Fresh Faces Home

May 23, 2008

Convocation vs. Graduation

Last Sunday was the CNR's commencement ceremony!


Laura Lagomarsino celebrating the big day.
Commencement is that special day when you show up in your cap and gown, congratulate all of your fellow graduates, sit with your friends in the hot sun baking under a black robe, and walk across the stage in front of a big, cheering crowd to receive a rolled up piece of paper.

It's a big day. Family and friends drive hundreds or fly thousands of miles to also bake in the sun and watch you walk, hop, and wave your way across a roasting stage.

But it's not the end! No matter how big and exciting that special day was, most of the graduates had the delightful experience of completing the last of their finals several days after commencement. If a crowd member looked carefully, they could find graduates hastily studying review notes and flash cards as they baked in the sun. Many spent that evening, not celebrating with family and friends, but rather attending review sessions, meeting with study groups, filling the study rooms of the library, and pulling all-nighters for their exams the following day.

Graduation only comes after you meet with your adviser, and turn in that last final - when grades are posted and the paperwork goes through.

I walked, but I'm still looking forward to the day my grades are posted and I know I really did make it through.

April 22, 2008

San Francisco Conservatory of Flowers


Tom and I visited the Conservatory of Flowers in Golden Gate Park last weekend, and we had a great time! Admission is only $3 with your student ID. Definitely worth a trip out - to take a break from studies.

They currently have a special children-friendly display on butterflies, called "The Butterfly Zone"

As always, you'll see...
breathtaking orchids:







Spunky bromeliads:







Enchanting Gingers & Heliconia:



And even the understated beauty of Penjing landscapes:

*Tom took all of the photographs in this entry.

Happy Earth Day!

Hey folks!
Happy Earth Day!

National Arbor Day is this Friday - so get ready to hug some trees.

April 16, 2008

Masai run London Marathon

What interesting news! I just had to share.

A group of 6 Masai warriors ran the London marathon earlier this week, to raise money for a new well for their village. They ran the marathon in traditional attire, chanting, dancing, and walking all the way - and they raised nearly $120,000!

You can read a blog from this group's leader here: http://sport.guardian.co.uk/athletics/story/0,,2273114,00.html

Here's a link to a CNN article about the warriors and their cause: http://edition.cnn.com/2008/WORLD/europe/04/10/maasi.marathon/index.html#cnnSTCText

Here's a fun little article about it from the London Telegraph:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2008/04/02/nmasai102.xml

The Masai warriors' guide to England
By Andrew Pierce
Last Updated: 1:47am BST 03/04/2008


Six Masai warriors, who are so fierce they kill male lions with their bare hands, have been warned that surviving the perils of the African bush will be child's play compared to what they can expect on their first trip to England.

The warriors, who are leaving their remote Tanzanian village to run in the London Marathon, have been given a detailed four-page guide on how to contend with the most curmudgeonly species they may ever encounter: the English office worker.


The visiting Masai will run the London marathon to raise money for water supplies back home

"You may be surprised by the number of people that there are and they all seem to be rushing around everywhere," the guide says.

"Even though some may look like they have a frown on their face, they are very friendly people - many of them just work in offices, jobs they don't enjoy, and so they do not smile as much as they should."

The warriors, who are leaving their village of Eluai in northern Tanzania for the first time, will run the 26.2-mile course in their traditional red robes, complete with shields and sticks, to raise money for life-saving water supplies back home.

Continue reading "Masai run London Marathon" »

April 14, 2008

Berkeley Weather

2 days of sunshine turned on its head and now the fog has rolled through town. Clouds rule the sky and the air is cool. Some may be thrilled. I hold out hope to see the sun by noon.

April 8, 2008

Graduate School Decision

I'm going to Miami University!

It's a little school in Ohio, with a well-established, thriving Botany department. Fall 2008, I'll start on my Master's degree. I'll be working with Dr. John Kiss.

Check out my previous entries for more information on Dr. Kiss and rest of the faculty I was able to meet in January.

March 20, 2008

My day, every day, as an average UC Berkeley student

Fret fret freezing cold, fret fret freakout, fret fret fret fret.

Wake up late? Rush, run faster, catch a random bus, and make it to class earlier than you usually do.
Get an exam back? Hit the books again and maybe worry some more until you improve your grade, or, alternatively cheer!

Today was one of those fret fret freeze fret fret CHEER!!!! days, which makes it significantly better than average.

March 17, 2008

Happy St. Patty's Day - Just don't Wear Orange!

It's St. Patty's Day!
You know what that means - a massive celebration of Irish heritage!

Green, green, everywhere. Most everyone wears green. In elementary school, you'll pinch your classmates if they're not wearing green. Usually the university crowd isn't going to pinch you if you forget to sport a clover.

So, yeah, you can wear just about any color you want on St. Patrick's Day - just don't wear orange!

Why not?

Protestants (represented by the color orange) have been oppressing Catholic Northern Ireland (represented by the color green) since 1509, when Henry the 8th was King of England, but especially since 1690's Battle of the Boyne when Protestant William of Orange defeated James the Second. source
According to my friend of Irish Catholic heritage, wearing orange is"...like wearing a KKK hood on MLK day." He cringes whenever he sees someone sporting orange on his happy holiday. So, as we in Berkeleyans strive to be sympathetic of all cultures, let's remember to wear something other than orange as we celebrate this snake-chasing, green-wearing Saint.

Happy Saint Patrick's Day, Everyone!

Clover image from:
http://www.co.bay.mi.us/bay/home.nsf/public/BE2FEDCC7EDDC47885257346006800F6/$file/four-leaf_clover2.jpg

March 16, 2008

Microwave Sugar Cookies

I used to hate the thought of using the microwave, everything always turns out rubbery or just odd. But last night changed my mind...

I didn't want to wait to heat up the oven, but I really wanted sugar cookies. Found this recipe at www.cooks.com decided to try. It turned out delicious! Cakey, fluffy not-too-sugary cookies.

MICROWAVE SUGAR COOKIES

3/4 c. butter
1 c. sugar
2 eggs, beaten
1 tsp. vanilla
2 2/3 c. flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt

Soften butter (15 seconds in microwave). Cream butter; gradually add sugar. Cream until fluffy; beat in eggs and vanilla. Toss flour, baking powder, and salt to mix; add to creamed mixture and combine well.
Chill dough 1 hour until firm. Roll out to 1/4-inch thickness. Cut in shapes. Arrange 8 cookies in a ring on waxed paper. Cook 2 minutes on HIGH. Yield 3-4 dozen.


This experience has opened my mind to the fact that yes, sometimes microwaves can help you make things that taste good.


March 10, 2008

Daylight Savings

Daylight savings came up on me unexpected this year. Isn't it supposed to be the first weekend of April? Sunday morning, I looked at my watch, looked at the clock on my computer, and realized one of them was probably wrong.

Then I looked it up - starting March 2007, the United States changed Daylight Savings permanently, extending it one month.

What's the point? I mean, people tell you that it's saving money, and that it's worthwhile - but has anyone actually done studies to prove it? Today I found this article by National Geographic, addressing these questions. Figured you folks might enjoy it, too.


Extended Daylight Saving Time Not an Energy Saver?
Brian Handwerk
for National Geographic News

March 7, 2008

On Sunday people in the United States will roll their clocks forward an hour at 2 a.m. and begin the country's second consecutive year of extended daylight saving time.

The change, adopted into law last year, was touted as a way to save energy. But some studies suggest the move actually has consumers using more power—and paying bigger energy bills.

Hendrik Wolff, an environmental economist at the University of Washington in Seattle, is skeptical of the purported savings.

Wolff and colleague Ryan Kellogg studied Australian power-use data surrounding the 2000 Sydney Olympics, when parts of the country extended daylight saving time to accommodate the games.

The pair compared energy use in the state of Victoria, which adopted daylight saving time earlier than normal, to South Australia, which did not.

"Basically if people wake up early in the morning and go to bed earlier, they do save artificial illumination at night and reduce electricity consumption in the evening," Wolff said.

"Our study confirmed that effect. But we also found that more electricity is consumed in the morning. In the end, these two effects wash each other out."

Continue reading "Daylight Savings" »

February 29, 2008

Cal Webfiles

Want to share a file with your classmates, but it's too large to send reasonably via e-mail? When I run into this problem, I always turn to Cal Web Files: https://webfiles.berkeley.edu

What is it?

Online file storage and file sharing! It's hosted on campus, is super secure, and available to students, faculty, and staff.

A few tips:

- It takes a little time to become familiar with the interface.

- Since their servers are based on campus, files upload faster when you're on campus than when you log on from a distance.

- You can choose to store things in a private folder, a shared folder, and a public folder. With the public folder, you can share files with anyone, not just Cal students. Shared is only accessible to people with Cal WebFiles accounts, and the private folder is viewable only to you.

Stuff I've passed along via Cal WebFiles:
- Class notes
- GIS maps
- Digital audio recordings of class lectures
- Photographs from study abroad

February 20, 2008

Speaker - Martin Hammer

Thursday, February 21, 2008

Time: 7pm - 9pm.
Location: Ecology Center, 2530 San Pablo Ave, near Dwight Way, Berkeley.
Cost: Free.
Info: 510-548-2220 x233, erc@ecologycenter.org, www.paksbab.org.


Rebuilding with Straw Bale in Earthquake Affected Pakistan

Berkeley architect Martin Hammer recently returned from Pakistan where he has been working to bring straw bale and other sustainable building practices to the mountainous region devastated by the 2005 earthquake, which was responsible for over 80,000 deaths, and left millions without permanent shelter. He'll give us an update on the work he presented last year, as well as provide details about straw bale construction. Straw bale construction is earthquake resistant, energy and resource efficient, and an affordable solution to northern Pakistan's enormous reconstruction needs. Martin Hammer has been involved with the design, engineering, and construction of straw bale buildings since 1995, and is the lead author of the proposed straw bale building code for the State of California. In 2006 he co-founded Pakistan Straw Bale and Appropriate Building (http://www.paksbab.org ). Come join us for this informative talk and slideshow.

Hay, a house!

Would you believe this beautiful earthquake-proof California home is made of hay?

You can find more pictures of that beautiful Berkeley home here:
http://www.2339ninth.com/

Straw home construction started in the sand hills of Nebraska, when the European settlers couldn't find building materials, and made do with straw. Now desired for its incredible ability to insulate, and its safety against strong winds and earthquakes, straw is starting to move up in the world, beyond hobbyists and into the mainstream as a sustainable building method. Even this conference and retreat center, the Presentation Center in the Santa Cruz mountains, has chosen straw for construction.


Straw construction is reinforced with steel and framed by wood. Compressed hay bales make up the bulk of construction, which is later covered with several layers of plaster. Not only are these homes earthquake safe, they are esentially sound-proof with their two-foot-thick walls.


(photo from http://www.redfeather.org)

An organization called Builders Without Borders is making a difference with straw home technology in earthquake prone countries like Pakistan. Straw has become one of the most practical and economical methods for common folk to rebuild their communities after earthquakes. Since hay is grown locally, costs are reduced in all areas of construction, especially with transportation. Here is a link to an organization that promotes and educates the people of Pakistan with hay building: http://www.paksbab.org/

Here's a story from CNN about a straw house in Santa Cruz:
http://edition.cnn.com/2007/TECH/08/10/straw.bales/
Website for the Presentation Center in Santa Cruz:
http://www.presentationcenter.org/


Websites of interest:
http://www.strawbale.com/
http://www.strawbalebuilding.ca/strawbales.shtml
http://builderswithoutborders.org/
http://www.redfeather.org/programsStrawBaleConst.html

February 13, 2008

Dr. John Francis

Today Dr. John Francis came to speak to my American Cultures & Natural Resource Managment course.

Experience of a lifetime.

He's the one who spent 17 years not speaking while he crossed the United States by foot. He currently spends 6 months every year walking around the world to raise awareness of environmental issues.

He's a UN delegate, and writes environmental policy.

Check out his website (his photo came from here):
http://www.planetwalk.org/

February 12, 2008

Neuroscience & Athletics

Yesterday in my Adventures in Neuroscience DeCal course, I learned just how aerobic exercise is linked to increased memory capacity. Quickly explained, without the nifty chemical signaling processes and complicated biology, thirty minutes of aerobic activity three times a week increases the oxygen flow to your brain considerably, which facilitates the growth of new memory-building cells.

With this in mind, I decided to check out the Cal's Recreational Club sports website:
http://rsf-pwf.berkeley.edu/insidepage.aspx?uid=95fadc92-319a-4482-a635-7b3091add462
Look at all the great club sports available!
Archery
Volleyball
Waterpolo
Lacrosse
Figure Skating
Gymnastics
Soccer
Squash
Field Hockey...and more!

I found Cal's Fencing Club!


Since I was in the fencing club at my old school, you can imagine that this makes me super excited. They were nowhere to be found in 2006 when I started at Cal, but now they seem to be going strong. I even saw a guy wearing a "Cal Fencing" sweatshirt the other day when I was riding the bus. We'll see if they let me join this late in the semester!
Here's their website:
http://fencing.berkeley.edu/

The nifty fencing image comes from the NBC sports image gallery.


February 4, 2008

Lecture - Genetics & Faith

Thought maybe a few folks will find this interesting! I'll definitely be there.


Intellectual Reflections of a Christian Geneticist
7:30pm. Wheeler Auditorium, UC Berkeley
Francis Collins
Author—The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief.
Director—National Human Genome Research Institute, NIH.

The talk will be followed by an interview conducted by Professor Jasper Rine (Howard Hughes Professor and Professor of Genetics, Genomics and Development UC Berkeley (MCB))

Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., is a physician-geneticist and currently serves as the Director of the National Human Genome Research Institute at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Maryland. In this capacity, he oversaw the International Human Genome Sequencing Consortium, and its landmark effort to sequence the entire human DNA code; the Human Genome Project. Building on the foundation laid by the Human Genome Project, Dr. Collins is now leading the NHGRI effort to ensure that this new trove of sequence data is translated into powerful tools and thoughtful strategies to advance biological knowledge and improve human health.

Loofah Explained!

I love my little bath sponge. I love it even more now that I know where it comes from.

I bought a new loofah sponge Saturday, since mine died a sorry death in French Polynesia months ago. As I pulled it out of its packaging, I noticed a seed. Then I stared at the placentation. I thought, "This is Curcubitaceae." And I wondered why I hadn't noticed that about my last sponge.

This image shows the placentation:

Always a curious sort, I put it on my list of things to look into. Did you know that you're scrubbing yourself with xylem? Here's a great step-by-step how to prepare your own loofah article written by Aaron Newton, who grows his own Luffa :http://www.groovygreen.com/groove/?p=689 In this article, Aaron describes the simple process of "milking" the Luffa fruit, to remove the fleshy fruit and seeds, leaving just the fibrous xylem that makes the exfoliating sponge we all love.

Here's a Luffa gord dried out on the vine:


Many species in the genus Luffa, within the Curcubitaceae, are grown for use as sponges. This is the same family as cucumber, melon, and squash. Luffa cylindrica, Luffa acutangula and Luffa aegyptiaca are a few of the species that are grown for this purpose.

Here's a flower with a bumble bee:

Click on "Continue Reading" to see references for further reading, and my sources for all of the photographs of this entry.

Continue reading "Loofah Explained!" »

February 3, 2008

Orchids!

Grab your student ID, hop on the Hill Line at the Hearst Mining Circle, and get your bum up to the Botanical garden. Yeah, I realize it's raining.

Ok, if you don't go, I won't hold it against you.

I might shed a tear or two for you, though, since you'll miss the orchids that are going crazy right now in the Fern and Carniverous Plant House, which is a little, almost invisible greenhouse right by the main gate to the garden.

Getting the most out of your bus pass

We all get one for free, as long as we're enrolled in classes at Berkeley. It's the AC Tranist bus pass. It goes on the front of our ID cards, next to our picture. Most of the time, students just use it to ride around campus on the Perimeter, Reverse Perimeter, or Hill Line.

But there's an awesome resource that few students know about. The online trip planner:
http://tripplanner.transit.511.org/mtc/XSLT_TRIP_REQUEST2?language=en&itdLPxx_homepage=secondStep

Just type in where you're starting, and where you want to end up. It'll tell you the best way to get there. If you scroll to the bottom "4. Transportation Options", you can choose Only Buses.

Some enticing places to visit, via AC Transit:

- Tilden Park
- Tilden Park Botanical Garden
- El Cerrito Plaza (Trader Joe's, Barnes & Noble, Lucky's, Ross, PetCo)
- Michael's Crafts in Emeryville
- Home Depot in Emeryville
- Office Depot in Berkeley
- Oakland Animal Shelter (to pet bunnies)

Continue reading "Getting the most out of your bus pass" »

Bunnies at the Oakland Animal Shelter

Do you like bunnies? They're soft and fun to pet.
Well, even if you can't have one in your apartment, I know of a great place to go and visit them in the afternoons. The bunnies at the Oakland Animal Shelter will welcome your pets and affection, even if you do have to put them back in their cages and go home without them.


At the Oakland Animal Shelter, they take care of a couple dozen rabbits. With their no-kill policy, excellently trained volunteers, and plentiful healthy hay, they take great care of their rabbits. Unfortunately, they're trapped in little boxes in a back room for most of the day, with tons of hay and good sanitation - but still, not much room to hop or folks to cuddle with.

If you find some free time, you should definitely go to keep them company!

To get there from campus with your free bus pass, take the 1R line (#1lx/1) from Telegraph Ave. in the direction of the Bayfair BART station.

