Tuesday, November 8th, 2011 by Elin, Communications CoordinatorcloseAuthor: Elin, Communications CoordinatorName: Elin Ljung Title: Communications Coordinator About: Elin's job consists of some of her favorite things: finding typos, experimenting with layouts, and figuring out how best to communicate the Committee's work to the world. She also oversees the Field Seminar program. Elin is an EMT on the Lee Vining Fire Department, loves sitting at Latte Da Coffee Cafe immersed in a good book, and watches English Premier League football (soccer) at any opportunity.See All Posts by Elin (133) Contact Elin
In a recent email from National Geographic I noticed a photo of a familiar place in a gallery called “Habitats–Freshwater Photos.”
Thursday, October 20th, 2011 by Arya, Communications DirectorcloseAuthor: Arya, Communications DirectorName: Arya Degenhardt Title: Communications Director About: Arya oversees the Committee's communications program, which includes the Mono Lake Newsletter. She loves her job because she gets to share the inspiring work of the Mono Lake Committee with members and visitors alike. When she's not in the office you might find her running with her dogs Dublin and Poco, volunteering with the Lee Vining Fire Department, listening to any music with a banjo in it, or willing the plants in her garden to grow. Her favorite things to do in the Mono Basin include ice skating on nearby lakes, skiing the Mono Craters, and getting to smell the sagebrush when it rains.See All Posts by Arya (91) Contact Arya
Great news for fans of Andrea Lawrence and those tracking the renaming of peak 12,240! Barbara Boxer introduced the bill last May and it was passed unanimously in the Senate this week. The next step is the House, where Republican Representative Buck McKeon of Santa Clarita has already sponsored the bill.
The peak itself is in Mono County, 0.6 miles northeast of Donahue Peak on the northern border of the Ansel Adams Wilderness and Yosemite National Park.
Sunday, October 9th, 2011 by Elin, Communications CoordinatorcloseAuthor: Elin, Communications CoordinatorName: Elin Ljung Title: Communications Coordinator About: Elin's job consists of some of her favorite things: finding typos, experimenting with layouts, and figuring out how best to communicate the Committee's work to the world. She also oversees the Field Seminar program. Elin is an EMT on the Lee Vining Fire Department, loves sitting at Latte Da Coffee Cafe immersed in a good book, and watches English Premier League football (soccer) at any opportunity.See All Posts by Elin (133) Contact Elin
If you had to describe the value of California’s State Parks in only one word, what would that be? What word would you use to describe the value of the Mono Lake Tufa State Natural Reserve?
See a few answers here in Folk4Parks.org’s latest video. Former ranger Janet Carle and current ranger Dave Marquart share their words. The Mono Lake Committee’s Morgan Lindsay and Geoff McQuilkin each have a word. What’s your one word?
Thursday, October 6th, 2011 by Bartshé, Education DirectorcloseAuthor: Bartshé, Education DirectorName: Bartshé Miller Title: Education Director About: Bartshé directs the Committee's Outdoor Experiences Program, Canoe Program, and Interpretive Programs, and manages the Mono Basin Field Station. He has been an Eastern Sierra resident since 1993.See All Posts by Bartshé (30) Contact Bartshé
Trumbull Lake Campground Road, October 5, 2011.
Along the Virginia Canyon Road. Photos by Bartshe Miller.
This year is providing one of the latest fall color displays in memory. The timing is not surprising considering that last winter did not end until June and many aspens did not leaf out completely until then. On October 5 an early-season snowstorm blanketed the high country with snow. A quick scout up Virginia and Lundy canyons revealed minimal colors. Conway Summit aspens were displaying (more…)
Sunday, October 2nd, 2011 by Arya, Communications DirectorcloseAuthor: Arya, Communications DirectorName: Arya Degenhardt Title: Communications Director About: Arya oversees the Committee's communications program, which includes the Mono Lake Newsletter. She loves her job because she gets to share the inspiring work of the Mono Lake Committee with members and visitors alike. When she's not in the office you might find her running with her dogs Dublin and Poco, volunteering with the Lee Vining Fire Department, listening to any music with a banjo in it, or willing the plants in her garden to grow. Her favorite things to do in the Mono Basin include ice skating on nearby lakes, skiing the Mono Craters, and getting to smell the sagebrush when it rains.See All Posts by Arya (91) Contact Arya
Fall color along the Highway 395 corridor is starting to make itself known with yellow and orange ribbons of aspens gracing the Eastside’s steep riparian corridors from Bishop to the Mono Basin and beyond.
Fall color at high elevations in the Mono Basin. Photo by Arya Degenhardt.
Aspen groves at higher elevations are definitely changing—such as the east-facing flanks above Lundy Canyon and below Conway Summit.
I’ve also heard reports that the colors are beautiful in the Sagehen Summit area out Highway 120 East as well as early color around the Lee Vining diversion dam up Highway 120 West.
Who knows what the incoming stormy weather will do to the progression of color, but I highly recommend getting out there as soon as possible.
