most have made it here from elsewhere thanks to human ingenuity and often with detrimental effects. I knew about a few of the most notorious species before I arrived, but not being from here I don’t have a very good idea of who is native and who is moving in and displacing others (plants in the woods and people in the neighborhoods).

One bad boy I’ve been hearing about lately is the Bradford Pear; a white blossomed, early flowering tree that’s rapidly spreading throughout eastern forests. I think it’s a pretty tree, but I haven’t witnessed all its badness. My mentor has lived much of her life on the east coast. She finds the tree hideous – not just because of its invasive qualities, she also finds its architecture and the tree as a whole ugly. In the Pacific Northwest, English holly is an invasive pest. I consider them a bit of an eyesore and couldn’t understand why anyone would want holly growing in their yard. My mentor has two growing in her yard and has mentioned she finds them beautiful, especially in winter. But they (American holly, Ilex opaca) are native here where she lives. It makes me wonder how knowledge of nativeness influences people’s opinion of plants. My knee jerk response of dislike every time I see a holly is fading. Would my mentor think the Bradford pear was beautiful if she saw it growing in its native habitat?

Viola papilionacea - Native! And cute. But still considered a weed.

Viola papilionacea – Native! And cute. But still considered a weed. I’ve seen it holding it’s own in weedy lawns.

Vicia sativa - Common vetch was an ancient cultivar found in Neolithic sites. Native to Southern Europe, it is cultivated in many countries including the US.

Vicia sativa – Common vetch is edible and cultivated in many countries, but native only to Southern Europe.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

As land managers, we are trained to consider some plants good and others bad. We fight a seemingly endless battle trying to eradicate those bad, introduced species. But it’s not the plant that is bad or wrong or hideous. We are the responsible party.

Stellaria media - Also goes by the common name of chickweed. This one is edible and used in herbal remedies.

Stellaria media – Goes by the common name of chickweed. This little guy reminded me of Claytonia. It is edible and has been used in herbal remedies.

Cerastium vulgatum - chickweed

Cerastium vulgatum – Also goes by the common name of chickweed. Not sure if you can eat it, but you’re likely to find it in every state you visit.

I have also been wondering how my perspective would change if my only exposure to nature was within an urban environment. I grew up in the Pacific Northwest with access to the Cascade Mountains and the wide open spaces of Eastern Washington from a young age. When I think of nature I generally think of areas beyond the city streets. Places far from shopping malls and subway lines. But nature is defined by the Oxford dictionary as “the phenomena of the physical world collectively, including plants, animals, the landscape, and other features and products of the earth, as opposed to humans or human creations”. By this definition the built environment of the city is not nature, but what about the oxalis sprouting in the crack of a concrete wall, the weedy plants flowering in an un-mowed lawn, all the squirrels and song birds I see daily on my walk to the Metro? Does our definition of nature discriminate against city parks because they are designed and maintained by humans? What about urban “natural areas”? They too have been weeded and planted by humans. Millions of acres of “natural” landscapes across the US have been seeded or treated for invasive species (on BLM Public Lands and elsewhere). By limiting our definition of the natural environment, we are limiting people’s access to nature. How can we expect those within urban environments to care about protecting or restoring a nature they cannot access?

Lamium amplexicaule - Henbit has spead across the continental US (including North Dakota according to PLANTS database)

Lamium amplexicaule – Native to Europe, Asia and northern Africa, henbit has spread across the continental U.S. (including North Dakota according to the PLANTS database)

While in Pittsburgh for the North American Wildlife and Natural Resources Conference, I attended a session on protecting and restoring wildlife habitat in urban and suburban areas. Sarah Aucoin from New York City Department of Parks argued that land managers and biologists should expand their view of nature. There are deer in Central Park, eagles in Inwood Hill Park, and endangered piping plovers in Rockaway Park.

Our natural world is changing. Instead of considering nature something I travel to, I intend to help cultivate a healthier version within the cities I live. I am excited to see what else pops up in Washington, DC over the coming weeks!