Here's a website that tells you all about the available dogs, cats, and rabbits in Oakland:
http://www.oaklandanimalservices.org/index.php?z=4

If you live anywhere in the United States, here's a great resource to help you find your new companion. With Petfinder, you can search all of the animal rescue centers nationwide, by zip code or city name:
http://www.petfinder.com/

California is Closing 48 State Parks

Part of the governor's massive state-wide budget cuts includes a significant reduction in aid for our California state parks, forcing the closure of nearly 20% of our parks.

Here's a map with the affected parks:

Here's the official stance of the state parks on this issue:
http://www.parks.ca.gov/pages/712/files/budget%20fact%20sheet%20w-graphics%20-%2001-14-08.pdf


*Most* of these parks will be closed to public, and placed in a "caretaker status," which requires fewer full-time employees. Many will be closed with no care. The parks they have chosen have the least amount of traffic, generate the least revenue, and are dependent on volunteers. Previous budget cuts have made it impossible to do trail maintenance anyway, so why not shut them down (ACK!!!! If I had known, I would gladly have chipped in extra for admission!)

It is horrible, but it's good to read that the parks tried their best to find the parks that will make the least impact. I'm super sad, though, because Topanga State Park was a favorite for Tom and I to go backpacking. It's on the cutting block, along with several others that I've visited and loved, like San Simeon State Park, Benecia, Railtown, Sutter's Fort, Bolsa Chica, and Tomales Bay. Tomales Bay was one I visited recently with a class. There was some interesting geology there and unbelievably beautiful wetlands.

Here's a website where you can write a letter to the governor about your sentiments on the issue:
http://www.environmentcalifornia.org/action/preservation/state-parks?id4=TAFsent


Continue reading "California is Closing 48 State Parks" »

February 2, 2008

Campus is Beautiful when there's Sunshine

When the sun peaked out from the clouds the other day, I decided to pull out my camera.
Hope you enjoy!



January 31, 2008

Neat lecture on Microbes!

Today there's a guest lecture on campus that many will find of interest!

Dr. Edward F. DeLong is visiting from MIT to discuss his work on Genomics in Microbial Oceanography.
His seminar will be from 4-5 today, January 31, 2008 in 100 GPB.

Here is a link to one of his papers, to give you a better idea of his research:
http://pmb.berkeley.edu/~taylor/pmb290cg/pdfs/DeLong_2005.pdf

Thanks, Trey & Dana!

If you're in GPB or MB, you're going to meet the awesome Undergraduate Advisors Trey and Dana. If you haven't spent time with them yet, you will be required to meet them soon. Be sure to ask them all the questions you have about course requirements - they can tell you all about creative ways to meet your elective requirements, or let you know that you don't really need that insane MCB class you were planning on taking.

Now, something to know - they're new! And dangit - they know their stuff. But occasionally some paperwork gets lost in transitions like this, so don't be shocked if you need to remind them you've completed a requirement.

For any of you transfer students out there - you're going to want to make super good friends with Trey and Dana. That's because they approve all of your course substitutions. If you've attended another four-year school like me, it can get pretty tricky. Like most upper-division transfer students, I took almost all of my lower-division requirements at another school. That means that Trey and Dana have to work some magic to make each one of those count toward graduation. It can be tricky at times, but worth it to not re-take courses.

January 29, 2008

Cell Phone no-no's

What you should NEVER, EVER do:

- Never answer your phone and carry on a conversation in the library. It's going to bother at least one person near you.

- NEVER leave your phone on "ring" during class. Turn off your phone, put it on silent, or put it on vibrate

- Do not ever use your phone in a computer lab. Most have it posted on the wall as a no cell zone, but all expect you to know not to use one.

- Never answer a phone during office hours. Just a bad idea. Terribly disrespectful.

- Please do watch where you're walking when you're talking on your cell phone. It's no fun getting trapped behind cell-phone-talking, slow-walking, hand-gesturing oblivious folks on your way to class.

- Please don't have a loud and obnoxious ring tone, in case you accidentally forget to turn off your cell phone in class.

January 17, 2008

Miami University Photos

Miami University of Ohio is a small school with a well-established Botany department. I am considering them for my graduate studies. Their graduate Botany department offers a small student - to- faculty ratio, ample funding, and graduate course offerings to drool over.

While I was meeting with faculty, Tom spent his afternoon touring campus and taking photos. A few highlights.

The Botany & Zoology Building



The Administration Building


The Stadium

Miami Univeristy is small, well-maintained, and filled with beautiful brick buildings. 

January 15, 2008

Busy Day in Oxford, Ohio

Today I visited with a large portion of the Botany faculty at Miami University of Ohio. This is one of the schools to which I have applied for graduate school. You can visit their Botany website here: http://www.cas.muohio.edu/botany/

Tom toured the little town and took photos while I met with faculty.

My schedule for today:
8:45am - Hotel pick-up by Dr. Prem Kumar (Post-doc in Dr. Kiss' lab)
9:00am - Dr. Linda E. Watson (Botany department chair)
9:30am - Dr. John Kiss (NASA-funded space Botany)
10:30am - Dr. R. James Hickey (fern systematist)
11:00am - Dr. Mike Vincent (herbarium curator)
11:30am - Dr. Quinn Li (genetics)
noon - Lunch with Prem Kumar (Post-doc for Dr. Kiss' lab) and Neela Kumar (PhD student Dr. Kiss' lab, vegetarian)
1:30pm - Dr. Richard Edelmann (electron and light microscopy specialist)
2:00pm - Dr. Nik Money - (Mycologist)
2:30pm - Dr. Beth Schussler (Biological sciences education researcher)
3:00pm - Dr. David Gorchov (Ecology)
3:30-5:15pm - Meet with Tom and discuss day.
5:30pm - Driving tour of campus with Dr. Kiss (Tom, too)
6:00pm - Dinner with Dr. Kiss (Tom, too)

The weather was cold, but not at all unbearable. Dreary in the morning, clear blue skies in the afternoon. People asked me often my impression of the weather. It was pretty. I liked watching the little flurries of snow caught up by the breeze.

Impressions of the program:
Well-established Botany program. Knowledgeable staff. Focus on teaching. Kind people.
Dr. Kiss is my favorite faculty member. His research is fascinating. The folks in his lab are kind and fun.

Drawbacks of the program:
May not be easy to petition into PhD program. Many encourage you to complete your master's, then move on to PhD.
Described by one graduate student as having "low expectations" (challenged by other students I met, who found it quite difficult to juggle teaching, their own coursework, and research)

Pluses:
Excellent funding
Diverse coursework offerings
Gentle people
Fun, fairly isolated college town, but driving distance from Cincinnati and Dayton.

I like it.

January 9, 2008

Send Certified

The UC Riverside Biological Sciences Graduate Division has officially lost 2 of my transcripts, GRE scores, supplementary application information, check, fellowship application, and 1 (of 3 total) letter of recommendation.

5 separate envelopes. 2 of which sent from outside the state of California.

They tell me it's all lost in the mail. "If you sent it certified, we might be able to track it."
I didn't.

Let's have this be a lesson for all of us:
Choose to mail everything certified.

Oh, and... Don't plan on getting small-school attention from UC Riverside. No matter how small the program is that you're applying to, the school is massive and you can still fall through the cracks.

January 8, 2008

Captain Vegetable!

This was my favorite super hero when I was a kid! He still is!
Stopping sugar-eating criminals in the act, Captain Vegetable convinces all of us that eating veggies is cool.

December 27, 2007

Farewell Donald Kaplan

A Berkeley legend passed away this month.

Dr. Kaplan's clearly-written readers got me through Dr. Specht's Plant Morphology course. I never was able to meet him, but I've wandered by his office many times, cracking up at his memorable bumper sticker: "With fronds like these, who needs anemones."

Donald Kaplan

Here's a link to the article from the CNR newsfeed: http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/12/21_kaplanobit.shtml

December 26, 2007

Two Poems

Here are a couple of poems written by my fiance Tom Sullivan.

(untitled)

One tiny drop,
teeters on the lip,
threatening intoxication.
Notes of fruit and chocolate
pervade,
drawing on the depths
of the old and mixing
with new.
Men, aged ‘n oaken
with the raw and undeveloped,
talk of the way
things
could have been—
glass after glass.
We weep and rage
over ifs and loves.
Husbands of the grape
and lovers of yeast,
we touch glasses
with friends and enemies.


Rose Marble

The marble feels so strong,
bathed in heavy sunlight,
scorching to the touch.
I wonder how those lines
cut their way through the silica--
pink and flashes of blue.
I’ve tried to make my own way in,
too slow to realize that my bone
and blood
are too weak, and feel the heat
more--brutally.
The master craftsman
chipped it away,
intentionally leaving flaws
for character, and shading in sunlight,
or moonlight.
Many attempt to imitate the craftsman,
adding their own curves and notches,
all beautiful, but not the same.
Creations of motionless marble,
with more character, and feeling,
than we--
Rose marble, smooth, strong, and hot.

Continue reading "Two Poems" »

December 23, 2007

The UC Botanical Garden!

For those of you who have been following my blog from the start, you're already well aware of all the time I love spending at the UC Botanical garden. But after speaking with a group of garden volunteers last week, I realized just how unique it is to even FIND the botanical garden as an undergraduate student, much less visit it regularly.

A link to their website:
http://botanicalgarden.berkeley.edu/index.shtml

So, here I'll highlight some of this year's great events given by the UC Botanical Garden, and mention the bus schedule to get there - to encourage more students to make their way to this beautiful oasis!

Look for the Hill line bus at the Hearst Mining Circle. You can use your student Class Pass to ride for free, otherwise it's $1. The bus comes every half-hour at 10-past-the-hour, and 40 -past-the-hour. Be sure to be on time!

Have a sick plant? Don't know what to do? Bring it up to the Sick Plant Clinic, every 1st Saturday of the month! Here you'll have experts tell you what's wrong and how to bring your favorite plant back to health.

FREE tours! Led by knowledgeable, trained docents every Thursday, Saturday and Sunday at 1:30pm.

Garden Gems of Asia - In early July, an opportunity to walk with horticulturist Elaine Sedlack through her masterpiece Asian garden (pictured above), to learn about hassle-free beauty that you can add to your garden.

Glass Houses at Twilight - In early August, here's a special opportunity to see the closed-to-public rare orchid house!

Summer Bird Walk - Check out the garden's beautiful birds with an expert birder!

Fall Plant Sale - at the end of September every year, you'll find a bustling scene of exotic plants for sale. Honestly, they have many of the same great plants for sale EVERY DAY at the gift shop, and you don't even have to wait in line.

Food of the Americas - an event that runs nearly every day in October, where kids can learn about all the different varieties of colorful corn, peppers, chocolate, and more, in the education marketplace!

Children's Carniverous Plants Workshop - Kids get a tour of the greenhouse, then learn how to pot, plant, and care for their very own carniverous plant!

National Parks of California

While daydreaming of summer vacation (and all that hiking I'd like to do) I thought it'd be nice to look up all of the national parks found in California. I didn't believe it, but there are some on the list that I've never heard of, even in the bay area!

So here I share...

Muir Woods has many accessible trails with views of the redwood forest.

Here's a link to the national parks website: http://www.nps.gov/

Bay area National Parks
( * next to those that are new to me)

Point Reyes
Muir Woods
San Francisco Maritime National Historic Park*
Eugene O'Neill National Historic Site*
Rosie the Riveter WWII Home Front National Historical Park*
John Muir National Historic Site - John Muir's home*
Port Chicago Naval Magazine National Memorial*

And...
Golden Gate National Recreation Area

Which includes:

Alcatraz Island
Fort Point National Historic Site*
Presidio of San Francisco

Resource for Pacific Islands

When I was in Moorea, I found this resource especially enlightening:

http://www.hear.org/pier/

With multiple photos of each plant, traditional Polynesian names, and links to resources and herbarium records, it's a pretty handy guide when deciphering the plants of the Pacific.

Another useful plant resource

Ever wonder where to find an online flora of wherever you're traveling? Chile, Ecuador, Nepal, Madagascar?

Well, wonder no longer. Here you go!
http://www.efloras.org/index.aspx

Their Flora of North America is super handy when on road trips around the US.

Moon Rocks

For those of you who are crazy about geology, here's a great article from the National Geographic. It focuses on the formation of the moon, through analysis of moon rocks.

http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/12/071219-moon-collision.html

Earth-Asteroid Collision Formed Moon Later Than Thought
Richard A. Lovett
for National Geographic News

December 19, 2007

The moon was formed from fragments of Earth after a collision with a giant asteroid relatively late in our planet's formation, new tests of moon rocks show.

The finding upends many of the prior theories for how the moon came to be, researchers say.

Scientists have long believed that the moon was formed by a collision between our planet and a Mars-size object.

Computer models have shown that in this scenario 80 percent of the moon's material should have come from the asteroid, with only 20 percent from Earth.

But the new study of moon rocks collected three decades ago by Apollo astronauts, however, found that Earth and the rocks were too similar for that to be the case.

Continue reading "Moon Rocks" »

Why choose the College of Natural Resources?

Finding a smaller campus environment within the monolithic, intimidating UC Berkeley is crucial to success as an undergraduate. It's easy to get lost in the shuffle. Even within the smaller, more intimate College of Natural Resources (CNR), where class sizes are smaller on average and academic advisors are not over-worked - sometimes, students get lost. It's just harder to fall through the cracks when you have people looking out for you. Looking out for you, giving you the best experience possible out of Cal - that's what everyone working for CNR strives for.

Just a few of the exciting majors offered by CNR:

Genetics & Plant Biology (GPB) - Of course I'll start with this one, it's mine! Here you're able to get through similar coursework to the School of Letters & Science Molecular Cell Biology program, but with a plant twist. Also, the required upper-division courses have 60 or fewer students - no more of those nightmarish 500-student courses.

Forestry - Here's where I've found most of my friends. This major is challenging and prepares you for a career in land management. It's biology with a twist, if you will. But doesn't require the same Organic Chemistry requirements as the GPB program. If you love plants, but hate Chemistry, this might just be the program for you.

Conservation & Resource Studies (CRS) - Here's the one where you get to design your own program of study! Want to go into environmental law? This program will prepare you well.

Environmental Science (ES) - our blogging friend Wendy Chen is an ES major. Here's a great program that's joint with Letters & Sciences. With courses in hard-core sciences and policy alike, this is a great option for someone who's interested in getting in on both sides of the environmental debate.

Nutritional Science - Want to become a pharmacist? How about a nutritionalist, or maybe a dietician? Perhaps you're looking into med school, but you want to be enabled with a background that will allow you to help people more than a background in molecular cell biology would. Well, here we are: Nutritional science.

December 6, 2007

Drizzle

Weather today:
mist clearing to drizzle
fragrant moist evergreens
soil crushing under the toes
sense the peaceful calm
looking from a distance
forced behind concrete and glass.

November 30, 2007

Japan's Cherry Blossoms - now??

Weather in Berkeley this morning: 43 degrees. But SUNNY!
I'm sure it'll warm up by the afternoon. In the meantime, I've taken to sitting in the sun, bundled in my coat and gloves. Why? Well, it's difficult adjusting to Winter when you've just experienced two back-to-back summers. The joys of jumping hemispheres.

My behavior is justified by recent travels. But what about those cherry trees that are blooming in Japan right now? Normally they bloom from Feb - May. This year, they're seeing something completely unseasonal.
Here's a run-down of when cherries bloom in Japan, according to the Japan photo guide webiste http://babibubebo.com/:


Here's an article from National Geographic that discusses the out-of-season blooms:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/11/071127-cherry-blossoms.html

Continue reading "Japan's Cherry Blossoms - now??" »

Correction: Fizer the Musician

My friend Josh saw this entry and pointed me in the right direction about the chess player. Apparently he's not a bum!

He's a beloved Berkeley street musician. Don't I feel out of the loop!
In 2005, students Sean Staub and Ben Hadden made a 14-minute documentary about his life, called "Future Past Remembered."

Here's an article written about Fizer's vision in The Daily Californian:
http://www.dailycal.org/sharticle.php?id=17840


Faces of Berkeley: A Voice of the '60s Plays for a Peaceful Tomorrow

BY Catherine Yang
Contributing Writer
Wednesday, March 2, 2005


John Fizer, a self-proclaimed "peacenik," sings and plays guitar in front of Dwinelle Hall. "I try to be there every day," he says.

He may look like country crooner Willie Nelson, but John Fizer-better known to students as the man who plays the guitar outside Dwinelle Hall-would rather think of himself in terms of Bob Dylan.

The 59-year-old Virginia native has traveled across the country, from the cafes of New York's Greenwich Village to the streets of Santa Cruz, hoping his music will inspire students as much as Dylan's music inspired a generation of peace advocates in the 1960s.

Continue reading "Correction: Fizer the Musician" »

November 29, 2007

This is Berkeley

After returning from Paradise, I started walking around campus and realized what an interesting place it is. It's as though the past two months of gazing at beauty everywhere gave me a desire to search for the beauty in my every-day. Berkeley offers an unexpected culture of contrasts, along with occasional snippits of the breathtaking.


Morning sun on the walls of Hilgard:

Winter's grasp:

Bustle of Sather Gate:

Chess game with a bum - guitar and voice:

Acapella nonsense:

Weekly organic mini-market:

November 27, 2007

Back to Berkeley

Back to work - and ready for it.

