There’s more than just rare plants to be found on the range…

This photo may ignite memories of a bygone-era, of “The Price is Right”, or some kind of rugged sales pitch for “life is great!” on the range. And yes it is, Summer of Fun 2014. Thank you to my photographer and fellow CLM intern, Brittany King, for getting the lighting, angles, and wardrobe just so. Hair and make-up, yeah right!

Couldn’t have used my time on the land this season in a more engaging way. Worked in 11 Eastern Washington counties and countless ecosystems including Ponderosa pine forest, interior Douglas fir forest along the Canadian border, the rolling hills of the Palouse, Juniper Sand Dunes, steep canyon lands, riparian coulees, countless lakes and wetland margins, and the remains of functioning sagebrush steppe. In addition, we had the worst fire season in WA state history which translated to far less road access, more hiking, and some uneasy moments with fire spotting. If that weren’t enough we wrestled with two flat tires, a badger, black bears, rattlesnakes, and getting caught in a lightning storm. I’m exhausted!

All that travel, all the logistics, and no one hurt. No major bumps in the road. Our rare plants were found and we gratefully contributed to efforts to conserve and restore them. If that wasn’t reward enough a last ditch search effort was made to recover a field friend of ours (Olympus Camedia C-5060 5.1 Mexapixel) last seen while hunting a rare pink, the federally listed Silene spaldingii (Spalding’s silene), near Spokane WA. Goes to show you that “not all cameras who wander are lost,” for long…(yes that is an original quote).
Wishing all you big and bright stars many blessings and transformations, the ability to see the path, know yourself, and always keep pushing out your greatness, your brilliance, your gifts in whatever form. Love and light!

Not All Cameras That Wander Are Lost.

Not All Cameras That Wander Are Lost.

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About Rosemary_Baker

Rosemary was born and raised in Seattle, WA where she continues to remain connected through family, friends, colleagues, the University of WA, and a personal landscape design business. Her mission this season is to develop connections to dry-side, Central and Eastern WA landscapes through its people, plants, and wild places.

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