I have been
coming down to this region of southwestern Oregon, the western Siskiyous, since
1978, first to botanize and revel in the amazing diversity of plants (like Lilium
bolanderi shown above, WOW!), and later as the location of my field studies
on the genus Arabis, or rockcress (Arabis aculeolata, the Waldo
Rockcress, shown below being visited by a bombyliid fly).
I can’t recall when I started
leading field trips for SFI, but it was long ago, and in recent years I frequently
meet folks who attended one of my earlier hikes. Those were the dog-friendly
days, and as much as people remember the places and plants, they remember my
most feisty and energetic rock dog, tail-chasing Jack Russell Terrier, Josie.
Now SFI has its own field station
(my deepest thanks to the anonymous donor), complete with accommodations for
campers and those needing a room, and a wonderful classroom with dissecting
microscopes for all! Hurrah for botany! I had 12 in my group this year, and we
alternated classroom time including slides, lectures, and keying plants, with
time in the field, reinforcing what we learned.
Day one: local Pitcher Plant fens
and drive up the TJ Howell Memorial Highway (a forest service road named for one
of Oregon ’s
pioneer botanists). I cannot list here the variety of native plants we saw,
but one highlight was the purple milkweed (Asclepias
cordifolia) above and below), complete with tiny monarch butterfly larvae—milkweeds
are always an interesting place to look for insects.
Day two: a hike to Babyfoot Lake , shown below, to see the effects of
the Biscuit Fire on its 10-year anniversary (and swim in the lake--a classic
Vorobik field trip). Day three: botanizing the montane meadow and area around Bolan Lake
(and swim). Day four: back at the lab with an intensive day of learning plant
family characteristics and keying (and noon
potluck).
The annual meeting of the Native
Plant Society of Oregon was special for me, in that I have been involved with
it since 1980, edited its bulletin and its journal, and this society includes many
mentors and friends. During my talk I spoke a bit about the 2002 Biscuit Fire,
as it was one of the largest that year at 500,000 acres in size, and came
within a very few miles of the Deer Creek Center.
As our climate changes and droughts
become more frequent and extreme, many of us have experienced wildfires. The
two that are intimately in my history are the 1991 Oakland, CA firestorm that destroyed the homes of some of my friends, and the 2002 Biscuit
fire, that transformed the Babyfoot Lake Botanical Area from an old growth
conifer forest, including huge Sugar Pines, Douglas
firs, and the Klamath endemic, Brewer’s Spruce, into a fire-ravaged moonscape,
at least in places. (Above: the moderately burned rocky outcrop within the
Babyfoot Lake Botanical area, with lewisias, penstemons, stonecrops, and 3
beautiful little rock ferns. Below: fire-ravaged forest in 2002).
The fire’s occurrence provided an
excellent teaching opportunity. For many years before the fire I led field
trips to the lake, to look at the plants, hike, and swim (a botanical baptism
of sorts). We would enjoy the cool of the dark forest, and look at several
different orchids, including Fairy Slipper Orchids, Phantom Orchids, and Coralroot Orchids. Post fire, the suite of plants had changed, but from the ashes comes re-growth!
There are several plants that are
now conspicuously absent from the dead forest, notably all of the
aforementioned orchids, but most of the shrubs came back vigorously from
crown-sprouting. And wildfires do not burn uniformly…some spots are devoid of
life immediately after the fire, some are passed over.
Though the character of this place
has completely changed, I cannot communicate the optimism I experience when I
re-travel these paths, and see the thriving shrubs, the white waves of blooming
beargrass, and lower down, smell the sweet-scented Shasta Lilies in full
flower.
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