For those of you who aren't sure what's up, here's the run down:
I'm in IB C158/ ESPM C107 this semester. It's a field course (apply for it in March as a junior!) that involves designing your own biological research experiment from start to finish, and carrying it out in a researcher's heaven: Mo'orea, French Polynesia. You spend the first 3 weeks of the semester on Berkeley campus, learning about the island geology, geography and a little on each of the major ecosystems. Next comes 2 months in Mo'orea, where you turn out a project proposal, carry out all your research, then write a few rough drafts of your paper. You then return to Berkeley, complete a statistical analysis of your data, write a paper to be published in the class's own journal, and participate in a symposium for the projects.

Where am I now? Said goodbye to Mo'orea last week, returned to visit my family in SoCal for Thanksgiving. Now I'm back in Berkeley to work on all the bits and pieces that remain before turning in the final paper and presenting at the symposium.

Feeling motivated since Monday's meeting with professors and classmates. We met at 9am and heard updates on everyone's projects. Most people had just barely made it back to Berkeley in time for the class. The professors discussed various lectures that they'll offer to help us complete our projects. After the big group meeting, the professors spoke briefly individually with those that they felt they could most help, to arrange times to meet. 2 weeks to get done with everything - should be a rush.

Today I met with Dr. Brent Mishler. We went over the statisical methods I should use for my project, and discussed me making a small key to the Cyperaceae found on Mo'orea, and adding to the Moorea digital flora project. We also sorted through my voucher samples. Mainly sedges, but also associated species, like grasses and composites. He'll pass them along to some of the experts in the herbarium to confirm my identifications.

It's great to feel motivated with my project. Seems there's so much to do - GIS modeling, statistics, keying, writing - I hope that I have time for it all!

November 11, 2007

Mo'orea Hiking Adventures

Hiking here is extreme - or can be, if you'd like to tackle razor-thin ridgelines and climb to the peak of the tallest mountains possible. Beauty everywhere.


Pointing at Mt. Rotui from 3 Pines

Hiking through Hibiscus tiliaceous


The Mouaputa crew

Continue reading "Mo'orea Hiking Adventures" »

October 14, 2007

Hikin' for Samples

Went in search of my sedge on the 3rd tallest mountain on the island. Found another of the same family, not mine. But then again, we didn't get to the top. We were rained on so hard we had to turn back about 3/4 through the trail. Waterfalls of rain and mud making up the one-mistep-and-you're-dead path, and a kind graduate student named David that was worried about our safety stopped us from continuing. We'll go for it again in a few weeks.

Here are some photos of the day:



September 30, 2007

So what are you doing in French Polynesia, anyway?

From the past couple of entries, one might assume that I flew an island in the middle of the Pacific to go on a semester-long vacation. This just isn't the case.

We're 22 students, working on our own personal research projects. Diatoms, octopus, fish, crabs, ethnobotany, invasive plants, skinks, micro snails... everyone has their own project. We go out into the field in pairs and help each other collect data and samples, learning statistical methods to apply while doing field research, and learning how to write a proper publishable scientific paper.

It's a rush of a time, with a few hours here and there of fun, mixed in with a lot of searching for applicable references, figuring out our model organisms, understanding dispersal, learning about habitat, and so on.

It's a great experience, but not for the faint of heart.

Several of the students say that the Field Lab section of Bio 1B has prepared them for this research. Other students were boyscouts, girl scouts, divemasters, lifeguards, worked for environmental firms, and so on. A diverse group of students, with fascinating backgrounds - scientists at heart, trying to make sense of their natural surroundings.

September 28, 2007

Tetiaroa

Yesterday we went as a class to Tetiaroa. It's a two-hour boat ride from Moorea. Here's a map of the Tetiaroa atolls:

I didn't take my camera with me for the trip, since they warned us in advance that we wouldn't be able to keep our bags dry. So, all of the photos in this particular entry have come from travel and dive websites, which are cited at the end of the journal entry.

Why weren't we able to keep our bags dry? The only way to access the island is by little French Polynesian fishing boats (Yes, the map indicates that there's a private airport, but it was shut down in 2004). These boats can get within a few feet of the fringing reef. But, oh, um... the ocean floor is about 30 feet deep at that point, and we had to jump into the water from the boat, swim 15 feet to the coral ridge crest (2 ft. under water still), and walk 100 meters to the shore, along the tops of reefs and between, sometimes in knee-deep water, sometimes in neck-deep water, the whole time dodging stone fish, diadema sea urchins, sea cucumbers, and fire coral.

It's worth it, though!!!

These low little motus are essentially untouched by man (the only hotel was shut down in 2004), with shockingly crystal-like water, mild currents, waters rich with rays, little reef sharks, rich varieties of coral, a rainbow of fish, and the nesting region of blue-footed boobies, and many other birds.


Incredible just doesn't seem to describe it thoroughly enough.

Photos are from these sites:
http://www.tahitinuitravel.com/fr/ile/tetiaroa/tetiaroa.asp
http://www.dive-tahiti.com/old/site04.html
http://www.tahiti-tourisme.fr/articles.php?id=783
http://www.tetiaroa.com/

Pink Morning

This morning I woke up early and decided to take a few photos around the station. The early morning sky was pink and beautiful.

September 21, 2007

Moorea Program Details

Erin Martin asked 1) what program I'm in Moorea with, and 2) how I found out about this opportunity.

I'll answer the 2nd question first:
You find out about cool study abroad opportunities like this one while attending CNR's Welcome Week new student orientation. Someone in the CNR staff mentioned the program, and I thought, "I need to look into that."

Now for that 1st question:
I'm here in Moorea through a class offered under the course title ESPM 107 and IB 158. It's a semester of research in French Polynesia, 13 units of coursework that can typically count as the bulk of your elective units. Check out the past semester of blogs under "Tina" in the categories, to find a few more entries that give background on the program and a couple different tours of the Gump Research Station.

In the meantime, here are some more photos....

Continue reading "Moorea Program Details" »

September 18, 2007

First few days in Moorea

Well, we're here! Moorea is a truly beautiful island. And this program is just incredible! 22 undergrads learning how to become scientists. Goodness - the past few days have been a complete rush. No time to sit and rest- much less check e-mails and do research. Oh, but it's a good busy.
Before we left for the island, we had a few weeks of class where we learned what to expect from the island. During those few weeks, we did preliminary research on potential projects, went on a field trip to the Bodega Marine Lab, took a swimming and snorkeling examination, wrote a paper, and took our midterm. That coursework was mingled in with hunting down supplies, getting our visas, and all the other hassle that comes along with making sure we can leave the country safely.

Coming up on Moorea by boat, from Tahiti

Now that we're on the island, we've had a great time.
Monday we went on a tour of the island. Dr.Jerry Lipps and Dr. Carol Hickman gave us a geological tour of Moorea, from the estuaries, to the basalt mountains and the coral reefs. Beautiful!

Today we visited one of the Motus of Moorea. They're tiny coral islands off the coast of Moorea. Since the motu we visited was isolated from tourism, we were able to see how very close the fish would come to the shore -within feet, all happy and healthy. On the way there, we stopped to snorkel with domesticated stingrays, little sharks, and fish along the small barrier reef that surrounds the island. We also caught glimpse of a humpback wale from the boat on the way back to the station. Goodness - what a good day.

August 30, 2007

Whew, lines!

I stopped by the STA travel office on campus today to pick up my international student ID card. There's place where I didn't need to stand in line.

I also picked up my bus pass for the semester, so I can ride up to the Botanical garden for volunteering on the off chance that I have a day off from class in the few weeks before I leave. That was a line.

Then I picked up the textbook that I needed and returned another textbook that I didn't need. Different lines. Different bookstores.

So many lines at the beginning of the semester. Hopefully I won't need to stand in one for a while. Wait. Tomorrow I'm getting my French Visa in San Francisco. That's probably another line.

August 24, 2007

Medieval Help Desk

My friend Lori-Ann showed me this one. It got me laughing. Hope it does the same for you!



Caltopia

Today I went to Caltopia. It's happening Saturday, too. You should go, too! Seems like everyone was making friends with the random people they were in line with at the various booths.

What is Caltopia? It's some sort of crazy welcome fair at the sports gym. They had games with prizes like stuffed animals and t-shirts, and vendors for every local company, handing out free stuff. People were walking away with bags crammed full with pointless junk, or priceless treasures. Some of it was actually useful! I was sure to grab only the stuff I'd use:

I picked up:
- Wooden 12" ruler
- Brown Cow blueberry-flavored yogurt
- 2 Cliff bars
- 1 slice of pizza and small drink (you actually have to go to a pizza place on Telegraph for this one.)
- post-its
- whistle and keychain
- Organic India brand Tulsi Ginger tea.
- Nicely-weighted clicky pen
- Pad of paper with magnet on the back for a grocery list
- 1 Whole Foods Market "Support Your Local Planet" button
- Bang trim from the Paul Mitchell School. They actually trimmed my hair there on the spot. Pretty fun. I liked my stylist. Now I have cute, long-ish bangs and a side part.


Check out what Caltopia has to offer you!
http://www.caltopialive.com/details.php

August 23, 2007

Graduate School Thoughts

Don't let this entry stress you out! If you're not a senior, you probably don't need to worry about this yet. If you're a junior, you may want to take a little look at this entry, so you can figure out how to make your life a little easier in your senior year. This entry is helpful to juniors and seniors at any institution, not just UC Berkeley.

Read on, if you dare...

Continue reading "Graduate School Thoughts" »

2 really cool events!

Tuesday, August 28; 4pm - 5pm in 2063 VLSB
Transfer Lab Research Workshop
If you're a transfer student, (or you can sneak in if you're just a regular junior or senior), here's the event for you. It's a workshop to show you how to get involved with research. The event is for all students in Biology-Related programs throughout the campus. There's SO MANY research opportunities for CNR students! Moreso than the L&S biology majors have available. Here's where you'll learn how to snatch your own coveted spot in a research lab, so you can make those MCB and IB friends drool with envy.

Tuesday, September 4; 9am - 12pm in 260 Mulford
CNR Student Resource Center Welcome Reception!
Ok, here's the perfect opportunity to explore the Student Resource Center (SRC), if you haven't already.


My favorite stuff about the SRC:

- New, soft Couches. It's a great place to take a break on those long days when you're stuck on campus.

- Computer lab. You have to sign in at the beginning of the semester so you have a login account, but after that, you're home free. There aren't too many computers, and usually they're in high demand, but dang they're handy. It's the closest computer lab to all of the CNR classes. Also, these computers have all the stuff you need, from word-processing to excel and internet. You can print stuff out there, too. Oh, and CNR students get to print 15 pages/day for free.

- Tables with a little tilt. While a odd at first, you soon realize that their tilted wooden tables are excellent for long reading assignments.

- Great place to meet people. It's a reliable, quiet place to study, where you see the same folks every day. By the end of the semester, you've made a new friend or two.

- Snacks during finals! At the end of last semester, they stocked up a little table with cookies, chips, fruit, coffee, and tea to entice us to spend hours on end studying in the resource center. It worked.

Perfecting that Resume & Cover Letter

What's a Resume? Well, it's something that American high school and college students write a lot of! You'll need one to apply to that part-time campus dream job.

What's a Cover Letter? A letter no longer than one page that entices folks to read your resume.

Here's an example of a resume, from this helpful website: http://www.improveyourresume.com

Key elements to a resume:
- Education. What high school did you attend? What university are you now attending? What is your major field of study? What is your GPA?
- Work Experience.
- Volunteer Experience.
- Hobbies. This is where you get to mention gardening, painting, or whatever you love to do. Hobbies don't have to be directly related to the job you're looking for, they can just be a conversation-starter for your interviewer.
- Keep it short. Since they're reviewing sometimes hundreds of resumes, 1 page is all they have time to read.

So, write one up! When you've finished, have people look at it. Lots of people! Before you use your resume, it is very important that you catch all the little glitches. It's also important that you know if it's appropriate for the position you're applying for.

People to proofread your resume:

The folks at the UC Berkeley Career Center! Here's a link: http://career.berkeley.edu
Their Peer Advisors are great.

Also, don't hesitate to ask the kind ladies at the CNR Student Resource Center front desk. While they don't have the intense training in resume-making like the advisors at the Career Center, they can still help you catch basic typos. If you print your resume out in the Resource Center computer lab, you can ask them to give it a look-over right there before heading over to your appointment with a peer advisor at the Career Center.


Find the right On-Campus job!

Check out the Work Study job listings website to find the perfect on-campus job.
http://workstudy.berkeley.edu/JobSearch.aspx

Here are some jobs currently available on campus for students who love plants!

Job Title: Lab Asst III
Employer: LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE & ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING
Hourly Rate: $ 14.01
Positions: 3
Start Date: When filled
Description: Horticultural tasks general garden maintenance.
Qualifications: past experience
My comment: For this job, looks like they need someone who is comfortable pulling weeds, mowing lawn, and all sorts of other tasks. The pay is good, too! $14.01/hour for 16 hours/week.

Job Title: Clerk
Employer: AGRICULTURAL & RESOURCE ECONOMICS
Hourly Rate: $ 12.50
Positions: 1
Start Date: When filled
Description: Working in the Giannini Foundation Library of Agricultural Economics:
1. assist in card catalog revision--pulling cards
2. searching library database and routing current journals to faculty and staff
3. delivering and retrieving materials from departmental offices
4. searching Melvyl for books
5. revising reserve files--pulling printed journal files off the shelf, comparing them to a printed list
6. other library projects as needed
Qualifications:
1. meticulous attention to detail
2. typing/basic computer skills
3. knowledge of the Melvyl database a plus
4. Library experience a plus
My comment: If you like libraries and plants, this is the place for you. The pay is pretty good for this one, too! $12.50/hour for 10-15 hours/week.


Job Title: Science, Nutrition and GardeningTeacher
Employer: Oakland Based Urban Garden (OBUGS)
Hourly Rate: $ 13.40
Positions: 2
Start Date: 9/17/2007 ending possibly before, but no later than 5/22/2008
Description: Teach Kids Gardening, Science, and Cooking! OBUGS is looking for students to teach K-5th grade garden-based classes. What is OBUGS? OBUGS, Oakland Based Urban Gardens, is a West Oakland-based nonprofit organization founded in 1998. Our mission to build healthy communities through programs offered to children, youth and families in a network of neighborhood gardens, green spaces and farmers’ markets. What We Do: OBUGS built and maintains four food-producing gardens in West Oakland. The gardens are used primarily for hands-on educational activities for children. We are looking for teacher assistants for the following programs:
1. In-School: Children in our in-school program learn about science, ecology, and nutrition. They do hands-on activities in the garden to support each day’s lesson.
2. After-School: Participants help plant, harvest, and maintain the gardens. They also practice healthy cooking, do art projects, and play aerobic games. The job: The job is 8 - 16 hrs./week. A one-semester commitment is mandatory.Students will work with a lead teacher to prepare for and teach the in-school and after-school classes. Students will have regular meetings with the supervisor to ensure they benefit from their time with OBUGS.
This job offers student employees: • $13.40/hr • Real teaching experience • Organic agriculture experience • A stand-out resume builder • Help build your community • Free organic veggies • Time spent with some very cool kids
Qualifications: • Experience leading children
• Gardening, science, and nutrition knowledge
• Enthusiastic and fun-loving
• Highly dedicated, punctual, and responsible
• Ability to stay on task, highly organized
My comment: If you like to teach kids, and you like gardening, here's a great opportunity to combine all of your passions and do something worthwhile with your spare time. $13.40/hour 5-10 hours/week.

Delicious Eggplant.

My friend Gabbie gave me this delicious eggplant recipe, and shared a great tip for a website where you can find recipes for anything! Yum!

"INGREDIENTS:

* 1 eggplant, cubed in spall pieces
* 2 tablespoons vegetable oil
* 1 medium onion, finely minces
* 1 teaspoon chopped fresh ginger, or powdered
* 1 large tomato - minced
* 1 clove garlic, minced
* 1/2 teaspoon ground turmeric
* 1/2 teaspoon ground cumin
* 1/2 teaspoon ground coriander
* 1/4 teaspoon cayenne or chili pepper
* 1/2 teaspoon salt, or to taste
* ground black pepper to taste
* 1 cube or 1 tblsp of Veggie Boullion dilluted in 1/4 cup water

"First I sauteed my onion, garlic, ginger and spices on medium heat. Then I added my eggplant and tomato after a few minutes. I cooked it for a few minutes and then added the broth. Then I simmered it all until the rice was done cooking, I think for 20 minutes. At the end I used my potato masher to mash it all up. It was really good and actually tasted very authentic!!! I served it over the rice. I am definitly going to make this more. Enjoy! Gabbie

"PS. Do you ever go to the webpage www.allrecipes.com? It is pretty extensive and you can search by ingredient so try to make a meal out of what's left in your fridge."

August 22, 2007

Gump Station Photos!

The Gump Research Station has a new photo album on their website! Thought It'd be fun to share the link:

http://moorea.berkeley.edu/gallery/

August 17, 2007

More Plants in Space!

That last article on Space Basil reminded me of the research that John Z. Kiss is doing at Miami University of Ohio.

Here are John Kiss' research interests, first in Common English, then in PlantSpeak.

(Common): http://www.cas.muohio.edu/botany/bot/iss.html

The goal of the current research is to better understand how plants integrate sensory input from multiple light and gravity perception systems. The long-range goals are related to developing better crop plants on earth and to determining plants' potential use as a food source during prolonged human time in space. They will again use Arabidopsis, a small plant in the mustard family, that is currently the focus of an international gene sequencing project analogous to the human genome project.