Friday, August 26th, 2011 by Oliver, Birding InterncloseAuthor: Oliver, Birding InternName: Oliver James Title: Birding Intern About: Oliver has been chasing birds since he was five. He first came to the Mono Basin for the fifth annual Mono Basin Bird Chautauqua in 2006. This year he returned to take the Committee’s Birding Intern position and was a field trip leader for the tenth annual Chautauqua. In 2008 Oliver worked on Dr. David Winkler's "Golondrinas de las Americas" project studying Tachycineta swallows in Lee Vining Canyon and he has twice voyaged to Krakatoa Islet on Mono Lake to assist in PRBO Conservation Science's California Gull monitoring project. Born and raised in Berkeley, Oliver just finished his first year at Wesleyan University.See All Posts by Oliver (3) Contact Oliver
Summer is truly winding down for many feathered friends here in the Mono Basin.
Red-necked Phalarope. Photo courtesy of Stiver Photos.
The songbird symphony that follows any hiker around the basin from April through mid-August is now merely a murmur. Many of the colorful summer vacationers to the Eastern Sierra (e.g. buntings, orioles, grosbeaks) are still present in the basin, but (more…)
Sunday, August 21st, 2011 by Mila, Mono Lake InterncloseAuthor: Mila, Mono Lake InternName: Mila Re Title: Mono Lake Intern About: Mila is incredibly excited to intern for the Mono Lake Committee and couldn't be happier to spend the summer in the beautiful Eastern Sierra! When she's not working, Mila enjoys hiking, climbing mountains, cooking delicious food, trail running, gardening, artichokes, and llamas.See All Posts by Mila (2) Contact Mila
By this time in the summer many thanks are due to all the amazing people who have volunteered their time pulling invasive plants and watering trees at Restoration Wednesdays for the past two months. We at the Mono Lake Committee want to say a special thanks to a dedicated group of volunteers, Ken & Gayle Midas as well as Donna & Jerry Farris, who have donated their time every Wednesday for the past month and a half to aid in restoration efforts. They have enthusiastically pulled enormous (more…)
Sunday, August 7th, 2011 by Sarah, Mono Lake InterncloseAuthor: Sarah, Mono Lake InternName: Sarah Melcher Title: Mono Lake Intern About: After a five-month hiatus in Spain, where she made it her goal to try the chocolate gelato in every city she visited, Sarah is back for round two as an intern to help with policy projects and stream monitoring. During the school year she attends St. Olaf College in Minnesota, where she studies sociology, anthropology, and Spanish, and regularly daydreams about the Eastern Sierra.See All Posts by Sarah (6) Contact Sarah
Join us for the second speaker in our lecture series, “Refreshments with Refreshing ‘ologists.” On Wednesday, August 10 we will host geomorphologist Scott Stine, a longtime member of the Mono Basin Science Council. Scott’s work has included researching many different topics ranging from lake level fluctuations to dating ages of tufa towers, and his talk will be focused on the volcanic history of Mono Lake’s islands. The talk will begin at 4:00pm in the Mono Lake Committee’s Theater & Gallery. Refreshments will be served. Contact Sarah at (760) 647-6595 for more information!
Thursday, July 28th, 2011 by Oliver, Birding InterncloseAuthor: Oliver, Birding InternName: Oliver James Title: Birding Intern About: Oliver has been chasing birds since he was five. He first came to the Mono Basin for the fifth annual Mono Basin Bird Chautauqua in 2006. This year he returned to take the Committee’s Birding Intern position and was a field trip leader for the tenth annual Chautauqua. In 2008 Oliver worked on Dr. David Winkler's "Golondrinas de las Americas" project studying Tachycineta swallows in Lee Vining Canyon and he has twice voyaged to Krakatoa Islet on Mono Lake to assist in PRBO Conservation Science's California Gull monitoring project. Born and raised in Berkeley, Oliver just finished his first year at Wesleyan University.See All Posts by Oliver (3) Contact Oliver
If you had chosen to visit the small town of Lee Vining at 2:30 in the morning on July 12th, you would have found a peculiar sight in the Mono Lake Committee’s Field Station alley: four intrepid souls huddled together under the three-quarter moon armed to the teeth with binoculars. A very peculiar ritual was about to begin wherein four birders attempt to identify as many different species of birds as they can within a defined geographic area in a full 24-hour period. Every second counts and there are no stops for lunch.
Oliver James, Chris McCreedy, and Justin Hite scan the skies.
The birders were none other than Justin Hite (Mono Basin naturalist), Oliver James (Committee Birding Intern), Nora Livingston (PRBO Conservation Science Field Technician), and Chris McCreedy (PRBO Conservation Science biologist). The playing field was Mono County. The existing record was (more…)
Tuesday, April 5th, 2011 by Bartshé, Education DirectorcloseAuthor: Bartshé, Education DirectorName: Bartshé Miller Title: Education Director About: Bartshé directs the Committee's Outdoor Experiences Program, Canoe Program, and Interpretive Programs, and manages the Mono Basin Field Station. He has been an Eastern Sierra resident since 1993.See All Posts by Bartshé (30) Contact Bartshé
American White Pelicans over Mono Lake. Photo by Tom Piekunka.
In March and April the brine shrimp are too small and alkali flies are scarce. Mono Lake does not get a lot of attention from birds on their spring migration, especially piscivores. But the birds do pass by as they wing north along the Pacific Flyway. Recently a large flock of American White Pelicans transited the Mono Basin. It’s a rare and spectacular sight to see these massive birds soaring overhead. Tom Piekunka snapped this beautiful image of American White Pelicans circling over the eastern portion of Mono Lake. With a steady hand and 400mm lens Tom was able to capture the nuptial tubercles located on the upper bills, a feature that adult pelicans grow each year as the breeding season approaches.