 

National Seed Strategy

Hello again from Washington, DC!

Life in the capitol city is still excitingly busy. It’s the middle of March and the BLM’s Washington Office Plant Conservation team and I have already hosted two meetings this month: an interagency meeting to discuss implementation of the National Seed Strategy and a Plant Conservation Alliance meeting. We will be traveling to Pittsburgh for a conference next week (more on that to come).

I visited NYC on the coldest weekend of the year! Despite temperatures being well below freezing, I enjoyed Central Park and the High Line.

The Martin Luther King Jr Memorial. The scale of the memorials in DC is breathtaking and inspiring. I can’t help but point out that the memorials are overwhelmingly male and white, but they are awesome despite their lack of diversity.

The interagency meeting on implementing the National Seed Strategy was the first week of March. Planning and organizing for it began in November. It was a big deal. A couple words I heard used to describe this interagency meeting included monumental and historical. Although I haven’t been in DC long, I quickly learned that an event in which leadership from many different Federal agencies are at one table at one time to discuss working together on a common goal is not something that happens every day. While Plant Conservation Alliance meetings often have representatives from 8 or more federal agencies, the interagency meeting on implementing the National Seed Strategy had a higher level of government leadership in attendance.

Helping to organize and attending the interagency meeting was an eye opening experience. I felt both discouraged and inspired. Together these federal agencies manage huge amounts of land. But, each agency has its own mission it must follow, its own programs and policies. Additionally, many of these agencies are underfunded, especially when it comes to plant conservation. These barriers aside, the opportunity to work together in a coordinated effort and restore the health of the plant communities and the functioning of ecosystems across our country has presented itself in a real way that could be hugely successful. This is what inspires me.

Barbra Kruger’s exhibition “Belief and Doubt” at the Hirshhorn Museum. I have been taking full advantage of free access to art, history, and science at the museums in DC this winter.

Working in Washington DC has exposed me to high level land management policy and introduced me to many people in charge of land management programs. More importantly though, it has shown me my voice. Working in an office, I spend the bulk of my time communicating. Avoiding phone conversations is no longer an option (email is far less effective with flooded inboxes and buried messages). It might seem silly to say that talking on the phone has increased my confidence, but it is true. The more I use my voice, the more confident I become. Everything becomes easier with practice, and talking on the phone is a daily exercise in being heard.

My posts are lacking in pretty flower pictures, I know. Spring is on its way and I hope to photograph the cherry blossoms like a good flower-loving tourist in the coming weeks.

Till next time,

Lindsey

Reporting from the Bureau of Land Management’s Washington Office in DC.

Serendipity

I must admit I am way behind on posting to the CLM Blog. I started my second internship the beginning of December and every week since has been a whirlwind!

But I should start at the beginning…

In October, while finishing up my first CLM internship with the Rae Selling Berry Seed Bank, I was asked to present my SOS seed collecting adventures on Steens Mountain at the OR/WA BLM botanists meeting. I hadn’t thought much about what I was going to do once my internship ended, but assumed it would require a million job applications via USAJobs and scouring the internet for the best plant conservation grad school programs. But for now, these daunting tasks have been put on hold.

Tara Donovan transforms seemingly two dimensional index cards into towering three dimensional sculpture. Nicole admiring the untitled instillation at the Renwick Gallery

Tara Donovan transforms seemingly two dimensional index cards into towering three dimensional sculpture, Renwick Gallery.

It was at the botanists meeting in Oregon that I met the Plant Conservation Lead for the Bureau of Land Management, Peggy Olwell, and decided that I would move to Washington DC for a second CLM internship. So, that is where I am now.

Working at the Washington Office in DC has been quite the change of work environment − from the remote solitude of Harney County to the hustle and bustle of the capital city. Although my daily tasks at times feel far removed from the field botany I so enjoyed, the work happening in DC is what keeps all those botany positions funded and the native plant materials programs running.

