Date: Friday, June 13, 2014
Time 11:15 am - 12:30 pm
Weather: Light rain, overcast
Temperature: 57 F
Location: Wolf Tree Nature Trail
It is with great honor that I write my final journal entry of the season. I will begin with my normal phenological observations, then provide a series of repeat photos, introduce a new type of simple description and observation, and finish with a reflection of my time at this place in nature. Enjoy!
Phenology
Due to the rain, everything in the forest is wet. All of the leaves and wood have been washed and now give a fresh scent through the forest. The whole forest (especially the moss!) seems to enjoy this rain after our previous dry and sun period of Spring. Like they are taking in new energy from the rain so they can grow even more. The first time I visited in Week 1 it was raining and now it is raining on my last visit. Its a pleasant coincidence that makes me feel like the time here has come full circle.
The leaves seem to hang lower than usual as if it is a resting day in the rain. The leaves gently jiggle as the rain drops from the canopy fall down to the understory below. The Salmonberry is bright green and wet (Figure 1). Some bushes have begun to dry, wilt, and turn brown (Figure 2). But other are still producing berries that will soon ripen (Figure 3).
Figure 1. Close-up Salmonberry leaves |
Figure 2. Drying Salmonberry |
Figure 3. Ripe Salmonberry
|
The forest floor is wet and soft. The Wood Sorrel is still full and green on the forest floor (Figure 4). The Tree leaves and needs hold on to their branches tightly above in the canopy creating a full and vibrantly green ceiling (Figure 5).
Figure 4. Wood Sorrel |
Figure 5. Full Canopy |
The Licorice Fern on the Red Alder near my sit spot has dried up and turned brown.
Licorice Fern dried on Red Alder |
I hear many Song Sparrow songs ring through the canopy above me. However the canopy is so thick that I cannot see them. But now I am able to recognize birds by their calls so I know what species are around me without having to see them! The Song Sparrows sing sweet and ringing melodies that call and respond to one another. A Black-capped Chickadee sings a song that goes "Chicka-dee-dee" off to my left. This is their alarm call but because the number of "Dees" in their call signifies the level of danger, I know that 2 "Dees" is a low level of danger. I also heard a Barred Owl off to my left. A soft "hop-hoo!"
Repeat Photo Series
Below are several series of repeat photos from around my sit spot. Notice the extreme difference in color and fullness in vegetation between weeks 1 and 9!
Repeat Log Week 1 |
Repeat Log Week 2 |
Repeat Log Week 5 |
Repeat Log Week 9 |
Repeat Red Alders Week 1 |
Repeat Red Alders Week 9 |
Repeat Trail East Week 1 |
Repeat Trail East Week 9 |
Repeat Trail West Week 1 |
Repeat Trail West Week 9 |
Pretend you are a kid observing the world
I am so excited! After breakfast this morning my mom let me come play outside for the rest of the morning! Now I can be with nature, who listens to my thoughts with a kind ear and gives quiet and peace in return. I ran through the trail and reached my favorite spot. "My Log" where I like to sit.
What's this? I hear something beautiful! A melodic conversation. I look up and I see a friend sitting above me. But who is she talking to? This friend likes to talk to herself when she knows no one is watching. She has a brown back and head and a glorious burning red tummy. She is covered in stiff hair which is wet, like mine, from the rain. She looks down and says to me "How are you? Don't be sad. Be happy. Cheer up!" (She says that to everyone).
I say "Hello!"with a smile. I notice her lips, which are pointy and yellow. She down't have hands. She tells me how she has arms that give her the magic to float through the air! She looks at me with kind eyes and I notice a white circle around her eye. She is propped up on two skinny stands. Her balance is impeccable!
"I must go now, I see an insect and I am hungry" she said to me.
"So long," I call back to her as she floats away. I hope we will meet again some day.
Friend |
Family of 3 green things |
I look to my right. Brown ornaments decorate these things families all around me. Some are round with long bumps and others are long with round bumps. They hang. They are not waiting for anything or anyone. They are content. Or are they? Are they caught? Stuck? Maybe they are trapped in these ties and are unable to escape. I ask them if they are okay. They tell me that they were sent by their mothers that watch over us. That they were sent to reach the ground and they cannot because they are stuck. Should I help them? Should I intervene? Or should I let nature run its course. I don't want to mess anything up. But I want to help. I grab a brown thing and I place it on the ground.
"Good luck!" I say as I leave them and head back home for lunch.
Brown things hanging |
Brown things |
Personal Reflection
1) How has your perception of your observation site changed through the quarter?
My attitude toward my site took a 180 turn. At the beginning of the quarter, I was nervous to be in nature alone and I felt overwhelmed with the observations and time it would take to complete weekly journal assignments. But now, my time at my site is what I look forward to most every week! I am no longer uncomfortable to sit quietly and let the forest functions continue around me. I use to feel so ut of place when I sat in my sit spot. I was worried about insects crawling on me and I was spooked by the slightest sounds. Now, I see my site as a place to escape from the busy city and relax with myself for a while. It is like friend that waits for me to return. I wonder about what is happening at my site while I'm away and look forward to the my next visits. I can sit peacefully at my sit spot and say hello to passing insects, listen to beautiful bird songs in the canopy, and look at the changing vegetation around me. I enjoy observing its changes and I am so surprised by the changes I have seen! The repeat photos I've shared above are wonderful representations of these changes I've witnessed.
2) How has your sense of the Puget Sound Region changed through the quarter?
My sense of the Puget Sound Region has changed tremendously over the quarter! This class has given me the opportunity to understand the natural areas all around me whether they were shaped by a geologic past and/or are disturbed by invasive species or human activity. I understand the origin or the local natural systems and I am curious about finding out more! I have gained a strong sense of personal direction and place within the Puget Sound Region. I am constantly wondering where I am in relation to the Olympic Mountains, the Cascades, Mt. Rainier, Lake Washington, etc. Curiosity isn't something that can be taught but the opportunity to cease it can be presented and I am grateful for this class and Professor Tim Billo for giving me this opportunity. It has changed the way I perceive the world around me. Thank you, Tim!
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).
I think that knowing a site intimately means to understand it not only from your perspective but also from its own. I had the opportunity to get to know the Wolf Tree Nature Trail through the quarter and I can say that I intimately know this place. Like I said above, this place becomes a friend. When I first visited my site, I knew close to nothing about specific species and interactions. But through the quarter, as my site has changed with the seasons, I feel as though I have changed with it. Every change it experienced, I was there with it, learning about it and understanding it. My site and I developed together and my intimacy with my site stems from the memories I have with it. The first ripe Salmonberry, tasting Wood Sorrel, or crawling through thickening Salmonberry bushes. I know this place. I also know the greater area of the Puget Sound Region because I have travelled on weekend field trips and explored new habitats and species. I have not only seen one site up close in detail but I have also observed a wide range of sites less formally.
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