(PlantSpeak): http://www.cas.muohio.edu/botany/people/profiles/Kiss.html
In my laboratory, we are interested in the cellular and molecular mechanisms of gravitropism and phototropism. In the gravitropism project, we have been studying how statoliths interact with the cytoskeleton in gravitropic signal transduction. In terms of phototropism, we have been examining the role of the photosensitive pigment phytochrome in the regulation of this process in both roots and stem-like organs.

Our experiments on gravitropism have been part of a spaceflight project on the Space Shuttle, and we have additional experiments in development for the International Space Station. Some of our research also involves the use of the Electron Microscopy Facility at Miami University. Most recently, we have been using microarray technology to analyze gene expression profiles during various tropisms. Our long-term goals include understanding of how plants integrate sensory input from multiple light and gravity perception systems.

Here are a few links to articles on Dr. Kiss' work:
http://newsinfo.muohio.edu/news_display.cfm?mu_un_id=429
http://newsinfo.muohio.edu/news_display.cfm?mu_un_id=411

Space Basil!

Going where no seeds have gone before - On the space station! My friend Tori sent me this great article from NASA's website: http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2007/16aug_basil.htm?list728615
Basil Orbits Earth
Authors: Lori Meggs, Tony Phillips | Editor: Dr. Tony Phillips

August 16, 2007: You'll never guess what was in Barbara Morgan's pocket when she blasted off from Kennedy Space Center last week onboard space shuttle Endeavour.

The teacher-turned-astronaut carried millions of basil seeds into orbit and onto the International Space Station. Basil ... in space? Well, you never know when the ISS might run into some bland spaghetti sauce.

Seriously, basil in space is cutting-edge research. Astronauts on future missions to the Moon and beyond are going to want to take plants along for the ride--for food, oxygen and even companionship. It's important for NASA to learn how seeds endure space conditions and germinate in low gravity.

Continue reading "Space Basil!" »

August 15, 2007

Lara's Theme

This really brightened my day.

Dr. Zhivago is one of my all-time favorite films. That's where this song comes from. This guy does such a spirited rendition of it on the accordion, I can't help but to smile.

August 9, 2007

Loss of a friend

Found out yesterday that I won't see a dear friend again. She lived with us in the Co-op, she was always such a helpful hand in the garden. She was going to school at Mills College.

Here is the news report from her school regarding her death. http://www.mills.edu/news/2007/newsarticle08072007boitumelo_president_statement.php

Continue reading "Loss of a friend" »

August 8, 2007

Lentils

The often over-looked, cheap, and incredibly delicious Lentil: I had my first lentil soup while living here at the CO-OP in Berkeley, and now it's my favorite. So today I decided to do a little research into the lentil.

What are lentils?
They're a legume! Like peas, or beans.

Its Latin name is Lens culinaris


Where are they really from?

Their origins are believed to be in northern Syria and South-West Asia. Lentils were found in Egyptian tombs, dating back to 2,400 BC, but there's archaeological evidence of their cultivation as early as 6,000 BC.

Where do they grow best?
Sandy, nutrient-poor soils in warm climates.

Why do I feel so good after eating them?
Lentils are filled with good-for-you stuff, like anti-oxidants, iron, fiber, and tannins. They have no cholesterol, fat, sodium, or sugars.

Here's a rundown of their nutrition facts:

Continue reading "Lentils" »

August 7, 2007

Sproul Plaza

Sproul Plaza is where the majority of crazy stuff happens on campus. You'll come across street performers, people trying to get you to join their club, and all sorts of other stuff at lunchtime.

Here's a random ninja battle that I wish I could have seen in person!

August 6, 2007

August in Berkeley

Ever wonder what the weather is like in Berkeley in August?

It's cold.

When I returned to campus the other week, I laughed as Tom and I drove by someone who was putting on a fuzzy winter coat. When I stepped out of the car, I no longer laughed.

We've had a couple of days where we've seen the sun. Usually that's at about 2pm, after the world has had ample time to heat up. Today it's 61 degrees with 73% humidity. There's a mist that covers everything in the mornings and evenings, plus a constant drizzle of rain throughout the day.

July 31, 2007

Whew!

Today I actually went about my day without feeling extreme anxiety and stress. I think I've been in burnout mode. Berkeley summer sessions are not for the faint of heart. Really made a difference to finish my lab write-up early, then spend the weekend with family. I only had a little pre-lab to do before class today. I can't remember the last time I felt this relaxed. Goodness, this is a good day.

Also of interest: Kyle (GPB adviser) approved an online statistics course. Nice! Now I can get started on that. Looks like I'm making progress to all these insane goals, like graduation. Only two states away and eight years after I started.

July 30, 2007

Titan Arum

You've been waiting for an excuse to see the UC Botanical Garden, haven't you? Well, grab your (free for students) bus pass and hop on the Hill Line. This week is the time to go!

A huge, beautiful, smelly corpse flower is about to bloom in the Tropical House at the Botanical garden! Her name is Titania, and she's taller than you are - go check it out!

Article comes from this site:
http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/07/30_titan.shtml

big stink to come at UC Botanical Garden
Rare corpse flower to bloom – and send out its unique aroma – this week

By Wendy Edelstein, Public Affairs | 30 July 2007


corpse flower Titania
Standing more than 5' tall by Monday morning, the corpse flower Titania is expected to unfurl its putrid blooms within days at the UC Botanical Garden's Tropical House. (UC Botanical Garden photos)

BERKELEY – When UC Botanical Garden's rare titan arum, Amorphophallus titanium (corpse flower), blooms this week, the flower will both attract and repel visitors. When the plant opens to a diameter of three to four feet, titan arum looks visually arresting, but it's best known for a characteristic that can only be experienced firsthand after it blooms: its distinctive odor.

"It really does smell like there's a dead body in the room," says Garden Director Paul Licht, recalling his experience with Trudy, another corpse flower that blossomed in the garden's Tropical House in July 2005. The odor helps the plant attract insects that carry its pollen to other titan arums, since corpse flowers can't pollinate themselves.

Titan arum specimens are rare enough to be named like pets. Garden staff call their soon-to-bloom plant Titania after the Queen of the Fairies in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer's Night Dream."

Titania was raised from seed in the garden starting in 1995. Not until July 19 did Licht and his staff know their plant would be one of the rare titan arums that actually flowers. On that day, Titania measured 36 ¾". By Monday morning, July 30, her spadex — the protuberance at the flower's center — had hit the 61" mark. The plant can grow up to 6" a day, notes Licht.


Trudy in bloom
Trudy in bloom in 2005.

Continue reading "Titan Arum" »

Butterflies on Moorea

Here's some fascinating research coming out of Moorea on butterflies!
From this site: http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/07/12_butterfly.shtml

Researchers witness natural selection at work in dramatic comeback of male butterflies

By Sarah Yang, Media Relations | 12 July 2007

BERKELEY – An international team of researchers has documented a remarkable example of natural selection in a tropical butterfly species that fought back - genetically speaking - against a highly invasive, male-killing bacteria.

male h. bolina butterfly

Male (above) and female Hypolimnas bolina, also called the Blue Moon or Great Eggfly butterfly. The proportion of females in some populations of H. bolina in the South Pacific reached 99 percent as a result of infection by a bacteria that kills males before they hatch. However, researchers recently witnessed a remarkable comeback of male butterflies on some islands thanks to the rise of a suppressor gene. (Sylvain Charlat photos)
female h. bolina butterfly


Within 10 generations that spanned less than a year, the proportion of males of the Hypolimnas bolina butterfly on the South Pacific island of Savaii jumped from a meager 1 percent of the population to about 39 percent. The researchers considered this a stunning comeback and credited it to the rise of a suppressor gene that holds in check the Wolbachia bacteria, which is passed down from the mother and selectively kills males before they have a chance to hatch.

Continue reading "Butterflies on Moorea" »

July 29, 2007

Stagecoach Inn

Memories of girl scout troop get-togethers, elementary school field trips, and good family times sprung to mind yesterday as Tom and I visited the historical Stagecoach Inn in Newbury Park, California. It's a little museum and historical site: A touch of the Old West with a reconstructed 19th Century Monterey Style hotel, a schoolhouse, carriages, phonographs, and a little village complete with volunteer docents in costume. It's tiny, nothing to step out of your way to see, but definitely a fun place to take kids. It seemed so huge in my memories, now visiting again it's just a little place. Still, the charm...


Photos come from their website:
www.stagecoachmuseum.org

July 23, 2007

Craze

Saturday morning, bright and early, I walked through the house and realized that everyone was glued to the new Harry Potter book. They were sitting tranquilly on the couches, reading. Relaxing. One guy got up periodically to play the piano.

It was a big project weekend for the CO-OP, other than the whole Harry Potter craze. Sarah helped Tom and I refinish the wood paneling on the spa. We sanded it down, then put the new finish on Saturday, then Sunday we put on the first coat of Polyurethane. By next weekend, it's going to be beautiful!


this used to be faded light blue-gray.

What a great weekend. A quiet house, and plenty of work completed. If only this would happen more often!

July 20, 2007

Quakey!

We had an earthquake this morning! Just a 4.2, at 4:44:22 am, how odd that those numbers are so similar. The epicenter was in the hills beyond Oakland, so we're within 10 miles. Living on the 4th floor, it definitely jolted us out of bed. Some neighborhoods lost power, nothing happened here. A couple of things fell off a couple of shelves.

July 18, 2007

Geckel

A funny new adhesive! Thought up by some wacky scientists at Northwestern, and Berkeley's engineers are helping to make it happen.

Link: http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2007/07/070718-geckel-glue.html

Gecko, Mussel Powers Combined in New Sticky Adhesive
John Roach
for National Geographic News
July 18, 2007

Give your tape some real "mussel"!

So might go the ad campaign for "geckel"—a next-generation adhesive inspired by the legendary stickiness of geckos and mollusks—if the product is successfully brought to market.

One of nature's greatest clingers, geckos have long fascinated scientists with the tiny hairs on their feet, which allow the tropical lizards to scurry up walls and across ceilings.

But tapes made by a number of research teams in recent years lose most of their adhesive strength underwater.

Phillip Messersmith, a biomedical engineer at Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois, was intrigued by the problem.

He has been making liquid glues for several years based on the adhesive proteins of mussels that allow the mollusks to hold on tight to rocks and docks in even the roughest of waters.

"I thought, Well, what if we try to combine the mussel adhesive proteins ... with a gecko type strategy, which has its own set of properties?" Messersmith said.

"We might have something new and interesting and useful."

Continue reading "Geckel" »

July 17, 2007

Bleh Examness

The Organic Chemistry professor prefaced today's lecture with these words:
"I have not graded enough of the exams to give a decent interpretation of the scores, but I will say this: I wrote this exam with an intended mean of 50%. If the class as a whole scores around there, I'll be happy. If the class averages better than 50%, I will make the next two exams more difficult. If the class averages worse, I will not change the difficulty of the remaining exams."

In other words, he set it up so that at least half of the students would leave the exam saying, "I failed!!! What do I do now!!?!"

So, we'll see. I still think I failed. Time to study the new stuff and eat a peanut butter & honey sandwich.

July 13, 2007

Oh dear

You know you're in for a lot of studying when you walk into your Organic Chemistry midterm, see this on the board and your first thought is...

"Why did someone write something on the board in Chinese?"

July 9, 2007

Linguistics - Chomsky debunked

Most people, if they've heard of Chomsky, think of his political theories and commentary. He's also a big name in the Linguistics world. Took a few classes in linguistics at my old school, considered majoring in it for a while. The big draw-back of that program for me was how the professors seemed to idolize certain theorists, Chomsky among them. I didn't like his theories. Always cringed whenever they mentioned his name. Now they've proven one of those theories to be flawed. Thank goodness there are people out there doing real research these days. Check out the article from the New Yorker:

http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2007/04/16/070416fa_fact_colapinto?currentPage=all

Dan Everett believes that Pirahã undermines Noam Chomsky’s idea of a universal grammar. Photographs by Martin Schoeller.

The Interpreter
Has a remote Amazonian tribe upended our understanding of language?
by John Colapinto April 16, 2007



One morning last July, in the rain forest of northwestern Brazil, Dan Everett, an American linguistics professor, and I stepped from the pontoon of a Cessna floatplane onto the beach bordering the Maici River, a narrow, sharply meandering tributary of the Amazon. On the bank above us were some thirty people—short, dark-skinned men, women, and children—some clutching bows and arrows, others with infants on their hips. The people, members of a hunter-gatherer tribe called the Pirahã, responded to the sight of Everett—a solidly built man of fifty-five with a red beard and the booming voice of a former evangelical minister—with a greeting that sounded like a profusion of exotic songbirds, a melodic chattering scarcely discernible, to the uninitiated, as human speech. Unrelated to any other extant tongue, and based on just eight consonants and three vowels, Pirahã has one of the simplest sound systems known. Yet it possesses such a complex array of tones, stresses, and syllable lengths that its speakers can dispense with their vowels and consonants altogether and sing, hum, or whistle conversations. It is a language so confounding to non-natives that until Everett and his wife, Keren, arrived among the Pirahã, as Christian missionaries, in the nineteen-seventies, no outsider had succeeded in mastering it. Everett eventually abandoned Christianity, but he and Keren have spent the past thirty years, on and off, living with the tribe, and in that time they have learned Pirahã as no other Westerners have.

“Xaói hi gáísai xigíaihiabisaoaxái ti xabiíhai hiatíihi xigío hoíhi,” Everett said in the tongue’s choppy staccato, introducing me as someone who would be “staying for a short time” in the village. The men and women answered in an echoing chorus, “Xaói hi goó kaisigíaihí xapagáiso.”

Continue reading "Linguistics - Chomsky debunked" »

July 7, 2007

Anemone genome - say that 10 times fast!

Ooo - little sea creatures! Looks like Berkeley's doing some interesting research.
Link:
http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/07/05_anemone.shtml

Anemone genome gives new view of multi-celled ancestors

By Robert Sanders, Media Relations | 05 July 2007

BERKELEY – The first analysis of the genome of the sea anemone shows it to be nearly as complex as the human genome, and researchers say it provides major insights into the common ancestor of not only humans and sea anemones, but of nearly all multi-celled animals.
mouth of scarlet sea anemone


A view into the mouth of the starlet sea anemone, Nematostella vectensis. The anemone, only a few inches long and endowed with between 16 and 20 tentacles, lives in the mud of brackish estuaries and marshes. It is becoming a popular laboratory subject for studies of development, evolution, genomics, reproductive biology and ecology. (Nicholas Putnam/UC Berkeley photo)

Continue reading "Anemone genome - say that 10 times fast!" »

July 6, 2007

Elegant Garden Nurseries

Today I went to see Elegant Garden Nurseries in Moorpark, California with my mom.

She's been raving about this nursery for months and now I see why!

So much variety! With 12 acres of plants and landscaping materials, there's no reason to not love it. Also - their prices are cheap but their plants are super healthy. Another plus - kind of rare to see, but they didn't have any black-market cycads. They had good horticultural stock of everything, including Gingers. No greenhouses, but dang - everything that you can think of they have it.

I can't believe how much fun we had riding around in a golf cart with one of the hort guys, roaming from one side of the nursery to another in search of hibiscus and daylilies. We picked up a bromeliad, too! I convinced my mom that a drought-tolerant pink was a good idea for our little hill.

Photos from their image gallery:
http://www.elegantgardenscom.superpageshosting.com/gallery/

July 4, 2007

Native Plants

Want to find a lily that will survive without water? Want to start a native garden but don't know where to start?

Here's a great resource to help you learn what grows in your part of California. It even includes photos like this one!


California Native Plant Link Exchange:
http://www.cnplx.info/index.html

It's easy to use. For instance, my parents live in Ventura County and they'd like to plant something that will flower year after year without replanting. So they click on "Ventura" in the county listing. It takes them to a new page that lists native plant nurseries in the area. If you scroll down on that page, they'll see a topographical map of the county, and just below that is a listing of native trees that grow in the county. They can then click on the "Perennials" link and that list will change to a massive list of native perennials that will do well in their county. Click on any plant and you'll see everything you could want to know about that particular plant, including a photo, common names, links to other sites with photos, and what nurseries should have it in stock.

Here's a link to the entry on a native lily:
http://www.cnplx.info/nplx/species?taxon=Calochortus+venustus

July 3, 2007

What it's like in Berkeley (in no particular order):

Diversity is everywhere. People are generally polite. Lots of homeless
people, which is a shock at first. The few white people you meet
on campus will most likely be from some unexpected country. There's this
awesome grocery store called "Berkeley Bowl" (odd name) that has tons of
cheap produce. 2 botanical gardens within jogging distance: Tilden and UC
Bot Garden. Redwoods all over campus, Eucalyptus all over the hillsides.
Tons of nice places to go hiking: Huckleberry preserve, Redwood Park, and
5 others within a 10 minute drive of campus, and you can usually catch a
bus to most of them. Crime definitely catches people by suprize. Don't
leave your backpack sitting unattended in the library or sometone will
snag it. Get a secure lock for your bike. People ride bikes like crazy
everywhere around here. Tons of little cars, hardly see an SUV. Expect
to see people wearing clothes you thought people stopped making in the
1960's. Sensible Asians, burnt out hippies, artists selling their work on
Telegraph and bums harassing you for change at every intersection.
Incredible selection of international food. Every kind of food you can
think of, you'll find, and it'll be reasonably priced. North side of
campus: "Holy Hill" with a representative church or educational facility
for every religion and denomination that has had contact with the Western
world. Calm, peaceful streets that are steep. Sidewalk cafes shaded by
trees, an insane number of copy shops.

