POTBR blog 9, Day 9

 Day 9, blog 9

Slept good even if it was at our own little sites, i felt safe. This is a beautiful area being here on the southeast side of Mt. Bachelor in the Deschutes National Forest. We are looking at a 1.5 hour drive towards Burns, Oregon to do a plant surveying with the Forest Service. I am seeing that it isn't just me who is starting to get tired from waking up early every day and then being busy all day and in the heat. We made it to our destination and all I see on the ground right away is Pumas from volcano eruptions. With Marla Fisher who has a degree in Botany and Americorp intern Anthony Luzana. How exciting this is, as we will be surveying the Pumas Moon Wort which is declining in the area. They have cleared an area a year ago that this plant resides, from Lodgepole trees that are taking over the area. To see if the plant is in competition with the tree. The results are positive as we have found more than what was the year before. 756 was the total of flags we counted. After the surveying we headed out and went to gas up and go look for a Safeway after taking a long detour. Twenty minutes there and out and we headed to find some showers. The showers were located at the Crane Prairie Reservoir that was really beautiful, but we paid $1.75 for 3 minutes to shower which is ridiculous but effective. I managed to scoop up some pumas and scrubbed my feet in the artificial lake. the water was warm. We made it back to camp and got started on dinner. Another one to say was super delicious as Monette cheffed up some bomb chicken alfredo with Rao's sauce. Which I need to remember. Strawberry shortcake for dessert. We did another lab night, and I did a Turtle Lake #2 sample, and it was a 10-4 light moderate. looked like scotch tape along the edges and bordered. 2mm, and my guess was Bascillus SPP and I had no fungal growth on the other side.  

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

POTBR Blog 6, Day 6

POTBR blog 7, day 7

POTBR Blog 2, Day 2