A brief diary following the week to week exploits of a College instructor and his students.
Wednesday, March 13, 2013
Castlegar News - Students chip in with city planning
Castlegar News - Students chip in with city planning
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Alpine larch
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| Leaving the ski runs below Ymir Basin |
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| Adrian and Ellie looking for trees that had cones |
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| Adrian inspecting a poorly developed cone |
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| A problem...fly larvae were already harvesting the seeds! |
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| 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.
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Orientation 2012
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| SEG faculty assistant, Leanne Reitan and I, manning the orientaiton both |
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| new students vying for cross-cut champions title! |
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| Our new SEG crowd getting treasure hunt instructions |
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
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| Bucking and limbing |
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| Peninsulas on the north side of the airport runway |
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| Mixing humus, mycorrhizae, peatmoss, and nutrients for planting |
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| Sharpening live stakes. |
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| Brush pockets and the start of the branch box breakwater |
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| Adding branches... |
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| The first layer tiedown in the branch box |
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| Tying down the last layer with 1/2 inch manila rope |
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| Adding beaver protection (2 inch stucco wire). The white latex paint is to prevent sun scald |
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| Success! |
Wednesday, October 13, 2010
Spring to Summer 2010 (I'm trying to catch up to fall!)
Time flies! Here are a couple of pics from the tree viewing trip in the Valhallas I talked about in Feb.
The snow was deep – but kind of reactive, Biologists Peter Corbett, Tyson Ehlers, and I were able to easily able to ski cut out small soft slabs down to a 30cm rain crust.

There were some big old whitebark pine trees, but many were dead (mostly beetle kill). Sadly, still a lot of high elevation logging up there, too, taking the lower tall subalpine pines.
Nevertheless, we still manage to see the bright side of our adventure.
Another day was spent up on Grassy Mountain looking at fairy spuds (spring beauty bulbs) the meadow voles had cached and forgotten, and the interesting “grassy bald” vegetation that appears at elevations far lower than you would expect to find alpine tundra (likely due to the warmer regional climate and southern aspect creating drought stress for tree seedlings).
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| Stacey gearing up for a tree climb |
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| Stacey in action placing the wire mesh covering over some cones |
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| Here's a shot of white pine blister rust spore sacs on one of the smaller whitebark sapling. |
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| Me, fighting with some branches, the city of Castlegar in the background |
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Winter! (spring?)
Crazy!
It’s the middle of February and we’ve being going so hard I’ve been letting this report on activities fall way behind. Already this winter (it feels like spring) folks in Forest ecology and botany (RRS 163) have been out looking at forest structure and succession in a variety of field sites. One of the problems of assessing these sites in the winter is figuring out which species of shrubs are present – as the majority have shed their leaves for the winter. The RRS 163 folks have been spending time learning to identify these species just from the twigs with their winter buds.


In the lab, my second year university botany class (Biol 210) has been sectioning and studying the meristems of local native plants and set up a germination study for whitebark pine.
This species of high elevation pine is endangered throughout most of its range, due to three main changes in the subalpine environment. The first, white pine blister rust (Cronartium ribicola), has become an epidemic on whitebark pine since its introduction to North America early in this century.
The second change, the implementation of effective fire suppression, has reduced the regeneration of whitebark pine. This pine species depends on the creation of open areas, where competitive canopy and understory cover has been removed in order for seedlings to become established. There is concern that fire suppression is leading to successional replacement of whitebark pine by more shade tolerant species, such as subalpine fir (Abies lasiocarpa) and Engelmann spruce (Picea engelmanni).
Until recently, Canadian whitebark pine populations where not considered to be under great threat from mountain pine beetle. However, a very large increase in beetle activity in British Columbia in the last few years. Oops! I forgot climate change….but that’s another rant. Learn more about the species and issues here.
Why collect and germinate seeds? Well, the trees that are left after an area has been severely infected by blister rust may have some genetic resistances to the disease. So we collect seeds from these ‘plus’ trees to grow out the seedlings and then attempt to determine if they really do have some genetic resistance by exposing the new individuals to blister rust spores. If they are resistant then more seedlings from those trees will be grown for restoration planting.
Now, germinating the seeds in any amount is notoriously difficult. One method to improve germination success in difficult or ‘recalcitrant’ seeds is making a small nick or cut into the seed coat. This allows water to be more easily taken up by the embryo and has been shown to increase germination success. Therefore, our interests in the germination study is to determine how much of an effect hand nicking the tough mature seed coat of whitebark pine has on boosting germination success of this species.

I’ve also inflicted whitebark mania on the ADGIS spatial statistics students. In their statistical refresher month, they have been learning how to use R for data analysis of whitebark prescribed burn data from the Rocky Mountains National Parks.
Well, all this hard work is going to deserve a trip to the subalpine on skis sometime soon to check out the trees...Maybe some fun pictures next week.










