June 27, 2007

Animals & Climate Change

Another great article - this one's about animal habitat-change research going on at the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology. Link: http://sciencematters.berkeley.edu/archives/volume4/issue28/story1.php



As Director of the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, Craig Moritz is in charge of more than 710,000 animal specimens such as this albatross. Photo courtesy of Museum of Vertebrate Zoology.

We've all heard the news—climate change is altering the world as we know it. Seas are set to rise and glaciers to melt, drought to parch some lands and scorching temperatures to desiccate others. The effects on us humans are grimly predictable. We'll have to scramble to develop new cars to drive, lands to farm, and sources of water to drink.

But the fate of the birds and beasts who share our planet remains an open question. Will chipmunks and salamanders weather this latest shift in habitat and climate conditions by adapting, or might they fade into extinction? How did they respond to climate change over past millennia, and what can we learn from this?


Continue reading "Animals & Climate Change" »

Berkeley's at it again -Renewable Energy!

From the UC Berkeley press release:

http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/06/26_jbei.shtml

DOE awards LBNL, UC Berkeley and partners $125 million for biofuels research

Robert Sanders, Media Relations | 26 June 2007

BERKELEY – Berkeley and the Bay Area cemented their position as the nation's center of alternative energy research with the announcement today (Tuesday, June 26) by the Department of Energy of a $125 million, five-year grant to Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), the University of California, Berkeley, and four other partners to develop better biofuels.

Energy Secretary Samuel W. Bodman announced in Washington, D.C., research grants totaling $375 million to establish three Bioenergy Research Centers in Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Madison, Wisconsin; and near Berkeley, California.

The California center, to be known as the Joint BioEnergy Institute (JBEI), involves six partners: LBNL, Sandia National Laboratories (Sandia), the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory (LLNL), the UC campuses of Berkeley and Davis, and Stanford University.

"The selection of JBEI is a major vote of confidence in the Bay Area's growing leadership in the national effort to develop new and cleaner sources of renewable energy," said Jay Keasling, UC Berkeley professor of chemical engineering and JBEI's chief executive officer. Keasling also is director of LBNL's Physical Biosciences Division.

UC Berkeley, LBNL and the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign were selected earlier this year by oil company BP to receive $500 million over 10 years for an Energy Biosciences Institute to investigate future technologies for biofuels and ways of using the new tools of biology to enhance oil recovery and to sequester carbon. That research contract is due to be signed in July.

Continue reading "Berkeley's at it again -Renewable Energy!" »

June 26, 2007

Gearing up for Moorea

Today I used an amazon.com gift card to purchase a few items for Moorea:
Boots

Snorkel kit

Mosquito netting w/ over-bed hoop

full-size roll-up silicone waterproof keyboard


I can't believe that I was able to get all of these items for $50 total. Hopefully the snorkeling fins fit right, and the jungle boots fit, too. Not very girly...

I'm curious what else I still need for the trip. Maybe I'll find similar deals. Time to start looking for a killer waterproof bag...

June 23, 2007

A friend asked...

A friend who studies graphic design asked:
Speaking of,[plants] wikipedia tells me that "The classification of all flowering plants is currently in a state of flux." (as found in http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnivorous_plants). Is that true? Why's it the case? I haven't read the full wiki article so I apologize if it's answered like two sentences down.

My response:
Yes, it's in a major state of flux! As more is understood about plant genetics, we're understanding plants much better.

Now that we're looking at the genetic data, we can look at the plants in a new context, and find new similarities. Now we're making the family trees from genetic base pair similarities, then adding the physical traits to that genetic tree. We're even trying to figure out what genes give rise to what traits, but we have only started mapping this out for a few test plants (arabadopsis, corn, and rice).

You see, botanists have always based their classifications on traits. Now, with genetics, we have more distinct traits on which we base the relationships (our traits are super basic - A,T,G...). The guys in the 16th century would say, "These plants have similar leaves (bark, flowers, number of flower parts, etc)." Those were their traits. Then they would make a family tree.

Older trees, for the most part, are matching up with current genetic findings - but not always! We're learning that many plants are not as closely related as we thought - and many plants are closely related that we never thought to put together. For instance, look at Dr. Charles Davis' work at Harvard: they used genetic data to determine that a family of leafless saprophytic flowers (otherwise impossible to place) is nested within the Euphorbiaceae - a very diverse group of flowering plants that includes old-world cactus-looking succulents, the rubber tree, and poinsettia.
Link from Science Magazine: http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/full/315/5820/1812?maxtoshow=&HITS=20&hits=20&RESULTFORMAT=&author1=Davis%2C+C&andorexacttitle=or&andorexacttitleabs=or&andorexactfulltext=or&searchid=1&FIRSTINDEX=0&sortspec=relevance&fdate=7/1/1880&tdate=6/30/2007&resourcetype=HWCIT
Link from Smithsonian Magazine: http://www.smithsonianmagazine.com/issues/2007/march/wildthings.php

My primary interest in plants is making genetic trees, then finding developmental similarities and differences, which will basically stand as tic marks on a tree. People can later compile these physical traits into a key, then use the key in the field to identify plants.

In the Specht lab, I'm working with ginger relatives (Zingeberales), and dessicant-tolerant (Cheilanthoid) ferns. This Fall, I'm hoping to work with woody tropical vines (Freycinetia and Pandanus).

Work Party

At noon today, the Ridge House Cooperative is going to band together and do some major fix-it and gardening work. It's called a Work Party, and I'm looking forward to it. Last semester we had several garden work parties. After one of these parties, our garden looks awesome, our house is clean and tidy, and we're a closer, happier community. It's a great time to get to know folks. Here is a photo from a work party last semester.

June 20, 2007

Pygmy Panda!

CNN reports that a skull was found of a smaller giant panda.
Link:
http://www.cnn.com/2007/TECH/science/06/19/panda.skull.ap/index.html

WASHINGTON (AP) -- The first skull of the earliest known ancestor of the giant panda has been discovered in China, researchers report.

Discovery of the skull, estimated to be at least 2 million years old, is reported by Russell L. Ciochon in Tuesday's edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Ciochon, an anthropologist at the University of Iowa, and a team of U.S. and Chinese researchers, made the find in a limestone cave in south China.

The animal, formally known as Ailuropoda microta, or "pygmy giant panda," would have been about three feet long, compared to the modern giant panda, which averages in excess of five feet (1.52 meters).

Previously this animal had been known only by a few teeth and bones, but a skull had never been found.

Judging by the wear patterns on its teeth it also lived on a diet of bamboo, the main food of the current giant panda, the researchers said.

Other than size, the animal was anatomically similar to today's giant panda, said Ciochon.

The work was funded by the Chinese National Natural Science Foundation and University of Iowa.

Copyright 2007 The Associated Press.

Continue reading "Pygmy Panda!" »

Fast-Paced Moms

Here's a book review that stands out. Not because it has anything to do with plants, but because it mentions moms who are PHDs. I hope to have a PHD someday, and being a mom doesn't seem too far out of the picture. Seems like all the women researchers, professors, and curators I know don't have children. It's good to read about how having children can affect a career in academia.

Article from the Berkeley news feed:
http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2007/06/12_moms.shtml
New book outlines discrimination against moms

By Yasmin Anwar, Media Relations | 12 June 2007

BERKELEY – Three decades after women began breaking into male-dominated professions, their numbers in top academic and corporate echelons remain flat, according to Mary Ann Mason, graduate dean at the University of California, Berkeley.

Continue reading "Fast-Paced Moms" »

June 12, 2007

Back to work - wait, I never had a break!

Seems like when you leave the country for a couple of weeks, people assume that you spent your time on vacation. They expect you to return all rested and happy. Well, that's not so much the case. Especially when you go to Europe for research. Jetlag is no fun, either. So what do you do when people say, "Welcome home, now get to work!" I haven't figured it out yet. I just kind of mutter, "I never stopped working in the first place."

It's been non-stop since returning from the weeks at various European herbaria. I arrived home, spent a day with my family, drove back to Berkeley, threw my bags in my room, and made it to work at Starbucks - just in time for a 4pm shift. Closed the store, ran home on my own two feet, fell soundly to sleep, and woke up in time for the 8am class Monday morning. Except I didn't know what room it was in - so I showed up at the wrong place, found someone who knew what room it was in. They failed to mention the building so I wandered the wrong building for a half hour, then showed up late at the proper room. Learned the first few steps for making microscope slides. Went home at 6:30pm. I had 20 minutes for lunch in there somewhere, in between paraffin steps and not at a usual time at all.

People at the Co-Op seemed to think that I was just back from a wonderful vacation. They wanted to hear about all the places I saw in Europe. When I explained that they all looked about the same - shelves or cabinets with dried, old plant samples on acid-free paper - they figured out that I just wanted a bit of a break.

In a way, last week was a break. Microscopy is fun, and I realized that I was actually decent at it. On top of the fun I was having with the course, I wasn't running to Starbucks every evening to help with the close. Class got out too late to work a normal shift, so I just spent more time making perfect slides, then coming home to eat dinner, crash, and maybe watch people play a game of poker before sleeping. Saturday I was supposed to have the day off, but I made a horrible decision and took someone's morning shift at work. An eight-hour shift starting at 5:15am is not the best way to end a stressful week of slide-making. I slept all day Sunday, when I wasn't walking a love-able dog named Otis, who I happened to be pet-sitting. So, Sunday was my break, until I went to work at 4pm, that is.

This week I'm spending time in the Specht lab, learning new skills. Yesterday I spent my time extracting DNA from some Cheilanthoid ferns, the start of my SPUR project for the summer. I don't work at Starbucks again until Wednesday - thank goodness. Working while going to school is a rush. Unless you're crazy like me, I don't recommend it.

May 19, 2007

Microtechnique!

I'll be taking an exciting crash course on plant microtechnique this summer. ie: learning to make microscope slides of plant tissues. Pretty slides, like this grouping from last year, source metioned later:

In order from top to bottom: a pollen grain sticking to the stigmatic surface of a Passiflora, Thistle stem cross-section, Iris petals in bud, Melilotus Ovule.
I'm looking forward to this course!

Here's the description of the course:
The Biological Imaging Facility at UC Berkeley offers during the first week of June a one-week workshop in Plant and Animal Microtechnique. The course covers paraffin sectioning and associated techniques using microwave techniques. This class is designed to familiarize the student with up-to-date methods in making microscope slides from specimen material for anatomical and molecular investigations. The more traditional techniques of paraffin embedding and histological staining are also covered. Alternating with laboratory exercises, lectures are presented covering the theoretical aspects of fixation and slide preparation, immunolocalization, and in situ hybridization.

Here's a website that tells you a little more about the course, the photos I mentioned, and general information on the state-of-the-art Biological Imaging Facility here on campus: http://microscopy.berkeley.edu/courses/microtech/index.html

Whirlwind over, new storm on its way

Finals are done! Whew! To celebrate the end of the semester, I went with the Specht lab to the UC Botanical Garden, where we took a new lab photo and individual photos of each lab member with their plant of interest. It was very fun!

Click on this link to see more of the new photos! http://pmb.berkeley.edu/~specht/labmembers.html

With each semester that I pass all of my courses, I feel a little more worthy of a Berkeley education. The tradition of excellence here at UC Berkeley has messed with my mind since I've arrived on campus, and has made me feel like I'm not intelligent enough to be here. With each passing grade I say, "See, you can do this." With each A grade: "Ha! You can cut it in the scientific world!" My friend Benta and I speak often on our feelings of insignificance in the face of such greatness. One difference, though, she belongs here, and I don't! Just kidding. Well, not really...

Tomorrow I leave for Paris, France. I'll be in the Paris Herbarium for a week with Dr. Specht.

(image from www.myparisnet.com/wp-content/images/JardinDesPlantes000.jpg)

Continue reading "Whirlwind over, new storm on its way" »

International Travel

Struggling to remember if you can put your 4oz. container of face cream in your carry-on? Didn't realize that your gel shoe insoles will be confiscated at the security desk?

Getting your luggage together for the airport can be tricky when you're flying internationally - or even from state to state these days. Here's a webiste that helps make sense of the regulations regarding tricky and commonplace items. It includes an easy-to-scan chart, and links to other helpful travel tips:
http://www.tsa.gov/travelers/airtravel/prohibited/permitted-prohibited-items.shtm#1

May 16, 2007

My Favorite Online Gardening Resources

As the garden manager for the Ridge House Cooperative, I find every now and again that I need a little inspiration when it comes to figuring out what to do around the garden. Here are some websites and magazines that I have turned to throughout the course of this semester, to make my life a little easier:

Organic Gardening. Here's a page on their website that gives you links to articles on growing techniques: http://organicgardening.com/subchannel/1,7513,s1-5-19,00.html

Sunset Magazine. Every gardener has a copy of the Sunset Garden Book, but their magazine has a checklist each month with what to do in your garden. Here's a link to their advice for May: http://www.sunset.com/sunset/garden/article/0,20633,1181031,00.html

Better Homes & Gardens. Now here's a good source for landscaping ideas. It won't help you so much with the day-to-day care of the garden, but it'll help you make heads or tails of what you want your garden to look like overall. With so many beautiful photos of gardens on their website, it's enough to inspire you to build your own breathtaking garden. http://www.bhg.com/bhg/gardening/

May 14, 2007

Green Waste Recycle Yard

Wonder where the trees end up that fall down in a storm? Well, wonder no longer. These folks find it a new home:

http://www.greenwasterecycleyard.com/index.htm

Not only do they have mulch and lumber, but they also have flooring, bio woodfuel, landscaping retaining walls, step blocks, and furniture!

Continue reading "Green Waste Recycle Yard" »

May 12, 2007

Sympetalae

Also known as Asterids by APG II (Angiosperm Phylogeny Group). This is the grouping of plant families that spans a huge number of Eudicots. Here's how the main groups and families break down:

Cornales - Cornaceae
Ericales - Polemoniaceae, Primulaceae, Theaceae, Ericaceae.
Asterales - Asteraceae (Compositae), Campanulaceae.
Apiales - Apiaceae
Dipsacales - Adoxaceae, Caprifoliaceae (opposite leaves).
Solanales - Convolvulaceae, Solanaceae (both of these have a plicate corolla).
Gentianales - Rubiaceae, Apocynaceae, Gentianaceae.
Lamiales - Oleaceae, Plantaginaceae, Acanthaceae, Lamiaceae.

May 7, 2007

Tour of Gump Station, Moorea

Here's a link to a virtual tour of the research center:
http://moorea.berkeley.edu/stationguide/

Wondering what to do while you're in Moorea? Here's a guide to hiking, and other great things to do while on the island.
http://moorea.berkeley.edu/islandguide/hiking/

Families that just confuse me

Thank you to Bianca Knoll and Bruce Baldwin for these wonderful descriptions.


Myricaceae - Bayberry Family. Trees or shrubs, aromatic, commonly with peltate yellow glands; leaves alternate and simple, oblanceolate; stipules present or absent; flowers unisexual, generally monoecious, flowers generally aggregated into spikes, axillary; perianth extremely reduced to subtending bractlets; stamens typically 4; superior ovary composed of two fused carpels, style present with two branches; fruit a drupe.

Moraceae- Fig or Mulberry family. Mostly tropical, but found worldwide. Trees and shrubs, milky sap or latex present in all tissue; leaves simple, may be alternate or opposite; stipules present, leaving a circular scar on twig, many with conical stipules covering apical bud; inflorescence axillary, flowers densely packed on thickened axis; flowers tiny, unisexual, monoecious, radial; perianth composed of 4-5 tepals; stamens 1-5, opposite tepals, with explosive pollen release; overay superior or inferior; 2 carpels, one ovule, 2 styles; fruit usually fleshy, drupelike achenes (often aggregated into multiple fruits).

Polygalaceae- termperate and tropical. Herbs, shrubs, trees or vines, leaves alternate, simple, entire. Venation pinnate; stipules lacking or spines present; inflorescence a panicle or raceme; flowers bisexual and bilateral; sepals 5, often with 2 fused, and two larger and petal-like, petals usually 3 (5), adnate to staminal tube; stamens typically 8, anthers usually opening by apical pores; style often with one fertile and one sterile branch, the sterile one ending in a tuft of hairs; fruit various.


Images from these sites:
http://biotech.tipo.gov.tw/plantjpg/Myrica%20rubra-3.jpg
http://www.forestryimages.org/images/192x128/1367013.jpg
http://www.mobot.org/MOBOT/paramo/images/75Monn_cras_small.jpg

Liliales vs. Asparagales

These two give me a headache! Mainly because there have been huge changes in the taxonomy of petaloid monocots over the past 30+ years, and my first plant identification course went by an outdated system.

So here's a few pointers:
3-merous? Could be either.
Inferior ovary? Always Asparagales.
Spotted, not an Orchid or Iris? Liliales.
Fruit blackened & crusty (Phytomelan crust) ? Asparagales.
Fruit not with Phytomelan? Liliales unless Orchidaceae.
Extrorse dehiscence of anthers? Could be either.
Introrse dehiscence of anthers? Definitely Asparagales.
Nectaries at the base of the tepals or stamens? Liliales
Nectaries on septae of ovary? Asparagales.

Orchid (Asparagales)

Narcissus (Asparagales)

Allium (Asparagales)

Lilium (Liliales)

Phytomelan crust (present in Asparagales, except Orchidaceae)
NOTE THAT THE CAPTION ON THIS IMAGE IS INCORRECT!!
Allium is no longer in the Liliaceae, within the Liliales. Recent genetic data has moved it to the Asparagales, Alliaceae or Asparagaceae.