Currently, most of the energy within the Plant Conservation Program is focused on implementation of the National Seed Strategy for Rehabilitation and Restoration 2015 – 2020. Involvement in this effort has me communicating with representatives from 12 Federal Agencies such as USFWS, NPS, USFS, and USGS as well as with the Smithsonian Institute and National Botanic Garden. Implementation!The Seed Strategy has been a cooperative effort since its conception and it is inspiring to see collaboration between agencies at this level. With lands protected/managed by so many different agencies and organizations across the country, collaboration is essential in restoring the health and function of our ecosystems. Before beginning my internships through the Chicago Botanic Garden, I never would have thought the Bureau of Land Management was at the front of such concerted efforts for plant conservation.

The National Botanical Garden. Roasty, toasty, steamy warm in the winter!

The National Botanical Garden. Toasty warm in the winter!

I have also been involved with the Plant Conservation Alliance (PCA), a joint partnership among 12 federal agency members and over 300 non-federal cooperators. In addition to its work on the National Seed Strategy which was released in 2015, PCA also developed the National Framework for Progress in Plant Conservation in 1995. I am thrilled to be working with such a radical force for botanical justice! Currently I have been reaching out to leaders in the plant conservation world looking for potential speakers at the upcoming PCA meetings.

 

 

Besides the overwhelming amount of networking here in Washington, DC I have also been seeking out the local flora – not an easy task in the winter!

This little Oxalis species showing off its adaptive capabilities in the Petworth neighborhood where I live.

This little Oxalis species showing off its adaptive capabilities in the Petworth neighborhood.

Graffiti tree

Graffiti tree on Roosevelt Island

Snowzilla definitely has been a highlight! I grew up in Seattle where snow rarely sticks around and spent much of my adult life in sunny Arizona, so shoveling snow and experiencing “blizzard” conditions was super fun!

Snowzilla Sickels!

Snowzilla Sickels!

 

SNOW DAY!

SNOW DAY!

I’m looking forward to the remainder of my time in Washington, DC. I am extremely grateful for the opportunities my CLM internships have afforded me thus far, and I am honored to be working with such an effective plant advocate and fierce feminist, my mentor Peggy Olwell.

Till next time,

Lindsey

Summer Always Ends Too Soon

Saying good bye to Big Indian Gorge

Saying good bye to Big Indian Gorge

Time can be a complicated concept. The ticking hands of a clock concretely mark the seconds of a day, but that day can seem to last both an eternity and fly by in the blink of an eye. In this same way, it seems strange to be writing my final blog post today. Five months felt like forever in the beginning, but summer always ends too soon.

 

 

 

Astragalus whitneyi var. confusus seed pod, one of my seed collections

Astragalus whitneyi var. confusus seed pod, one of my seed collections

 

Regardless of time, this internship was jam-packed with learning experiences, all of them rewarding whether pleasant or otherwise. Here’s a short list:

-cardboard from your plant press and a tiny spade can get a monster truck un-stuck from wet clay

-always say yes! even if you’re terrified of public speaking, being seen & heard can lead to a job

-it can take a really long time to count to 10,000

-the world of botany is relatively small; anyone can become a networking wizard in no time

Erigeron compositus var. glabratus

Erigeron compositus var. glabratus

 

 

This internship also provided me the opportunity to improve my botany skills. There’s no better way to learn than to sit in a meadow of wildflowers with a flora and a hand lens. I keyed all the plants I could, most of them charming little herbaceous guys. What a dream job! Working with the BLM collecting for Seeds of Success, I made voucher specimens (pressed plants) for all my seed collections.

