Big Bear Lake, CA

I arrived in Big Bear in mid-November from Minnesota.  I’d never been west of Montana or so, and so Utah, Nevada, and the Mojave Desert were new and very different.  I camped near Moab and NE of St. George, and got to do some hiking along the way.  

It’s extremely exciting to be in a region with such a high amount of plant diversity and endemism, and definitely not too late to do some winter botanizing (see Anisocoma acaulis).  It’s also interesting to see what different resource management issues botanists and biologists confront here compared with the Great Lakes region.

During the first week of my internship, I spent a day doing restoration work at Cactus Flats with USFS restoration staff and crews from Big Bear Lake and Riverside.  We planted Joshua tree and matchweed, collected seed, and cleaned up fencing.  This week a fellow intern and I went to the Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden in Claremont, CA and toured the herbarium, seed bank, greenhouse, and gardens.  Along with those field days and several afternoons checking fuels treatments, I’ve been reviewing and checking forest and regional plant lists, and generally reading and gathering resources.  We’ve also started work on a guide to invasive plant species of the San Bernardino NF, which may eventually include many non-native species that occur on other forests in southern California.  There are already a lot of great resources about noxious weed species in California.  However, as well as being forest-specific, this guide is intended to be very visual and accessible.

It’s great to be in Big Bear Lake and to have the opportunity to begin learning a new flora!

Big Bear Ranger Station

US Forest Service

Winter Time!!

This last month I was involved in Fort Ord’s National Public Lands Day, the biggest community service day for Fort Ord National Monument. The event drew about 150 people from the Monterey County area and was a great success. The event had a few different service projects the public chose from. I was stationed at a project site where we were planting plants, cutting down brush and brushing trails.

At my previous job, I worked for a non-profit community based habitat restoration project. Being able to lead a planting event with kids and their parents was really awesome. This event solidified that I am in the right place. I love it. I want to continue working in environmental science and in public education. One of the kids I was working with on public lands day came up to me after we were wrapping things up to go to lunch. She said she remembered me from my previous job, as her group leader. She said that was 3 years prior, when she was in 5th grade. That one little girl gave me hope, that all the work we are doing in this field, is actually reaching people.

Casey brought her mom and little sister out that day with her. She has grown to care about her community and is teaching her family to as well. She is a perfect example of what we want our community to emulate. She has pride in her green spaces and has become a steward of the land, owning her responsibility to keep her community beautiful.

I was proud to be in this line of work, but Casey gave me hope for the future and the reassurance that I’m in the right place.