Thursday, August 21, 2014

Catch up!

Catch up.
Ok, one a year does not make a blog! So much happened over the last year at the College and the applied environmental field in the Kootenays, it's a bit over whelming to report out on, but there is lots of cool stuff that I've meant to share, so I'm going to take a few posts here to show off, mostly with images. Here we go...

Every fall instructors in our RFW program have to get ready for fall RFW field school. Part of these 10 days are spent working on measuring fish populations.
Rena and her young research assistant, Adriana, setting up minnow traps


In October last year, Doris Hauslietner and I took her IEP 260 class up on Cornice Ridge in Stageleap Provincial Park to do some vegetation monitoring with with the Parks staff, and to assess the whitebark pine population health in that area.

Unloading at top of the Salmo-Creston Pass

Students getting to more open vegetation on Cornice Ridge.

Doris and her students assessing blister rust damage on whitebark saplings in one of the vegetation plots.
Students setting up a plot and assessing vegetation cover using a line intercept method. 
Don't do this unless you work for Parks! Here's an old unexploded avalanche bomb. First one I've come across in many years of vegetation monitoring in that area. 
IEP class of 2013/14!

Monday, September 16, 2013

Orientation 2013

Lots of stuff has been happening, but there's never enough time to post it! So here's a few tidbits from orientation week...

Pete and Keyes getting the cross cut competition started.

SEG students get to know one another

Lining up first and second years to form learning teams

Sage advice from Rob Macrae at the MIR centre

Your truly listening to students given sage advice

Lui Marinelli reflecting on that advice...

Scholarship winners, Cali and Laura, with friends and instructors

SEG second and third year scholarship winners: Ezra, Heidi, Mandy, Cali, and Laura!

Wednesday, March 13, 2013

Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Alpine larch

A call from Don Pigott from Yellow Point Propagation provided a much needed excuse for a subalpine escape. Don wanted mature larch cones. The details were to find a sample of viable seeds from 10 individuals in two separate stands. Adrian Leslie and I decided to pick a relatively close by and familiar location to look for some these samples - above Whitewater ski hill, in Ymir Basin.
Leaving the ski runs below Ymir Basin



Adrian and Ellie looking for trees that had cones
 Once up to the shorter trees that we could access with our pruning pole, we discovered that other seed predators were well at work.

Adrian inspecting a poorly developed cone
 This critter was probably Strobilomyia macalpinei, something that I found a fair amount of in the stands I suveyed in the Rockies.
A problem...fly larvae were already harvesting the seeds!

An old vet..
















This was a classic open, timberline stand, where avalanche disturbance and deep spring snow packs allowed the larch to continuously regenerate among surviving older seed producers. The other high elevation species, spruce, fir, and whitebark pine were relegated to protected ribbons below rock outcrops, or mature larch groups. 









In the end, a dissapointing cone crop - but a beautiful day out in the mountains and great break from the office!

Me clipping off cones, using a pruning pole.

Another cone with a smaller larvae instar

Two well developed cones, and a short shoot that couldn't make up its mind whether to be a cone or a branch

A local resident (marmot) checking us out

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Orientation 2012

Well, we're at it again for 2012! So far there there are 85 new students spread over four diploma and one degree program in the School. We've had the College wide orientation, our own get together with first and returning second year students, the first week of field trips, forestry bridge installations, getting to know LANs, servers, and GIS.
SEG faculty assistant, Leanne Reitan and I, manning the orientaiton both

new students vying for cross-cut champions title!

Our new SEG crowd getting treasure hunt instructions
For me, it's been a lot learning in my new role as the Chair of the SEG. I've been getting to know a whole lot of College staff that I never really appreciated before - an eye opener!

Friday, February 3, 2012

A New Year.

Feb 2012 - It's been a busy time since Field School last spring. Right now I'm a month in teaching a revitalized forest ecology - now terrestrial ecology and biology course. For the first couple of weeks students and I have been out on the college campus learning how to identify shrubs in winter,

measuring different tree plantations, and observing evidence of out-of-season wildlife wandering around in the warmer temperatures that we've experienced this January.




more recently, this class  moved up to the Nancy Greene Lake area, west of Castlegar, to examine forest structure and ways of measuring site productivity.

Folks have been busy staring through prisms, rapping DBH tapes around trees, estimating stand ages, and generally having fun! Students will find the hard part settling down in the computer lab to restle with data that has been collected over the next few weeks...

Monday, April 25, 2011

Field school


Well, we’re halfway through field school which has been an interesting and busy time so far. The Recreation, Fish and Wildlife students started off with a chainsaw safety course where they learn how to strip down and clean saws, what safety equipment to use, and how to safely make some basic cuts.






Bucking and limbing
 Our Integrated Environmental Planning students spent the first week working on a restoration project on the City of Nelson’s shoreline. This was in conjunction with Eileen Senyk of Benchmark Environmental Services, the folks from the City of Nelson, and Thor Smestad from Terra Erosion Control Ltd. This was an interesting project where we were attempting to stabilize the softer material remaining on the small peninsulas originally created to compensate for lost fish habitat in this region of the West Arm of the Kootenay River. 

Peninsulas on the north side of the airport runway
This four day short course in environmental restoration started off with a walk through of the sites to discuss issues with Eileen, Eric White, Crystal Klym (Central Kootenay Invasive Plant Committee), and Thor.


Invasive plant discussion
live staking


Following this, the students attacked some weed hotspots and learned a number bioengineering techniques, including live staking, brush pockets, and their crowning achievement, a branch box breakwater.

Mixing humus, mycorrhizae, peatmoss, and nutrients for planting

Sharpening live stakes.

Brush pockets and the start of the branch box breakwater

Adding branches...

The first layer tiedown in the branch box

Tying down the last layer with 1/2 inch manila rope


Adding beaver protection (2 inch stucco wire). The white latex paint is to prevent sun scald

Success!