 

 

 

A few of my 52 SOS specimens I mounted for the Portland State Herbarium

A few of my 52 SOS specimens I mounted for the Portland State Herbarium

This gave me the opportunity to learn proper herbarium curation procedure. And, my voucher specimens will be housed at the Smithsonian! It was great fun looking at all the flowers I had pressed earlier in the season and creating (what I would consider) works of art. It’s too bad herbaria don’t showcase exceptional collections at museums with pieces by Picasso, Frida Kahlo, and Georgia O’Keeffe. 

making new friends

making new friends

I believe my experience was different in the fact that I was a team of 1 in the field, but even so I met numerous like-minded people over the field season. Networking really was a large part of my internship, from my contacts at the Burns District BLM office, to the Oregon/Washington state office, the people I met through the Oregon Native Plant Society, touring the Bend Seed Extractory, meeting other CLM interns in Chicago, working with the Portland State Herbarium, and coordinating with Steens Mountain flora expert Don Mansfield. The more people I met, the clearer it became that the working (and retired) botanists all knew (or knew of) each other — and now they know me!

magical fairy land spring covered in monkey flowers, Erythranthe guttata & Erythranthe lewisii, and Arnica mollis

magical fairy land spring covered in Arnica mollis and monkey flowers (Erythranthe guttata & Erythranthe lewisii)

 

Working as a CLM intern has been truly excellent. If you are a recent graduate with any interest in plants, I recommend you apply. I am grateful that a CLM intern recommended I apply last year. My resume and skill set have grown exponentially while being able to make payments on my school loans (this internship pays better than most entry level field jobs I’ve found). Remember: say yes!

Camp Snacks; how to pack food for 10 days in the field and still enjoy eating

As I mentioned in my last blog post, Olga Kildisheva ─the grad student who collected with me on two separate trips for seed dormancy trials she is working on, recommended I do a food blog. I think she really enjoyed eating the smoked salmon I brought from Portland. Field work can be very demanding physically and involve long hours, often in rather harsh conditions such as high winds and hot temperatures. I find having good food that I enjoy eating more satisfying and it can inspire happy snack songs, smiles, positive thinking, and a good mood no matter how exhausted I may be.

Smoked salmon, cream cheese and cucumber. Yum!

Smoked salmon, cream cheese and cucumber. Yum!

When I head to the field I bring one cooler and one other bin for food. There’s never as much room in the cooler as I wish there was, limiting perishable food selections to the most cherished. I compensate by bringing along plenty of fresh fruits.

Cold melon after a long, hot day in the field is one of my most cherished perishable foods. If I could only fit two things in my cooler they would be melon and smoked salmon.

Cold melon after a long, hot day in the field is one of my most cherished perishable foods. If I could only fit two things in my cooler they would be melon and smoked salmon.

Instant oatmeal. Pictured is my favorite combo: peaches, chopped almonds, and ghee. I also like to add jam, sliced banana, or trail mix.

Instant oatmeal. Pictured is my favorite combo: peaches, chopped almonds, and ghee. I also like to add jam, sliced banana, or trail mix.

 

After spending 60 days in a tent this field season I have decided ghee and avocado are two versatile foods I will forever take with me when camping. Ghee is a most delicious clarified butter which originated in ancient India. Because it’s clarified, there are no milk solids to go rancid in the heat, it comes in a jar, and it doesn’t leak or spill like olive oil does. Plus it even tastes good in oatmeal. Avocados: put ’em on everything! They are good for breakfast (scrambled eggs), lunch (sandwiches), and dinner (chili and soup). Plus, when you buy them by the bag they tend to be cheaper so you kind of have to put them on everything.

Avacado on everything! Creamcheese is also a staple in my cooler. It is good on chili (pictured above), in scrambled eggs, essential for smoked salmon crackers, and it makes mac n cheese tastier when using water instead of milk.

Avocado on everything! Cream cheese is also a staple in my cooler. It is good on chili (pictured above), in scrambled eggs, essential for smoked salmon crackers, and it makes mac n cheese tastier when using water instead of milk.

 

PB&J, the old time favorite. I switch it up by bringing sunflower seed butter (cheaper than other nut butters and so delicious) instead of peanut butter once in a while.

