We're going to post weekly CalNat program highlights here! Ready Set Go...

May 5, 2016

We're going to post weekly CalNat program highlights here! Ready Set Go...

May 5, 2016

Hello to those that follow us out there in the blogosphere! We're going to post regular weekly or biweekly CalNat program and partner/Naturalist highlights here. Let us know in the comments or at canaturalist@ucanr.edu if you have suggestions or updates/pics to share about your course, capstone project, partner organization etc! A lot of the content will look familiar if you're already following us on Facebook or Twitter, but we realize no one communication type fits all and some folks miss those updates. To see new posts you can log into the volunteer portal, or look at the bottom right of the page here to find the buttons to subscribe for e-mail updates or add to your RSS feed. Following is a summary of the last few weeks. Enjoy! 


 

20160421 202325 clear

Join us in congratulating our second graduating class of University of California, Merced Vernal Pools Reserve California Naturalists! This spring the vernal pools received more rain than they have in 5 years, creating a breathtaking outdoor classroom that was teeming with life. Capstone projects included developing naturalist and citizen science curriculum for Merced public schools, creating several local interpretive trail guides, implementing a bullfrog eradication project, and participating in citizen science projects including raptor surveys with Audubon California, the Lost Ladybug Project, and water quality monitoring.


 

13123246 1138501136189713 5391492972284583790 o
Congrats to our recently certified California Naturalists from the Dominguez Rancho Adobe Museum course! The past weekend saw these grads sporting their CalNat pride in front of the Museum's historic oil well. After weeks of studying the culture and ecology of California's past and exploring the unique urban open spaces of the present-day South Bay region of Los Angeles County, these Naturalists are now poised to take action and shape our state's future. Capstone projects ranged from school programs to butterfly surveys to plans for continuing education and distance learning opportunities. We welcome these talented and passionate Naturalists to our statewide community!

 

 

 


 

instructors

 

CalNat has a lot of teachers to appreciate on National Teacher Appreciation Week! From our 35+ course instructors (pic from the inaugural 2014 CalNat conference) and guest experts, to all the dedicated classroom teachers and interpreters that attend and enrich our classes, we salute you and your important work! Don't forget to?#‎ThankATeacher? this week!

 

 


 

CalNat was well represented at the California Association for Environmental & Outdoor Education - AEOE 2016 Statewide Conference this past weekend in Malibu! CalNat Instructor Chris Cameron from Camp Ocean Pines, and CalNat staff, Shayna, teamed up on a joint presentation, and we ran into a few Certified California Naturalists also enjoying the conference. Outdoor educators and CalNat certification--what a perfect match! Hope to see CAEOE at our CalNat Conference ?#‎CalNat2016?!


 

google360
 
We're fiddling with new technology to more widely share the wonders of natural history in CalNat classes, conferences, and beyond. This week we had the privilege of participating in InterpTech 2016, organized by California State Parks and the National Association for Interpretation at the Mott Training Center in Pacific Grove. Click on the link to see a dizzying Google 360 photo of Point Lobos State Natural Reserve! We promise to practice a bit more in the future! http://bit.ly/1SNXsjs
 
 
 

Hot off the press! A new Bioscience article by Cameron Barrows UCR College of Natural and Agricultural Sciences (CNAS) and UC colleagues titled "At a Crossroads: The Nature of Natural History in the Twenty-First Century" supports what you naturalists likely already suspect: the value and relevance of natural history to twenty-first-century ecological science is real. Come see Cameron Barrows speak at the upcoming ?#‎CalNat?2016 conference! All the early career scientists they surveyed agreed that natural history "is relevant to science and “essential” or “desirable” in their vocation." The authors also point out that the opportunities for gaining natural history skills and knowledge through education and training are hard to come by in academia today. It is time for a natural history revival and its great to see CA Naturalists leading the way!  Full article can be viewed at https://bioscience.oxfordjournals.org/…/biosci.biw043.abstr…

 

Have you checked out the program lately? We have added some amazing speakers! ?#‎CalNat2016? http://calnat.ucanr.edu/2016conference/2016program/


By Brook Gamble
Author - Community Education Specialist 3 (NorCal)