Photos from these websites:
http://www.botanique.org/IMG/arton24565.jpg
http://www.theflowerexpert.com/media/images/mostpopularflowers/narcissus/narcissus-jonquilla.jpg
http://www.touchofnature.com/Fall%20Pictures/allium_gladiator.jpg
http://www.hillkeep.ca/images/Lilium_speciosum_2004-08-14_019xx.jpg
http://www.oardc.ohio-state.edu/seedid/images/Allium_porrum_2.jpg

May 5, 2007

Special Dinner

The cooperative that I live in, Ridge House, is throwing a big, fancy dinner. It's Rainforest/Cinco De Mayo themed. We're looking forward to all sorts of deliciousness - and the exciting decorations.

The one draw back - I have to work tonight.

Even so, I'm making dishes. Yummy.

Flowers & Greens Salad - including Nasturtiums, rose petals, fennel, red bell pepper, baby spinach, and mixed baby greens.

Peach, Banana & Coconut Cobbler - it's delicious. Made it up a couple of weeks ago, and it was a hit. Can't wait to make it again. This time, it's going to be Vegan since I'm making the only desert option that our house's two vegans might eat.

Other items on the menu (not made by me):
Carnitas
Fajitas
Somosas
killer fruit salad
some other stuff, just can't think of them.

May 4, 2007

Researchers in Paradise

Here's an article that peaked my interest from Berkeley's Spring 2007 edition of the Berkeley Science Review:
It's about the Gump Research Station on Moorea Island, French Polynesia. Since I'm going there this Fall, I figure it's a great time to learn about it!

Link to the article, which includes all posted images:
http://sciencereview.berkeley.edu/articles.php?issue=12&article=moorea

Researchers in Paradise
A tour of UC Polynesia
by Erica Spotswood

On the island of Moorea, a mere ten miles from Tahiti in the South Pacific, lies the Gump Research Station, UC Berkeley’s best kept secret. Known more for its attractiveness as a honeymoon destination than for its value to science, Moorea has nevertheless proved itself over the last twenty years to be a place where certain kinds of biological and anthropological research questions can be particularly well addressed.






Continue reading "Researchers in Paradise" »

May 3, 2007

99 Ranch!

Today I went to 99 Ranch, in Richmond, where I purchased some delicious tea-type stuff.

"Honeysuckle Flower Beverage" The majority of the packaging is in Chinese characters, which of course looks beautiful but... well... I only took one semester of beginning Mandarin.


I love 99 Ranch.  Incredibly inexpensive deliciousness.  A Chinese grocery store - easy to get to on BART, or from campus just hop onto AC Trainsit bus #43/El Cerrito Bart and get off at Pierce St. & Pacific East Mall.



April 27, 2007

For the Plant Freaks - Courses and Profs

Hyun-joo asked what courses I've enjoyed - so here we go! I'm addling a little information on professors as well.

PMB C107 & C 107L: Plant Morphology. This is my favorite course in the major. It teaches you the ins and outs of vascular plants. Be prepared to do a lot of quick drawing in the labs. You're trained to have a critical eye when viewing plant structures. You also learn the general layout of plant lineages. In the lab, we get to look at microscope slides of plant anatomy, living plant samples, and even fossils! Be warned - those upper-division students that came in without a decent understanding of plant descriptive terminology are feeling overwhelmed by the amount of material covered in this course. In the Genetics & Plant Biology major, the majority of students have a good background in plant biochemistry, cell biology, and genetics. Take at least one non-biochemistry or non-molecular biology plant course before this one. Meeting with study groups and bringing your questions to the graduate student instructor during office hours are essential to success, no matter your background.

The professor, Dr. Chelsea Specht:

She is perky, incredibly knowledgeable and ready to share what she knows, so don't miss out on a class from her. Sometimes she speaks very fast in lecture! Never miss a lecture, always read background material before coming to class. Otherwise, you risk getting lost in the fast pace.

It's probably a good idea to take some of these before PMB C107:


IB168: Plant Systematics
. This course gives you a general understanding of plant families, and just gets you comfortable looking at plants. For the lab, you'll need to learn the main characters of most plant families. For the quizzes, you'll need to look at a plant and know its family. Bring your camera, sketchbook, and colored pencils to lab. Don't think you know how to draw? If you choose to sketch the plants in this course (rather than just taking photos), you'll get the hang of it by the end of the semester, and you'll be better prepared for PMB C107L. You'll enjoy the small class size, individual attention in lab, and the enthusiastic students. Get to know people and form study groups before exams - it helps to exchange notes.

The professor, Dr. Bruce Baldwin:

He's the Curator of the Jepson Herbarium. You want to get to know this man. Find any excuse you can to take a course by him. He is soft-spoken, and incredibly kind. He likes to bring up silly facts and stories about the plants, to make his students laugh. Don't miss a lecture, it all shows up on his multiple-choice exams.

IB 102 & IB 102L: Introduction to California Plant Life.
Who wants to leave California without knowing its flora? Here's an excellent course where you'll run into plant-minded people with interests in forestry, ethnobotany, range science, and so forth. These are folks that you won't run into in your other major courses, but you'll have a lot of fun with them on the field trips and in the labs. You're introduced to the plants of California by their habitat, as well as by family. Watch out! There's a lot of plants to know for this course. It focuses on sight-identification of plants by family, genus, and species. You'll learn a little morphology in this course, since you'll need it to navigate the Jepson Manual, the key to California plants.

The professor, Dr. Dean Kelch:

Dean knows his field well. A great speaker, and definitely a big part of what makes this course fun. Watch out when he writes on the board - he doesn't have the best hand-writing. The key to enjoying his course - ask questions!

PMB C102 & C102L: Diversity of Plants and Fungi. I have not taken it, but several of my friends have enjoyed this elective. Here's the course description: "An integrated treatment of the biology and evolution of the major groups in the plant, algal, and fungal kingdoms." My friends say the instructors have a great sense of humor, and make these plants come alive. It's the only introduction you'll get to marine "plants." I haven't had a semester where I could take the course, but a friend gave me their textbook: Diversity of Plants and Fungi by Rudolf Schmid. It's an excellent resource for getting your mind around an upper-division understanding of plants.

Other Great Major Courses:

(These happen to be required.)

PMB 135 & PMB 135L: Physiology and Biochemistry of Plants. Here's a course that threw me for a loop. Make sure that you take all of Organic Chemistry before embarking on this adventure. I didn't, and boy was it a rush. Other students seemed to have an easier time of it than I did. Here's where you learn C3, C4 and CAM photosynthesis in detail, including the nitty-gritty of how chloroplasts capture energy. Also covers nutrient deficiencies, a bit on soil and water potential, just how turgor pressure works, and, well... all of the math and chemistry that you'll need to understand when it comes to plants. Watch out for the chalk dust - there's a lot of learning, and neither professor uses power point. This course also has frequent quizzes. Don't miss lectures, they're the most important part.

The Professors,

Dr. Anastasios Melis:

When speaking with other students in Genetics & Plant Biology, his name is the most common when you ask about a favorite professor. A Greek accent, incredible smile, and detailed organization are the most notable aspects of this professor. He outlines his lectures well, and brings even the most challenging concepts to a level that we all can understand. He doesn't like textbooks, so take good notes in class - it's all you have to work off of!

Dr. Norman Terry:

You can see a more current image of him if you watch the first 30 seconds of my "day in the life" video from last semester. Dreamy English accent aside, Dr. Terry is older but he's quick. Organized, and thankfully he works with the course website to give us all of the important notes from his lectures. Sit back and take it all in when he teaches. There's some difficult concepts to master, but he makes it all clear- what you need to know and what you don't.


PMB 150 & 150L: Cellular and Developmental Plant Biology.
Interested in cell signaling, or genes that control specific functions? Those are two main topics that this course covers. A couple of my friends tell me that this course is much easier if you have already taken PMB 160 and 160L. Be prepared to write a scientific paper, and be sure to come to class for frequent quizzes. Neither professor believes much in textbooks. Be sure to take good notes, and go through their lectures online before attending each course. They won't stop to explain terminology if you've had a chance to look it up.

The Professors,

Dr. Sheng Luan:

His lecture slides are filled with the information he wants you to know, while his gentle voice fills your ears with analogies and stories to help you remember the challenging concepts. His office hours are worthwhile, and his eyes light up when answering questions. You'll find he offers great advice on graduate schools and other pertinent life topics, as well as the course subject material.

Dr. Renee Sung:
Another professor whose lecture slides accurately depict what she expects us to know for quizzes and exams. She's great at gearing the information she presents to the students she has in her class. If you don't have the proper background to understand a concept she presents, be sure to visit her during office hours to ask for clarification. She also responds quickly to e-mails. A straightforward lecturer, though some may have a difficult time with her Taiwanese accent.

Geeks hit the Military

All of us have friends or family who have spent some time in Iraq, or maybe are there right now. Some of them might even be geeks. Well, here's an awesome event that any military geek wouldn't want to miss.

The website: http://www.gamegrene.com/node/790

Ziggurat Con - The World's First War Zone Game Convention?
Category: News
By aeon | Thu, 2007-04-05 02:12

Which Con are you going to this year? GenCon? Origins? Dundracon? How about Ziggurat Con? The latter is brand new this year, and is being held at Camp Adder/Tallil Airbase on June 9. In Iraq.

When President Bush ordered troops to Iraq, he probably never imagined that he would be ultimately be responsible for what very well could be the very first D&D convention/game day ever held in a war zone. Ziggurat Con, being held June 9 from 1200 to 2100 hours at Camp Adder/Tallil Airbase, is open to all allied military personnel and civilian contractors in Iraq.

"Here in Iraq, we do many things on the different Forward Operating Bases to help keep our spirits up," said SPC David Amberson, the Con's organizer. "Here at Camp Adder/Tallil Airbase, we have lots of sports activities -- baseball, football, dodgeball, kickball -- and we work with many marathons across the US like the Boston Marathon. This is a great way to improve morale among the troops, but what about those who prefer Role-Playing Games?"

The Con's historical landmark "mascot" -- the Ziggurat that gives the Con its name -- can be found on the post, and hails from the ancient city of Ur. Nearby is the house where it is believed that Abraham (a large figure in the Bible, the Koran and the Torah) was born. Cool digs for a Con -- if not for the fact that there's a war going on. Amberson, however, emphasized the need for soldiers to relax and kick back with enjoyable activities from time to time.

"There is a deeper sense of camaraderie in a war zone than you see back home," said Amberson, who is a supply soldier with Alpha Company, 86th Signal Battalion. "You eat with these people, work with them on a daily basis, and can even share a tent with the same people. When work is over for the day, we can sit back, relax, drink our favorite sodas, eat our favorite snacks, and play a bit of D&D. This helps us relax in a very stressful environment. We found a place where we can go somewhere far away from the IED's, mortar attacks, and gunfire, without ever leaving the safety of our camp. The next step was only logical."

Miss Joy Brown, an employee with KBR who works with MWR (the army’s Morale Welfare & Recreation Department) has graciously allowed service members to use part of the Community Activity Center to hold the Game Day. The Ping Pong room will be set up for RPGs (Role-Playing Games, not to be confused with the rocket propelled grenades which share the same acronym), and the DVD Movie room will be playing Anime Movies all day in support of the event.

"Miss Brown has expressed her support of the soldiers who are planning this event, and who keep her in the loop," said Amberson. "In many events, MWR does the running around, trying to get supplies and support; however, in this case, it is the service members themselves who are contacting the publishers and manufacturers. This makes it a real event for the service members, by the service members."

The largest problem with running a Con in Iraq, of course, is that there are no local stores or game publishers, and few game books on the post. Even dice are in short supply, with many soldiers breaking the unwritten taboo held by many gamers and (gasp!) sharing dice. Thankfully, many game publishers have also lent their support, and have agreed to supply game products to help the Con along. aethereal FORGE, Sovereign Press, Final Redoubt Press, Goodman Games, Paizo Publishing and Steve Jackson Games are among those that have thrown in their support for the convention. But Amberson indicated that the soldiers could definitely use more.

"This convention is currently in drastic need of prizes and giveaways for the troops," he said. "Everything donated will go directly to the troops, or to MWR to use as loaner books for the soldiers."

For more information, contact SPC David Amberson at the following address: david.amberson (at) iraq.centcom.mil

Donations can also be sent to SPC Amberson directly at the following address:

SPC David Amberson
A Co 86th Sig Bn
APO, AE 09331

"We thank you all back home for supporting us, and we promise that we will try to come back home safe and sound," said Amberson.

Con organizers pictured above:

Standing: SPC Jerrel Barber, Mr. Jeff (JB) Brown, SPC Christopher Watkins, PFC Samuel Dennison, SGT Gary Decker, SPC Kathleen Hirsche
Seated: SPC David Dennison, SPC Konrad Schlarbaum, DPC David Amberson
Others not pictured: SPC Matthew Joslyn, PFC John Gilbert, Mr. Raymond Knapp, CPT Andrew Heymann, Miss Joy Brown

April 25, 2007

Good News! Research Abroad!

Today I got this e-mail:

Dear Moorea Applicant:
If you received this message, you are one of the 22 students selected
for the Fall 2007 course. Congratulations, this was a very
competitive process. We will hold an organizational meeting within
the next two weeks and I will let you know the day and time.


So... I applied to this program. We go here for a semester.

It's study abroad on steroids. More pretty photos:

You go to an island in French Polynesia. You learn stuff. You plan a research project. You carry it out. You have a full labs to your disposal. You get to know the 21 other students that are there with you. You practice French. You make a poster and present a paper back at Berkeley campus when you return. It's awesome. And somehow they decided to let me go!

Photos are taken from these websites:
http://p.vtourist.com/2062063-Moorea-Moorea.jpg
http://www.polinesia.com/foto/moorea.jpg
http://www.wayfaring.info/wp-content/uploads/2006/10/moorea.jpg

April 18, 2007

Thoughts on Racism

I never thought about racism until I came to Berkeley. I never saw it at home. Most everyone was white, and we were happy for the diversity when they weren't. Dunno. It shocked me when I came here to Berkeley and in my Organic Chemistry course there were 3 other white people: a Sweede, a Russian, and one American. When people asked me where I was from, I'd say California. I'd talk about the city that I was raised in - the place that I call home. But that wasn't enough for most people. They asked where my parents were born, where their parents were born. They couldn't get over the fact that I couldn't point to a single specific ancestor that wasn't born in the United States. They couldn't believe that I was a focused student, that I got into Berkeley or even care about school in general. Their experience had been that every white person whose parents were raised in the US was lazy, and didn't care about school. Making assumptions is bad. The university environment is where you learn to get over stereotypes.

Berkeley is full of diversity. I can't walk down the street without seeing it. I rub shoulders in each classroom with incredible representatives of culture and kindness in the people that surround me. I'm happy for it. What an enriching opportunity!

