Thirty years ago yesterday, I was picked up at the end of a backpack trip in the Costa Rican rain
forest.
I grew up in suburbia, it was love of plant ecology that drew me into strange activities like a week's trek in the rainforest.
Sunday, May 29, 2016
Sunday, May 22, 2016
Plant Story--the Dramatic Larkspurs
Sunday, May 15, 2016
Visiting Northern Colorado--Horsetooth Mountain Park in Sunshine
Five days later (see last week's blog) I revisited Horsetooth Waterfall Trail, this time on a sunny morning after three days of warm weather.
Flowers that close in cold weather were open!
Sunday, May 8, 2016
Visiting Northern Colorado--Horsetooth Mountain Park in Spring Snow
Horsetooth Mountain Park trail, in falling snow |
When I got there it was snowing. Lightly, mixed with sleet, but persistently.
One of the things I learned as a prairie ecologist: "do it now, the weather later may be worse."
Hiking out in the sleet/snow was cool but not unpleasant and I knew the weather forecast was for snow for the next three days. Out I went!
Sunday, May 1, 2016
Visiting Australia—Glorious Kakadu National Park
Being in the Southern Hemisphere, the northern end of Australia is the warmest. In the lands east of Darwin on the northern coast, there is monsoon forest. A distinctly Australian tropical forest, very dry part of the year, alternating with periods so wet the low spots all become lakes and the roads disappear.
Kakadu National Park preserves a big part of that region for
visitors to marvel at. It is the world's second largest national park and a World Heritage site (for both culture and nature), protecting a complex and diverse place.