Friday, July 1, 2011

My post for work. Enjoy!


I wrote half of this with a killer migraine last night and the other half this morning after the kids already arrived for class. 

By Program Intern Brittany Mielcarek

I find that it can be easy to forget about the natural beauty around us. My internship here at the science center has been 5 weeks or reconnecting with nature and its amazing beauty.
Something as simple as a pinecone can tell a great story, but only if we take the time to notice it. Education program director, Amy Yeakel, took me and the other interns for a hike up Mt. Fayal as part of our professional development. We came across a pinecone and Amy took that opportunity to explain something we might find on the forest floor. Red squirrels will pull the exterior scales (bracts) off a pinecone to get to the underside of the bracts for feeding. When the squirrel is finished, a bare pinecone is left surrounded by bracts. If you happen upon this in the forest, it’s a sure sign of red squirrel activity.
Naturalist Dave Erler and I cleaned the white tail deer exhibit of stinging nettle. Stinging nettle is a plant covered in fine hairs that contain irritating chemicals and can grow up to 2-4 feet tall. When this plant is brushed up against, these hairs stick in the skin of whatever animal may be passing by. This creates an itchy feeling that is almost impossible to resist. When scratched, the hairs release the irritating chemicals into the skin and the itching becomes more intense and lasts much longer. Before Dave showed me what stinging nettle looked like, the deer exhibit looked like a blur of green and brown. Once I took the time to distinguish between one plant and another, the picture changed. It was no longer a mix of colors.
We passed a tree the other day that had grown is a wavy pattern. I have seen trees like this before, but I had never known the cause. I learned that there is an insect that eats the apical buds off the tops of trees. Apical buds produce the hormones that are responsible for vertical growth in trees. In order for the tree to continue growing vertically, there must be a small amount of lateral growth first. The insects keep eating the apical buds and the tree continues to grow up and then to the side. The tree ends up looking like a wavy piece of curly hair growing into the sky.
This week I’ve been assisting with the Wild Art guided discovery. One of our first activities was creating field guides using Kirkwood Gardens. Page one was a general view of a group of plants. There was little detail but many colors blended together. The next page involved closing in on one plant or one flower and painting the details in. This was a reminder to me about the importance of fine details. Not only is the big picture important, but each individual aspect is equally as important.
The trees and plants around us have stories to share is we take the time and care to listen. If take time to actually see and learn about the natural world around us, we can truly benefit from all it has to offer.
Remember that every part of nature has a purpose. A dead tree is just as vital as a live tree. Each and every organism serves a purpose, although we may not know it at first. I would like to encourage all of you to take the time to reconnect to nature. Spend an afternoon outside with friends and family. Your backyard can be as much as a natural adventure as a hike to the top of a mountain. You just have to take the time to find it.

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