Green, Life-Giving and Forever Young

What a great article from the New York Times! I just had to post it.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/04/17/science/17angi.html?_r=1&oref=slogin

By Natalie Angier
Published April 17, 2007

Show somebody a painting of a verdant, botanically explicit forest with three elk grazing in the middle and ask what the picture is about, and the average viewer will answer, “Three elk grazing.” Add a blue jay to the scene and the response becomes, “Three elk grazing under the watchful eye of a blue jay.”
What you’re unlikely to hear is anything akin to, “It’s a classic temperate mix of maple, birch and beech trees, and here’s a spectacular basswood and, whoa, an American elm that shows no sign of fungal infestation and, oh yeah, three elk and a blue jay.”
According to Peter H. Raven, director of the Missouri Botanical Garden, many of us suffer from an insidious condition called “plant blindness.” We barely notice plants, can rarely identify them and find them incomparably inert. Do you think that you will ever see a coma as vegetative as a tree? “Animals are much more vivid to the average person than plants are,” Dr. Raven said, “and some people aren’t even sure that plants are alive.”
But the antidote to plant apathy is at hand. As an unusually cool, sodden April edges toward May and spring’s cheeky blooms can be bridled no longer, botanists urge everyone to venture outside and check out the world through nature’s rose-colored glasses — and the daffodil, cherry blossom, dogwood and lupine ones, too. If this view doesn’t move you, you’re pushing up daisies.
As it happens, plants are not only alive in their own right. They are also the basis of virtually all life on earth, including ours. The core feature of planthood is autotrophy, that is, the happy ability to make one’s own food. Plants essentially eat the sun, transforming solar energy into sugars and starch through the stepwise enzymatic stitchery of photosynthesis. Animals, by contrast, are heterotrophs, defined by their need to devour other organisms — the hard-won fruit and fiber of the suneaters, or the once-removed flesh of herbivores.
Moreover, because plants release oxygen as a byproduct of photosynthesis, plants also give us aerobes leave to breathe. Our atmosphere is currently about 20 percent oxygen, all of it the bounty of the planet’s green-skinned autotrophs. “The most important chemical reaction on earth is photosynthesis,” said Robert DeFeo, chief horticulturist for the National Park Service. “We are all parasites upon it.”
Essential though plants may be to our survival, Dr. Raven emphasizes that they are a radically different form of organism than are animals. Plants and animals have evolved along separate paths for hundreds of millions of years, ever since single cells began pooling their talents into multicelled beings. “Plants have evolved their multicellularity completely separately from animals, and any direct comparisons between the groups are wrong,” Dr. Raven said. “It’s as if plants evolved on Mars, and animals here.”
In addition to their caloric self-sufficiency, plants can be envied for their eternal youthfulness. A plant elongates itself through constant cell growth in two zones of its body, at the very tips of the roots, which grow down into soil or other surface to which the plant clings, and the outer tips of the shoots, from which new leaves, flowers and fruits sprout. Whereas an animal, upon reaching maturity, has almost no young cells left in its body, Dr. Raven said, “in plants the ends of the roots and shoots are always juvenile, always growing, always babies.”
A plant is also always drinking, slurping water and nutrients the only way it can, through its roots. Everything needs water to survive, but another radical difference between the faunal and floral crafts is that while we can drink water and keep it circulating through the body via the bloodstream, water moves through a plant’s body in a continuous stream, entering through the roots, crawling up the stem and evaporating out through little openings, or stomata, in the leaves. In fact, the upward tug of evaporation is what pulls more water up from the soil, as the clingy water droplets follow each other skyward through the hollow capillaries of the plant’s stem and leaves, shinnying as high as 300 or 400 feet above ground in the case of the giant redwoods.
No, there’s no rest for the weary, especially if you’re immobile. Beyond feeding style, perhaps the biggest discrepancy between animals and plants is that animals can move, but plants are of necessity stuck in place. Unable to defend themselves by running away, plants have instead become crackerjack chemists, evolving a vast armamentarium of insect repellents, fungicides, microbicides, ultraviolet blockers and other defensive compounds that human chemists have just begun to tally.
Rootedness also complicates a plant’s love life, which brings us back to the blooming bounty of spring. Plants, like everybody else, want to spread their seed around and diversify their genetic stock through sexual reproduction, but it’s hard to meet fresh faces when you don’t have legs. A number of plant species like pine trees, oaks, cottonwoods and grasses rely on wind to blow their pollen around, with the hope that some of the male sperm contained therein will land on receptive female parts of their far-flung kind. Or if not the same kind, at least something in the same general group: the boundaries between plant species are far more porous than they are in animals, and different species and even genera of plants cross-hybridize with each other surprisingly often.
Nevertheless, wind sex is highly iffy and inefficient, and many species of modern plants, the angiosperms, instead manipulate members of the animal kingdom to serve as yentas in a more discriminating style. The plants offer up brilliant blossoms to entice a specific pollinating insect or bird, which gets drunk on the blossom’s nectar and wants more and so seeks out other blossoms of similar shape, color or scent. And as the bee or hummingbird flits from one favored flower to the next, it incidentally delivers pollen pockets to just the right spots. “We say, isn’t that beautiful, but the precise forms and shapes of flowers are adaptations to attract individual pollinators,” Dr. Raven said. When we eat, we are parasites on the foundational labor of plants; and when we “say it with flowers,” we are plagiarists, too.

April 16, 2007

American Public Gardens

http://www.aabga.org/

Ever wonder what links all of the great public gardens across the United States? You think - surely they're related somehow. Well, now you get to learn. APGA - the American Public Gardens Association is what brings them all together.

You're sitting in Berkeley, trying to plan your trip to Santa Barbara. You've just taken a lot of plant courses, so you think it'd be fun to impress your friends and family by taking them to a garden where you can point out what's what. Well, here we go, you can find gardens anywhere you'd like to go with their search page:
http://www.aabga.org/Custom/GardenSearch.aspx

It even works if you know a garden's name but can't remember where to find it. For instance "I want to visit the Huntington Botanical Garden! I keep hearing about how great it is. But is it even in California?" Well, yes, indeed it is. In fact, it's in San Marino, CA. That search page brought you right to its address and main phone number. How handy!

Maybe you're looking for research materials. You'd like a little something from its natural habitat in Idaho. You're not sure who to contact or where to go for your specimen. Don't worry! Just turn to the advanced search and you'll find everything that you need to get started.

Such a great resource!

April 2, 2007

What's the difference between these 4 trees?


Since I've had a bit of a frustration working out the details separating these trees in my mind, I figure it'd be fun to write a blog about their differences and similarities!

Just what's the difference between Elm, Alder, Hazel, and Birch?

Continue reading "What's the difference between these 4 trees?" »

March 30, 2007

Fertilizer Goin' Wild

With fog, comes fertilizer? What a great artilce, from California Magazine's current edition.

California Magazine

Praxis
Feeding the forest
by Erik Vance
Researchers find fog brings more than just moisture—it brings fertilizer, too.


feeding the forest
Cay-Uwe Kulzer

It's morning in big basin State Park, Santa Cruz County, about an hour after sunrise. Ten miles away, on the Pacific Coast Highway, drivers alternate high beams and low beams, trying to see more than 20 feet ahead of them in the thick fog. Deep in the redwood forest, it's dark, silent and damp. One quiet hiker listens to the drip of water on leaves.

Today that hiker is Professor Todd Dawson, visiting one of his research plots in the park. Dawson is a botanist with the Integrative Biology Department and he is looking for redwood fertilizer—but as he walks through the forest he's not looking down at the ground, he's looking up.

In the plant world, nitrogen is a rare and precious commodity. The air we breathe is mostly nitrogen, but very few living things can use it. California strawberry growers spend millions to inject nitrogen into coastal soils through artificial fertilizers. Yet giant redwood forests nearby seem to grow on just the bare minimum.
Biologists say it is better to pee on a plant than on bare dirt or rock when you are in the woods. The nitrogen in the urine's ammonia will be quickly absorbed.

"'Where does that nitrogen come from?' then becomes the question," Dawson says. "In this case, we find that a significant amount of it is definitely coming through fog. And that's a new twist in the story."

Dawson and his students discovered that Pacific fog is dripping with usable nitrogen. California fog forms over cold ocean water and is blown onto land. Tiny bacteria on the surface of the ocean capture nitrogen the same way microbes do on a peanut plant, which farmers use to recharge the soil. The bacteria pull out the nitrogen, inject it into the water that becomes fog, and the trees absorb it through their leaves.

"What it means is that the ocean is feeding the forest, so to speak," he says.

A few years ago, Dawson helped show that fog is a crucial source of water to redwood forests. Now, early results show that a third of the nitrogen passing through the coastal system comes from the fog. And it's not just nitrogen. He has found other important nutrients such as potassium and phosphorus in fog as well.

The discovery has wide implications for fog ecosystems around the world, such as the cloud forests of Central America. In ultra-arid places such as Chile's Atacama Desert (where it rains perhaps once in 50 years), most of the nutrients may come from fog.

Dawson says now that he's measured the nitrogen, he wants to know how the forests will be affected when stripped of their fog by global warming.

"What happens if our land use or our climate ends up changing?" he asks. "How will that influence the water and the nitrogen inputs? And then in turn how will that affect the forest?"

Jumping Genes

Here's agreat article from the November 2006 California Magazine. I love transposons - this article brings a crazy spin on the concept.


California Magazine

Praxis
Interspecies love
by Nathanael Johnson

You get your genes from your parents — that principle is the foundation of current evolutionary theory. But what if genes could jump from organism to organism in passing, like a contagious disease? More and more evidence suggests that this sort of thing happens regularly. Most recently, a team of Berkeley scientists has shown that totally different species of plants have exchanged DNA.

When genes jump out of one organism’s genome into another’s, it’s called horizontal transfer — as opposed to vertical gene transfer from parent to child. Mostly this happens among bacteria, but the Berkeley team, led by microbiologist Damon Lisch, has shown that genes moved between millet and rice plants — millions of years after the families of those two species could no longer breed. It’s the first well-documented case of this sort of interspecies hanky-panky: specifically, the movement of outside DNA into the nucleus of a plant’s reproductive cells. How do the genes move? That question makes Lisch’s eyes light up. "We’re talking about a section of DNA here, but it acts more like a parasite," he says. "It would seem like science fiction if it [weren’t] reality."


Gene illustration
Illustration by Carin Cane

Scientists have been tracking these jumping genes — or transposable elements — since the 1950s. They already knew transposons moved around on a single genome, creating variations such as striped kernels in corn. These jumping genes also have been tracked in bacteria. But scientists didn’t realize these genes could leap from one species to another until now.

Humans share 99.4 percent of their DNA with chimpanzees, 85 percent with dogs, and 70 percent with slugs.

Transposons make copies of themselves from one section of the double helix to another, sometimes wreaking havoc on gene function. In other cases, they have conferred useful abilities—such as antibiotic resistance — to their hosts. The implications for evolutionary theory are immense. Instead of each species having to develop adaptations on its own and pass them on through offspring, they can pick up genes—and the traits that go with them—from the organisms around them. That’s how bacteria often develop resistance to multiple antibiotics: They swap their defensive tricks. These findings could revolutionize our understanding of human evolution as well: The mapping of the human genome shows that about half of our genetic code is derived from transposable elements.

March 29, 2007

Local Pizza

Last night, Tom, Evan, and I walked down to a very popular little place in town - Cheeseboard Pizza.  Live improvisational jazz music, and folks that care about the food that they make.  It's customary for folks to order their pizza, then picnic on the grass in the median.  It's on a main road, in downtown, so you can imagine it's pretty entertaining to watch the traffic as you're munching on your pizza.  I hadn't ever been to the Cheeseboard, but I've heard so much about it.  It's good pizza, and a slice is only $2.25, but I still like Pie in the Sky better.  Why?  Pie in the Sky offers bigger slices.   Cheeseboard is a cooperative, which means their workers aren't exploited, but they're not having anywhere near as much fun as the workers are down the street at Pie in the Sky.  At Pie in the Sky, they'll toss pizza in front of you, and let you watch the whole creation from start to finish, including fun conversation and even sometimes singing - unless you want it quick, in which case they have their half-baked pizzas sitting out for you to pick, then they'll throw it in their huge, impressive oven.  It'll come out within a minute or two.  Pie in the Sky also has MUCH more selection than Cheeseboard.  Since Cheeseboard only makes one type of crazy pizza every day, it's not too difficult to offer more variety - but the variety that Pie in the Sky offers is exotic, fun, and undeniably delicious. 

March 27, 2007

Charter Gala

Have you ever heard of the Charter Gala? I hadn't.

Just two weeks ago, I received this e-mail:

Hi there,

On behalf of the CNR Dean's Office, we would like to invite you to
attend the Charter Banquet as a guest of the Dean on March 24th at
Fort Mason in San Francisco. The dinner begins at 6:30 and there will
be about 20 people in the party for CNR -- donors and friends of the
College, as well as Executive Associate Dean Gilless and CNR Major
Gift Officers Alex Evans and Laura Oftedahl. We always invite a
student or two and would love to have you join us.

If you could let me know as soon as possible if you can attend I
would appreciate it.

Thank you!
Aimee

Aimee Kelley
Events & Awards Coordinator
College of Natural Resources

The first thing that popped through my mind? Rodgers & Hammerstein's Cinderella, with the lyrics: "The Prince is giving a ball! The prince is giving a ball! His royal highness Christopher Rupbert..." After that brief community theatre flashback, I went Googling for a little more information on the event. I found this site:
http://alumni.berkeley.edu/CAA_Events/Charter_Gala/2007/awards.asp

It's a huge event that the Alumni Association puts on every year to celebrate the anniversary of the school, and to honor alumni that have made a spectacular impact on the world. 900 proud alumni, sponsors of the school, and representatives from each college come together for a spectacle that includes a gourmet banquet, performances by student groups, dancing, and an open bar. The last event that I attended with folks as well-dressed as at the Gala was...well... I was going to say Prom, but that was so many years ago a girl is bound to see another spectacular event every six years or so... about 3 years ago I went to an 80th birthday party of a dear friend that took place at a castle. Anyhew...

The Charter Gala is an impressive event, and I was honored to attend. Gina Lopez came, too. A Senior in Forestry, Gina is a fun girl to hang out with. We sat at separate tables, but that's all right - mainly it seemed that we were present to help keep folks entertained. Trust me, they didn't need much help! It was such a fun event. The Cal Band came to play, slap dancers from a sorority, and an acapella group called Decadence. What a great time!

March 22, 2007

Morphology

Today my Plant Morphology lab course took a little trip up to the Botanical Garden.  We were given a scavenger hunt of sorts, where we were to find examples of specific mophological traits.  Who wouldn't love roaming around a beautiful garden with a bunch of your friends, learning something new at the end of a stressful week?



Jose Arevalo, Reihaneh Fakourfar, April Dobbs, Danielle Johnson

Today was also our midterm for Morphology.  In preparing for the exam, I realized something this week.  CNR offers something that is difficult to find around campus - a community.  Our class size for Morphology is small.  20 people.  I know all of them.  We all know one another.  We meet up for study groups, we ask one another questions.  When one of us can attend office hours, we pass along the information that we gleen to those in the study groups.  It's different in the College of Natural Resources than the other courses I've attended on campus.  It's a cooperative feel.  The competition that comes along with hundreds of high-pressure students is on the other side of the campus.  We're over here, studying microbes, forestry, genetics, and so on... studying what we love, enjoying what we learn, and making friends that walk with us through our journey.  We were in classes together last semester, we're together again this semester.  We know how to study together, and we're not afraid to help one another understand the difficult concepts.  The more we're able to teach one another, the more we're able to enjoy the subject that we're learning.  I love this program.

Here are some more photos of us having fun with morphology today.


Reihaneh


Me with a member of the Cycadales.

March 15, 2007

Greek Theatre

My buddy Melissa visited from Ventura County this summer to see a Flaming Lips show at the Greek Theatre. Before that, I didn't know that it existed. Turns out they host all sorts of great shows. Here's what it looks like:

The Greek Theatre is 104 years old. It opened September 24, 1903 and has been hosting great performances ever since. Here's a link to a little article that gives a glimpse of its history: http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/2003/09/11_greek.shtml

A great, new thing about the Greek Theatre- It's Green! My friend raved about the organic food there, but I had no idea that they went to these efforts to offset the emissions from driving to the event!

Here's an article from Breakthroughs that talks about the Greek Theatre's efforts to go green!
http://nature.berkeley.edu/breakthroughs/break_briefs.php?title=the%20greek%20goes%20green

the greek goes green

Fans of Radiohead, Emmylou Harris, the Flaming Lips and other bands that rocked UC Berkeley’s Greek Theater last summer had more than great music to celebrate: the Greek became the first major concert venue to make a season-long commitment to minimize its footprint on the planet.

The eco-efforts at the Greek—including an organic food cafe, recycling stations, the use of recycled paper for all printed materials, and the use of biodegradable utensils, plates, and cups for artists’ meals—came about through a partnership between Clif Bar, an environmentally conscious energy bar company based in Berkeley, and concert promoter Another Planet Entertainment.

In addition, Clif Bar purchased renewable energy credits from NativeEnergy, a Native American sustainable energy company, to offset the 88 tons of carbon emitted to power the Greek’s 2006 season.

Even audiences had a chance to get in on the act: by purchasing “Cool Tags” at the venue, music fans could offset the emissions they generated driving to and from the events. Every $2 tag offset 300 miles of car travel—making the concerts that much more harmonious.

March 8, 2007

Check out the Newts!!

The Newts are going crazy mating in the Botanical Garden. They're all over the lily pond in the Asian section.
Aren't they cute?

Check them out here: http://botanicalgarden.berkeley.edu/program/temp/newt.shtml

March 7, 2007

Ultimate Plant Search

Looking for photos of plants in a certain county of California? How about every plant legitimately recorded in California, searchable by family, genus, species, county, resource... etc?

Here's the ultimate search page. http://www.calflora.org/occ/ CalFlora searches an incredible array of herbaria, land surveys, Forest Service records, and other literature. Here's another search that they have with photos and distribution maps for each plant name you type in. http://www.calflora.org/

Tilden BG!

Yesterday my California Plant Life visited the Tilden Park Botanical Garden. While we waited for our group, a couple of my classmates decided to climb an Oak. I started climbing with them for little while, but then they started climbing higher and higher... and I chickened out. They're crazy!



Christopher Hobbs
took us on a tour of the garden, pointing out plants that we have covered so far in class, and pertinent uses of many natives.

Here's a great little article that talks about the magic of the garden, from Bay Nature: http://www.baynature.com/v07n01/v07n01_botanic.html

March 5, 2007

Agriculture and Policy

As a former produce buyer for the USCA (University Students Cooperative Association, made up of 17 student-run houses in Berkeley) I've seen what goes into buying all organic from local farms. When purchasing in bulk, the costs are less than traditional commercial sources - and the produce is far fresher - more flavor! I wish that we could convert entirely to organic methods, but while grocery stores continue to sell non-organic produce, and marking up the organic, we're not going to see much change. Maybe the 2007 Farm Bill will encourage smaller, local farms. Maybe it won't. The following article takes a unique perspective on the condition of the current US farming systems, by showing us how Africa is affected by current US policies.

Here's a quote from the following article: "Negotiations will soon begin on the 2007 Farm Bill, the 5-year legislation that governs US food and farm policy. Terry and others will join the efforts of Oxfam America to mobilize people and lobby key members of congress to significantly reduce the subsidies that encourage overproduction and redirect those resources to programs that will help small businesses and non-commodity organic farmers build rural infrastructure and create conservation programs that encourage farmers to better care for the environment."

Continue reading "Agriculture and Policy" »

One Great Big Plastic Hassle

Hey folks, I was reading this article in the new March edition of Common Ground. Thought plastics would be a great topic of discussion. Anyone in Toxicology able to add more insight on Endocrine Disrupting Chemicals (EDCs)? This is the first I've ever heard of them!
Here's the text of the article:

Continue reading "One Great Big Plastic Hassle" »

What's related?