 

 

I leave for the field on Monday for what may be my last trip. While I am looking forward to spending more time sleeping in a warm and comfortable bed, I will miss all the time I’ve spent outside becoming a better field botanist. Beyond learning how to pack efficiently and deliciously, I have gained plant identification skills, learned the names of quite a few birds, networked with professional botanists, overcome fears associated with camping (alone), and realized wind is my least favorite weather.

 

 

 

 

 

So long for now. And don’t worry, my next blog post will have plenty of plant and landscape pictures, but first it’s time for a snack!

-Lindsey in Portland & Harney County, Oregon

Don’t Forget to Have Fun

The last month (or two…) kept me very busy. I met new people, gained new skills, witnessed world cup soccer, and the seeds just keep coming!

Hope Solo defending the US goal against Japan in the World Cup Final. Yep, I took that photo from my seat at the game in Vancouver!

Hope Solo defending the US goal against Japan in the World Cup Final. Yep, I took that photo from my seat at the game in Vancouver, BC!

While I usually spend most of my time in the field alone, my last two trips brought fresh faces to the campground. Olga Kildisheva, a grad student at the University of Western Australia, spent a few days in the field collecting for seed dormancy studies she’s working on. She has collected in the Vale district as well, but I’m hoping she spends a couple more days on Steens Mountain with me in the future. A long day of seed collecting through bugs and heat isn’t so bad when you have a buddy to joke about your shared PTSD from the buzzing of flies and mosquitoes. She urged me to write a food blog with photographs of what I’m eating in the field (look for it on the CLM blog next month!). Apparently she was impressed with my camping snacks.

Olga investigating... something...  Polygonum bistortoides with pollinator in the foreground

Olga investigating… something…
Polygonum bistortoides with pollinator in the foreground

Despite working alone most of the time, this internship has been a great opportunity to network with a diverse array of like-minded folks.  I helped lead a Native Plant Society of Oregon hike on Steens Mountain with a retired BLM botanist from the area. Walking around my field site with someone who spent 30+ years identifying its flora was a real treat. It also gave me a boost of confidence; working alone, I have no one to tell me if I’ve identified the plants correctly but, now I know I’m doing it right! Most of the hikers drove in from Portland or Bend and camped on the mountain. I was lucky enough to share my campfire and my inner tube for floating on the campground lake with the NPSO Portland chapter’s president. She told me of federal botanists working in Oregon and how best to go about working for them in the future. Meeting other plant enthusiasts and networking with professionals while looking at flowers has been the highlight of my field season so far.

White-crowned sparrow nest spotted on the NPSO plant hike

White-crowned sparrow nest spotted on the NPSO plant hike

Getting to know the grasses (all by myself!)

Getting to know the grasses (all by myself!)

Flowers are a mere highlight, seeds are the real deal. Collecting seeds, missing seeds, finding new seeds ─ sharp seeds, itchy hair seeds, buggy seeds, jumping seeds. I am learning how seed collecting can be an exciting adventure. The toughest lesson so far, is learning how to slow down even though the seeds aren’t going to wait for me. I take 10 day trips to the field with 10 days in Portland in between, so if I don’t make time to collect a population that is ripe on one trip it will likely disperse before I return. This fact sent me into a dizzying whirlwind of 12 hour days the beginning of July. The flowers are easy to collect, seeds can take all day. Although this sense of urgency continues to haunt me, I realize I will never be able to collect ALL the seeds (no matter how badly I’d like to). So, I now make it a rule that I return to camp in time for a swim before dinner and begin where I left off the next morning.

Where I work is beautiful. Little Blitzen Gorge, Steens Mountain.

Where I work is beautiful.
Little Blitzen Gorge, Steens Mountain.

The best advice I’ve received: “Don’t forget to have fun” -Retired BLM botanist, Rick Hall

Botanizing Harney County via Portland, Oregon

Hello!

