Thursday, June 12, 2014


Ravenna Journal 9
Thursday June 12
4:00 

Ten weeks have passed since my first visit to Ravenna Park. I can see at my observation spot that there are fewer Salmonberries  than the last couple of weeks. Over the last ten weeks I have witnessed the plant flowering and fruiting and generally just growing, you can barely see the creek now that it is overgrown by the bush. I noticed that the Indian Plum has its berries now. They are deep purple and when crushed stain your hands a purple juice. The Tall Oregon Grape around here is also producing fruit, clumps of smaller berries on the bushes. It makes me wonder what stage the plants on the Olympic Peninsula are at. 



 Week 1

 Week 4




 Week 6

 Week 9
3 species

Plant

Indigo teardrops
drip from dark green
pulled taffy



Bird
There's a noise on repeat. Freeze. Look. Again. There, veiled eyelids, a funeral or just dipped in ink? 


Animal
Rustling in the bush, speck of silver, stillness, then scampers up the tree





Final Reflection

1) How has your perception of your observation site changed through the quarter?

On my first walk through Ravenna I was amazed at the native forest in the city park. I thought I would have to travel further than a fifteen minute walk to study natural history. When I set out looking for my observation site I knew I wanted to find a nice little clearing where I could sit and observe I also wanted to go back to the creek each week. The spot I found a little up the slope was surrounded by different trees. I found I liked going back to that spot once we had learned the names and how to identify the different trees. I was also able to think about how slope aspect affected the way species grow. I liked to look at what grew near the water and what grew on the slope of the ravine. I found that the sword ferns mainly dominated the slope while Lady Ferns, Salmonberry and giant horsetails grew near the water. As the quarter progressed I found just sitting still at my observation site was a really good way to look for movement and wait for birds and animals to come to me. I always went off to explore other parts of the park and try to identify new species. At new sites I spent more time looking for specific things like mushrooms or invertebrates, my observation spot has been a constant almost meditative place that is like my home in Ravenna. Since the beginning of the quarter I have watched my site change, pretty drastically on the weeks that we were away in field trips. When you get to know a plant it is sad to see its flowers fall, but there are always other plants beginning to bloom and new changes to observe year round. 
2) How has your sense of the Puget Sound Region changed through the quarter?

I feel that I know the Puget Sound Region much better and I am more excited and grateful to live here. Before this class I never thought to ask questions about the Puget Sound. I just moved here last September and never learned the history of the land and how it has been formed over thousands of years. Even though I didn't grow up here I feel more attached to this region. I understand the basic weather systems and can tell people why it is so mild and rainy here. I also appreciate the rain because I know it is a part of this region and look forward to the dry summers. I am much wiser when it comes to identifying species of this region, I have tools and a curiosity to learn how the species interact. I am so thankful to live in a city where I can look past the skyline and the Cascade Mountains, the Olympics, Mt. Rainer, there are so many incredible natural places to explore in this city and I can't wait to get to know it better!
3) What does it mean to intimately know a natural place? (Think about this question in terms of the process and the outcome. Also think about it in terms of scale—you have done close observation of one site, as well as developed broader appreciation on field trips around the Puget Sound).

To intimately know a natural place you have to spend time in it. It is not enough to spend a whole day exploring an area if you never go back. A natural place changes throughout each year and is different each time you return. Once it becomes part of your routine to go visit a place then you can really get to know it intimately. Also the more time you spend at a place the more you want to be there. Learning about the natural history in Ravenna Park has made me more curious about the natural history of this area. I am more observant and try to check in with my surroundings more often. When you know a natural place intimately you can clearly see changes and notice different things each time you return to the site. You have a desire to check back in on that place to make sure everything is still as it should be. On a larger scale, I think knowing the Puget Sound intimately will take more time. Each time I have an opportunity to visit a natural place in this region is an opportunity to get to know the Puget Sound better. I think it also involves putting yourself in perspective. We only have a chance to know this region as it is now, from our unique perspective. However, this region has been formed over thousands of years, who knows what it will be like in the future. 

Sunday, June 1, 2014

East Slope of the Cascades
Saturday May 31

This weekend half of the class went on a field trip to the East slope of the cascades. On the drive we passed through the Douglas fir forest, into the pine forest dominated by Ponderosa Pine and finally made it to the steppe habitat of Eastern Washington. 
When we got out of the car at the first stop along the Yakima valley river it was about 11:00 am and the sun was brutal. Such a sharp contrast from out first trip to the Olympic Peninsula. We were clearly on the dusty, dry slopes of Cascade rain shadow. Although I am from Eastern Washington, I never really wondered about the natural history of this region. However coming to this area with a new perspective and sense of wonder really made this trip meaningful to me. 



Mountain Daisy


After arriving at our first destination we walked across a wobbly bridge to get to the trails. Flying all over the river were loads of cliff swallows probably catching insects over the water. It was a little overwhelming watching all of them and walking over that bridge! We stopped for a while in a clearing to look at the birds of this region. We spotted the magnificent Lazuli Bunting, Turkey Vultures, Ravens as well as the Yellow Chat and  Bullock’s Oriole. It was refreshing to see some new birds today but also a challenge to pick up on new calls. 


White markings on cliffs indicate areas frequented by hawks


Nootka Rose also found in Seattle 



Tall Sagebrush


After a 911 emergency call, quiet an exciting morning, we made our way up one of the trails looking out for the native plants of this area and rattlesnakes! Most abundant was the Tall Sagebrush, Artemisia tridentata, tri for the three pronged leaved. We also saw Bitterbrush and Prickly Pear cactus. Most of the plants in this area are brittle and dry, they grow close to the ground due to exposure to wind. They also store water in their roots. 



Orange lichen on Tall Sagebrush

Sulphur Buckwheat

Our next location was the expansive shrub steppe habitat. At first glance it seemed like a rugged barren landscape, however, up close there is an entire ecosystem of fragile plants and wildflowers growing in the dry soil. This side of the state was not affected by glaciers like the west side, it has rolling hills and mysterious mounds instead. Although I didn't see it, we heard the bubbling song of the Meadow lark which is now my favorite song to date. 

Bitterroot

Unfortunately sometime around now my camera ran out of battery. Some of the exciting species I saw with my naked eyes were the Horned Lizard, Scorpions, and Tent Caterpillars. The caterpillars were the most fascinating to me, there were bunches of them crowded together in webs on the Tall Sagebrush!  


Our final location was the waterfall trail in the Pine forest. Here I noticed many familiar species we had notice in Seattle including Nootka Rose, Douglas-fir, Cottonwoods and Snowberry. There was also another type of alder I think Sitka Alder. Also common along the trail was the Rocky Mountain Iris a beautiful blue/purple flower, my favorite new species! 

I was glad to have the chance to practice natural history observations in a new place even if I couldn't immediately identify everything I was seeing!  

Mycology at Ravenna
May 30 2014
3:00 warm

This week at Ravenna I set off to find as many species of fungi that I could. I was able to explore some different parts of the park. Fungi are decomposers of dead organic material and the mushrooms I found were growing on dead trees on on the forest ground on dead leaves. 






Agrogybe praecox 

Button Mushroom Agaricus bisporus





I found bunches of Fairy Ring Mushrooms growing together close to the ground on the side of the path sloping down to the creek. 



Fairy Ring Mushroom. Has a distinctive bump in the center of the cap, slim stem and white gills. 
Turkey Tail Mushrooms. Found growing on a fallen tree attached to the wood. semi-circular with various shades of green and brown rings. Wavy and wrinkled hard texture.


Agrogybe praecox 
 Artists Fungus growing on the side of a dead hollowed out tree.