Oftentimes as I'm studying plant families, I wonder what their evolutionary relationship is. The Tree of Life web project compiles the phylogenetic work from biologists around the world. Its user-friendly format makes it easy to see genetic relationships.
http://tolweb.org/tree/phylogeny.html

The Tree of Life includes phylogenies of:
Land Plants
Animals
Anthropods
Terrestrial vertebrates
Fungi
Eukaryotes

It also is an incredible resource for kids! Plenty of biology-related activities to keep your child's mind active with scientific goodness:
The Treehouse for Kids

February 26, 2007

FAFSA & Taxes

Yep, it's that time of the year again! Yay! Tax time. FAFSA is due this Friday and of course I'm sitting here trying to figure everything out at the last minute. I have a few words of advice for you folks - don't trust anyone to do your paperwork other than yourself. My fiance wanted to deal with the taxes this year, so I collected all of the paperwork in an envelope for him, then placed it on his desk for him to help me with. I told him that it needed to be done by March 1. Then - it's lovely... he let it sit there for the past 4 weeks. When I reminded him this weekend that I need to have everything done by March 1st, he of course says "Why didn't you tell me that?!" Then proceeded to call his dad and ask him how to do my taxes. Mind you, I'm not stupid. And I am 24. I have done my own taxes for a few years. I don't need him to do my taxes... but somehow I convinced myself that it was a good thing to let him worry about them. Well, folks, now I'm hoping that I get my financial aid application in on time. Don't make my mistake - take these silly things into your own hands - as I will be sure to do in the future. What a pain!

February 24, 2007

Star Trek Bloopers!

I love Star Trek.

What plants will do well?

Seems like I'm always being asked "Will this do well out here?" Well, there is an ultimate resource out there that will tell you just that. It's the USDA Plant Hardiness Zone Map. Growing up, I just assumed that everyone had one of these, and would consult it regularly when planning their garden. Well, now everyone (at least those who read this blog) will wonder no longer. Here's a site that outlines the zones:

http://www.usna.usda.gov/Hardzone/ushzmap.html

When you look up information on a plant - when buying it online or just looking in a catalog - they always mention what zone it will do well in.

February 20, 2007

A great article on epilepsy

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/20/health/20epil.html?_r=1&oref=slogin


Battling Epilepsy, and Its Stigma
By ALIYAH BARUCHIN
Published: February 20, 2007
The first thing you notice about 12-year-old Nora Leitner is the dark circles under her eyes. They stand in stark contrast to the rest of her appearance; at a glance she might be any petite, pretty tween girl, with her blond ponytail, elfin frame and thousand-watt smile. But the circles tell a different story: Nora looks as if she hasn’t slept in a month.

Continue reading "A great article on epilepsy" »

February 16, 2007

No time for art? Yeah right.

This semester isn't offering me any time for an art class, but goodness I feel like I'm taking one. All three of my plant science courses this semester require a considerable amount of detailed, quick sketching. Hopefully my drawing skills will show an improvement at the end of the semester. It's spectacular looking at flowers under a hand lens and microscope - so much beauty in unexpected places. And so many colors. It blows me away the kind of colors that show up in the most boring, little flowers.

February 11, 2007

A great article from the NY Times

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/02/11/fashion/11green.html

Sure, not every college student is planning a wedding. But I thought - what a great idea! That's one option I hadn't ever considered. It doesn't get a lot of press to have a wedding with minimal environmental impact.

Here's the article:

Continue reading "A great article from the NY Times" »

My little Garden

As the garden manager at a student coop, it's pretty frustrating work. Especially when the previous person in my position wasn't diligent. Been spending a considerable amount of time weeding and generally getting frustrated. My garden log is my only solace. It shows me that, yes, I have completed a lot, yes I have made progress - even if it's not quite as I intended. The reality is that there's considerably more work to be done than any one person can hope to accomplish in 5 hours a week.

Here's a few images from our frightful little garden. Hopefully the photos that I post at the end of the semester will be more encouraging.

Walk down into the garden

Look to the side, you'll see this climbing rose

Turn the corner, here's what you see

Look around, you'll see a little more

Budding daffodil in the front yard

February 10, 2007

A bit about North Side

I live in Ridge House, and love it. It's one of the student cooperatives through the USCA. We're a block away from the UC's North Gate, and about two minutes away from all of my classes. So, North Side is a great place to live if you're studying in CNR because you're the closest you could possibly get to these buildings: Koshland, Genetics & Plant Biology Teaching, Valley Life Science Building, Giannini, Tollman, Mulford, among others. You're also very close to the Doe and Moffit libraries. The North side of campus is quieter than the South, East, or West sides of campus. It's lined with old houses that have been converted into apartments, newer apartment buildings, and several cooperatives. Such a landscape emotes a different vibe than the run-down and bum-ridden South Side, or the frat & sorority- plagued East side.

Here's the sign from a fun niche bookstore that's on Euclid.

And some fun teacups outside Nefeli Cafe

There's more great stuff on this side of campus. Try continuing down the street as you walk through the UC's North Gate. You'll find inexpensive beer and pizza at La Val's, delicious sandwiches at Stuffed Inn, unique teacups and crisp croissants at Nefeli, fresh smoked Gouda at 7 Palms, squeezed juice and coffee at Brewed Awakening. Sure, North Side doesn't have Strada or Jupiter, but it's still a fun place to live, or just hang out.

February 9, 2007

Trash Your Trashcan

Great article in January 2007's edition of "Common Ground" - a holistic living magazine for the Bay Area. Check it out at http://commongroundmag.com/

7 Simple Steps to Trashing your Trashcan

Let's face it - we know better than to dispose when we should be Reusing, Reducing and Recycling. But we're busy, forgetful and, well, does it really make that big of a difference? You know the answer. So clip out these friendly reminders on how to bring your personal waste closer to zero. Just think: you'll never have to take out the trash again!

Continue reading "Trash Your Trashcan" »

Hunting

Today I went hunting for everything in the garden with the genus: Tillandsia. Someone is doing research on the group, and they'd like as many samples as they can get. So Holly sent me through various specific greenhouses to find Tillandsia. What is Tillandsia?

There's a lot of variation. Here's a photo that came out ok:

Other species in the genus include the ever-so-popular "Spanish Moss." And other pretty tropical plants that loosely resemble the foliage of pineapples.

It was fun.
The greenhouse that I was searching in was overgrown, crazily unkempt, filled with crazy orchids and tropical cactaceae. Go figure.

An adventure.

Then I made a bunch of labels for other stuff.

February 8, 2007

Ceanothus in bloom!

Today my California Plant Life took a field trip to the UC Botanical Garden. I'm pretty familiar with the place, as you folks already know. Here's proof:

It's a bad image, but it's my name tag from the UC Botanical Garden. Last semester I was there 7-9 hours/week working on signage, collecting flowering (phenology) data, and updating their endangered species list. This semester it's only 6 hours/week, but I still have a lot of fun over there with Holly and Barbara in curation.

So, today we went with my California Plant Life course. Our trusty GSI Christopher took us on a journey through some significant natives and their habitats.
Here's a photo of Christopher showing students the attributes of a plant.

My notes from the journey!
Ceanothus. Beautiful blue or white flowers, found along stream-beds or mountainsides. One of the more showy California tree shrubs. Its flowers are soapy when crushed and mixed with water. It lives 10-20 years, then dies.

More to come... right now I need to run to class!

February 5, 2007

First week of February

It's already February! Housemates are preparing for their first Physics and Math midterms. I'm preparing for quizzes on California native plant identification and systematics of vascular plants. I'm glad I'm studying what I love.

Great memories walking into the co-op this afternoon after class. The fire alarm went off. Someone from central maintenance was fiddling with a defunct heater, trying to get it to work when he created some smoke and triggered a fire detector. Everyone ended up outside sitting on the porch, chatting while the maintenance guy made it so the fire department wasn't alterted. After a while, they gave us clearance to re-enter our home. Craziness.

January 26, 2007

What is SPUR?

Sponsored Programs for Undergraduate Research.
It's a program that allows you to come up with your own resarch project, with the help of a faculty mentor - and it gives your lab money to work on your research. Where does the money come from? Donations from Alumni in the College of Natural Resources!

What a great use of resources!

When you're studying the sciences at a credible institution you're expected to have a bit of research experience under your belt before entering the working world....

Continue reading "What is SPUR?" »

Why I love CNR

They took me in. I was rejected from UC Santa Cruz, UC Riverside, UCLA and UC Davis. Not too often that you meet someone at Berkeley that was flat-out rejected from the lower-ranked UC schools. The only school that even considered my application was Riverside; other than Berkeley, that is.
Why did they reject me?

Continue reading "Why I love CNR" »

January 22, 2007

Cymbidium

This entry is for a couple of my housemates. They seemed a little lost around a newly-aquired cymbidium, so it seemed like a good time to give everyone a few pointers on tending to California's easiest-to-tend orchid.

Continue reading "Cymbidium" »

January 21, 2007

Life in the New Semester

First week of class is over. An incredible semester before me. After the headaches of last semester's challenging coursework, I'm ready for a new start. I'm excited about my instructors: Bruce Baldwin teaches Systematics of Vascular Plants, Chelsea Specht for Plant Morphology, and Dean Kelch for California Plant Life.
Monday I'll start in Chelsea Specht's Research Lab.
Good stuff.

December 17, 2006

Oh, there's no place like home for the holidays!

Drove up to the house. Christmas decorations up and ready to go. Gave Mom a big hug - I came 2 days earlier than I said I would. I wanted to surprise her. She was happy to see me. Called my aunt and my sister to say hi the minute I came to town.

Continue reading "Oh, there's no place like home for the holidays!" »

December 11, 2006

White and Nerdy

Remember Weird Al?
Well, he's done it again.

Continue reading "White and Nerdy" »

December 9, 2006

A Day in Tina's Busy Life

Continue reading "A Day in Tina's Busy Life" »

December 7, 2006

Garden Goodness!

I've landed the position of Garden Manager for the Ridge House coop next semester! I'm looking forward to tidying up our overgrown backyard, bringing a bit of nourishment to the soil and planting a substantial vegetable and herb garden.

Continue reading "Garden Goodness!" »

November 25, 2006

Artichoke!

We have had artichokes growing in my backyard since I can remember. My parents never tried to cook them. But in May, I finally bit the bullet and put those delicious artichoke buds in a pressure cooker. The result was a more poignant artichoke than one you can find at the market. All sorts of delicious. I couldn't believe it: all of this untapped potential hanging out in my backyard year after year. Unfortunately the fruit is small enough that it's a lot of effort to peel and eat, for only a little reward of potent, incredibly delicious artichoke-yums.

Continue reading "Artichoke!" »

November 21, 2006

Dinner = Yum!

Made dinner for the coop tonight. I had an hour and a half to throw together a meal for 10 people. Not as many at home as usual since most everyone is going to see their families for Thanksgiving. I just threw stuff together and it actually worked:

Zesty Zuc:

1/8 - cup olive oil
3 - 8" x 1.5" Zucchinis
1 - lemon, juiced over Zucchini, sliced and cooked in the mix
1/2 - bundle green onions
2 - colorful bell peppers
1/2 - white onion

Mix in frying pan until flavors blend and Zucchini melts in your mouth. Serve as a side dish.


Elegant Eggplant Pasta Sauce:

1 - Globe Eggplant, diced
1/2 - bundle green onions
1/2 - white onion
1 - shallot
1 - small red onion
1 - colorful bell pepper
1 - industrial-size can of tomato paste (1 gallon? Maybe more.)
1 - cup water
7 - sprigs of fresh thyme & sage
1 - cup parmesan cheese, preferably in 1/4" chunks

Serve over whole wheat rotini pasta.

Delicious warm bread from a bakery on the side, and orange juice to drink made for a successful treat! Everyone was happy to have an unexpected, warm meal. Since it's Thanksgiving week, we have no official schedule for chores and meals. It worked out great, and I had fun cooking. Felt like I was racing against time, and working with only what I could find in the 'fridge. Craziness!

November 18, 2006

Fun!

Last night was Music & Story night here at our coop. Many people from the house were there and enjoyed the evening, sitting on couch cushions on the floor and listening to one another perform, then salsa dancing late into the night.

I swallowed hard and performed a little ditty a capella: "Life for Rent" by Dido. Then a soprano in the house and I sang a traditional hymn that I hadn't heard before, but I made up harmony on the spot and we decided that we'd like to sing together more often.

I've been practicing singing often lately, just informal singing for fun while walking to class and the like. It makes me happy to perform for a group. The folks were riveted, people came in to listen from another room, and people came up to me afterward to tell me that they had no idea I could sing like that. It made me so glad, and gives me motivation to grab opportunities to sing in public more often.

November 15, 2006

People's Park

I participated in Berkeley Project Day this past weekend. It was a lot of fun! Our project was to re-establish the Peace Garden at People's Park by turning the weedy soil and planting some hearty flowers. We also did a considerable amount of weeding, raking, and general cleanup around the park. I had a lot of fun meeting service-minded people and watching the progress of our projects. We stopped when we ran out of dumpster space.


Continue reading "People's Park" »

November 10, 2006

An Unexpected Delight!

I ran into a great band playing by Sather Gate yesterday at lunch. It consisted of 2 men: 1 guy singing & playing the guitar, the other accompanying him on the violin. It sounded great! Turns out they're playing at a Battle of the Bands on Sunday. I hope that folks can go and support this talented group!

What: SHAY + 6 bands battle it out for crowd support. And lots of money.
Where: Oakland Metro (Opera House), 201 Broadway Ave, Oakland, CA.
When: Sunday, Nov 12 @6pm
How Much: $8 presale, $10 door (but please get presale from us as it affects their line-up placement!)

tix: Contact Shay at shaysayar@gmail.com or 510-649-0314

November 9, 2006

Ladybug

studying in a quiet courtyard.
a ladybug in flight
landed.
a contrast; my black backpack
watched its uneaven steps
enjoying the sunlight
warming wind-induced goosepimply skin.

October 28, 2006

Visiting the Farmer's Market and a Native Plant Fair!

Results of an Asian Pear Varietal Testing at the Berkeley Farmer's Market:

Hosui - my favorite. Complex flavor, not too sweet.
20th Century - green/yellow fruit. This is the one we have growing in our garden at home.
Olympic - crisp, super sweet, but good
Shinko - tastes like crisp water, faint flavor.
Nitaka - strong "blow out your pallette" flavor. Delicious, but too intense of a flavor for me to eat regularly.
Conjuro - wasn't able to try, but sold here.
Shinseiki - wasn't able to try, but sold here.

Continue reading "Visiting the Farmer's Market and a Native Plant Fair!" »

October 9, 2006

Solar Cooking

Remember making solar ovens when you were a kid? Ok, maybe I was the only kid with a girl scout troop crazy enough to cook this way...

Continue reading "Solar Cooking" »

October 7, 2006

Cleaning

Today I scrubbed grease off the stainless steel wall beside the oven in the kitchen. It's an industrial kitchen. As I was cleaning, I thought about how I really do enjoy the cooperative living arrangement, and community living in general.

Continue reading "Cleaning" »

September 25, 2006

Super Geek

http://www.innergeek.us/geek-test.html

Continue reading "Super Geek" »

September 24, 2006

First Paper

Tomorrow I will turn in my first paper at UC Berkeley. It's only 4 pages, 7 references. This is the kind of paper that I wouldn't have batted my eye at three years ago at my old school, but since it's my FIRST paper due at BERKELEY, it somehow turned into an anxiety-ridden event.

Continue reading "First Paper" »

September 11, 2006

Art Project

I'm taking Art 14 this semester, which is an intro to scuplture course. This weekend's assignment was to come up with directions for a sky-writer. After a great deal of conversation with a pilot friend, here are some directions for a sky-written heart directly above the Campanile.

Continue reading "Art Project" »

September 1, 2006

Yuca Root

Nope, it's not Yucca!

Nope, not at all. I just want to make this very clear, because if you try looking for Yucca root when you want Yuca root, you'll be terribly disappointed.

This is the plant you're looking for:

Yuca root is what they make tapioca out of! Have you seen Boba Tapioca pearls? Those are made from Yuca Root, too. Other great uses include anything you could use potatoes for, like Yuca Root gnocchi. Also, its flour can be used to make a wheat-alternative bread.

Continue reading "Yuca Root" »

August 26, 2006

Starfruit/Carambola

Starfruit! Here we have an incredibly delicious fruit that I hear about, but, sadly, have never eaten. Today I decided to look into the fruit, so in case I run into some at the Berkeley bowl, I can figure out if it's ripe or not, and have a general idea of what it tastes like.

Here is a good image that shows the overall look of the fruit:

Here is a fun, artsy photo of Starfruit:

Continue reading "Starfruit/Carambola" »

August 25, 2006

Store Wars

Who would expect Organic Foods to join forces with Star Wars?

Http://www.storewars.org/flash/index.html

August 22, 2006

Lemon Verbena

Do you love citrus and flowery springtime all at once? Lemon Verbena is what you're looking for. It is common in perfumes, soaps, lotions, and you can even make it into some great desserts!

Here's what the blossoms look like:

You can spot it as anything from a 2-3ft ornamental shrub to a tree that is 2 meters tall. 200 years ago, it was one of the most common European ornamentals. But on this side of the world, it requires more trimming than most people want to do - in order to keep it a manageable size.

Continue reading "Lemon Verbena" »

Powered by Movable Type 3.38