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Get Intimate with the shrub steppe
 
12th Annual
G
et Intimate with the Shrub-Steppe


Saturday May 7, 2011

9:00 am to 2:00 pm
(7:30 am birding field trip)

Helen McCabe Park 
(main venue, exhibitors, some field trips, and all lectures)

Umtanum Recreation Area
(field trips, River Bugs and Fish booth)


 
What's new this year?

Face painting by Allison
Food by Hot Diggity Dog

Shuttle service from Downtown Ellensburg to Helen McCabe (corner of Ruby St. and 4th St.)


 
2011 Field Trip and Lecture Schedule

2011 Field Trip and Lecture Schedule 
bus times included

 
2011 Exhibitors

Kittitas County Field & Stream
Wellspring Gardens
Cascade Land Conservancy
Puget Sound Energy
Kittitas Environmental Educational Network
GreenDrinks
Kittitas County Water Purveyors
Bug Booth
Environmental Resource Management Association (ERMA)
Kittitas County Solid Waste
Girl Scout Troop 1014
Yakima River Canyon Scenic Byway Initiative
AquaSoft Astronomy Club
Yakima Arboretum
CWU Science
Washington Water Trust

 
We need VOLUNTEERS!
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP

 
Image: 
Thanks to our Sponsors!

Special Thanks to our Ponderosa Pine Event Sponsor - The Copy Shop - 12 Years in a Row!

Maps to Event Venues

Map to Helen McCabe State Park
 
Map of Helen McCabe State Park
 
 
2010 Field Trip Leader and Lecturer Biographies

Rod Pfeifle is a forester with the Washington State Department of Natural Resources (DNR) in Ellensburg, Washington. He is responsible for sustainable management of state timber trust lands in the Yakima and Ellensburg area for the citizens of Washington State. Rod graduated from Washington State University in 1984 with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Forest Management. After working seasonally for the US Forest Service, Rod worked as a consultant in the Colville area for 16 years before starting his career with DNR in 2003. Rod is an also an avid outdoorsman, enjoying hunting, fishing, hiking and camping in his spare time.


Tom Cottrell is a plant ecologist at CWU, with M.S. and Ph.D. degrees from Colorado State University.  He teaches Plant Biology, Terrestrial Plant Ecology, and Plant Taxonomy, among other courses, at CWU.  His research focuses on the effects of fire on plant communities, and cottonwood growth in riparian forests.  He has a genuine love for the native plants of the shrub steppe, and for being in the field.



Dan Beck lives in Ellenburg, where he studies snakes and teaches biology at CWU.  He has participated in GISS since its inception in 2000.

Deb Essman: I am an avid amateur ornithologist/birder. I never say I’m an expert unless I am lecturing at least 200 miles from home. I rehabilitated birds of prey in California (’72-‘80) and at the Woodland Park Zoo (‘80-‘81). I was a Wildlife Officer (ie. Game Warden) for the Wa State Dept of Fish and Wildlife (‘83-‘90).  I have lived in the Kittitas Valley for 20 years (’89-present).  I am a Cascade Land Conservancy trustee, secretary of the Kittitas County Field and Stream Club (the 2nd oldest sports club in Washington—90 years old this year), and a KEEN board member (not as active as I’d like).   I also occasionally help lead Kittitas County Audubon field trips.  I have been attending the Ellensburg School District’s 5th grade camp for almost 20 years teaching about wildlife and especially birds of prey. Oh, and I am manager of Sterling Savings Bank in Ellensburg.





Karl Lillquist is a physical geographer at CWU.  His upbringing in Coulee City, WA probably played a big part in his love of physical geography field study. "I grew up amidst the Channeled Scablands of eastern Washington. My parent's house was situated on a late Pleistocene flood scoured basalt surface, and I grew up recreating in this unique landscape."  He teaches physical geography, geomorphology, soils, airphoto analysis, mountain environments, and arid lands. Karl's recent research has focused on geomorphic and stratigraphic evidence for environmental change in the western U.S. including mass wasting, glaciers, and arroyos. Both Karl and his spouse Nancy are Geography alumni, and they have two boys–Erik and Jensen. In his spare time, Karl enjoys most human-powered outdoor activities (including rock rolling), wrestling with his boys, making compost for Nancy's garden, and yard saling.

Richard Ambrose: I have a bachelor's degree biology. I worked 28 plus years for three different park systems. 26 years for Washington State Parks. I taught Native plants for 13 quarters and ethnobotany for 1 quarter at Skagit Valley Community College. I have conducted numerous guided walks and hikes. I have studied native plants for over 30 years. I enjoy hiking, backpacking, snowshoeing, canoeing and fishing. I have written a hiking article for the local newspaper once a month for the past nine years. My wife and I have worked as volunteer rangers and caretakers for the forest service in Hell's Canyon for 8 seasons and BLM in S.E. Utah for 6 seasons. 
PRESS

Document
Inside the Outdoors GISS Column May 2009
Document
Daily Record Opinion - GISS 2009
Document
Take a Hike Column Part 1 - May 2009
Document
Take a Hike Column Part 2 - GISS
Kittitas Environmental Education Network
Contact us at kittitasee@gmail.com 2009
 

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