For my internship I am working with the Rae Selling Berry Seed Bank & Plant Conservation Program (RSBSB) in Portland, Oregon. This is my first year as an intern, but it’s the second year the RSBSB has partnered with CLM and Seeds of Success. Last year the CLM intern for RSBSB, Isaac Sandlin, made over 60 collections – an amazing/impressive (gulp) feat for a single collector! I had the opportunity to visit Isaac on one of his collection trips last year and decided I wanted to participate in SOS and the CLM internship program. Like Isaac, I will largely be on my own in the field. That’s not to say I am alone for my internship; I have been in contact with botanists in the Medford, Lakeview, and Burns BLM offices, Isaac Sandlin, several Native Plant Society of Oregon members from the area, and of course, my mentor at the seed bank, Ed. All have been very helpful and supportive.

Although based in Portland, I will be collecting seeds on the sagebrush steppe of Southeastern Oregon – a very long commute! For this reason, I anticipate two ten-day trips to the field each month. I realize this is somewhat different than the experience other interns have who are living much closer, if not at their main field site. My home while in the field is the campground and my tent. While I had assumed this would be a lonesome experience, my first trip has proven the opposite. I have found my fellow campers to be friendly and inquisitive, often inviting me to join them for coffee or dinner at their campsite. I even met the author of the Flora of Steens Mountain at the campground! He graciously verified some of my specimens and gave me pointers on where to look for other species on my list.

 

Rocky field of Lomatium cous and L. bicolor var. leptocarpum

Rocky field of Lomatium cous and L. bicolor var. leptocarpum

Hillside with Balsamorhiza sagittata

Hillside with Balsamorhiza sagittata

 

The focus for my SOS collections is on plants important to the greater sage-grouse for food and cover. Sage-grouse habitat is an SOS priority and is under consideration by the USFWS for possible listing under the Endangered Species Act. In Harney County, local ranchers and USFWS have been working together to protect sagebrush habitat on private rangeland for the threatened bird and its ecosystem (http://www.fws.gov/greatersagegrouse/). I find this type of cooperation between government agency and private land owner inspiring. Within Harney County is the Steens Mountain Cooperative Management and Protection Area where I have spent most of my days in the field. It too has brought together private land owners and government agencies to both conserve and manage the area. But, I must admit the rainbow checkerboard map of public, private, state, and tribal property boundaries can be difficult to navigate at times…

Greater sage-grouse photo: http://www.blm.gov/style/medialib/blm/wo/Communications_Directorate/public_affairs/sage-grouse_planning/images.Par.14496.Image.600.424.1.gif

Greater sage-grouse photo: http://www.blm.gov/style/medialib/blm/wo/Communications_Directorate/public_affairs/sage-grouse_planning/images.Par.14496.Image.600.424.1.gif

 

Since completing my first trip to the field last week, I am eager to return! I spent a great deal of my time exploring the maze of dirt roads in my monster truck, getting to know the lay of the land while scouting locations for targeted species populations. It also took a while to become familiar with the flora as this was my first trip and my first time working in southeast Oregon. Over the ten days I spent in the field I experienced a broad range of the area’s weather. High winds and below freezing nights welcomed me to my campsite at the base of Steens Mountain the first couple nights. Luckily, I was able to get quite a bit of scouting in before rain, snow, lightning, and thunder made its way to Southeastern Oregon. So far I have collected voucher specimens for 21 targeted species.

Castilleja angustifolia

Castilleja angustifolia

Astragalus filipes with a weighty pollinator

Astragalus filipes with a weighty pollinator

Orobanche uniflora

Orobanche uniflora

However much needed in this drought stricken area, rain and snow made exploration via many of the soft dirt roads difficult, if not impassable, even in my 4-wheel drive truck. Wet, slippery roads or not, I can’t wait to get back out there next week to check on my populations and make new plant friends (the social life of a solitary botanist)!

Road looking east after the first full day of rain

Road looking east after the first full day of rain

Till next time,

Lindsey

Portland/Harney County, OR