asenvs3000
asenvs3000
Natural Weird
14 posts
Wildlife Biology & Conservation Major. Proof that 600 million years of evolution doesn't create intelligence, it creates weirdness
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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“With great power...
...Comes great responsibility”
-The Peter Parker Principle
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In some ways, the job of an interpreter is actually a very powerful role. Our job is to translate the natural, historic, cultural, scientific, artistic, political components of the world around us and communicate it with a wide range of audiences (Beck et al., 2018). But just like educators or language translators, the way we teach and the words we use can influence the way our audience perceive and act in their worlds. In our positions, we are given the influential power of being a professional in our field, an expert, or at very least a knowledge-holder, and this means that we have a certain degree of power over what our audience believes. Especially when speaking with a younger audience, this means it is paramount that we are aware of (1) the truth and (2) the nuances of our interpretation. While people love facts that tell an interesting story, especially ones that seem too crazy or amazing to be true, it is important that we not embellish for the sake of good storytelling or say things that can be misconstrued. It is also important to recognize word choice when speaking about other cultures. As a white Canadian, I need to be very aware of how I interpret aspects of Indigenous or POC culture and their connection with nature because of my personal biases growing up in western colonized society. As interpreters, I believe it is crucial for us to evaluate our biases, our privilege, our morals and ethics, and our values and beliefs, so we can justify our interpretations and be understanding of others.
As a white, fully-abled, cis-het women, who has a Christian background, was raised in a two parent income household I recognize I am afforded a lot of privileges and have many implicit biases. I try to be aware of these so as not to let my biases and privilege influence how I interpret on behalf of groups I am not apart of. I do this by educating myself on others perspectives and trying to be inclusive of multiple interpretations of the world and nature (not always perfectly, but I try). I recognize that voices and stories of minorities; indigenous, POC, disabled, members of the LGBT+ community, have been silenced or ignored and I believe it is our ethical duty to give room for the interpretations of these groups, particularly indigenous as their cultural history has been so closely connected to nature.
As part of our reading, we talk about environmental education, which can be rather depressing due to the state of our current climate and peoples response to this. When I grew up and learned about science, I felt like everything I heard was just all the bad news; that we are destroying our planet and its probably too late to fix it. This is not a helpful mindset and we need to stop this cycle. As the upcoming generation of interpreters, it is our duty to give our young audience hope. By helping ignite excitement, love, and curiosity about the natural world in the younger generation, we start the foundation for building the future protection and care for the enviroment (Rodenburg, 2019).
References Beck, L., Cable, T., & Knudson, D. (2018). Interpreting cultural and natural heritage for a better world. Sagamore-Venture Publishing Rodenburg, J. (2019). Why Environmental Educators Shouldn’t Give Up Hope. Retrieved on March 28, 2021, from https://clearingmagazine.org/archives/14300
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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An animal so cool, its killer
The ocean is a pretty terrifying place considering we have only explored about 5% of it yet it makes up 70% of our planet. Who knows what mysterious creatures lurch in the dark corners of the deep, especially since the creatures we’ve already discovered are horrifying. So frightening and vicious, our name for them literally includes the word killer. Beasts the size of a two story home, that can weigh more than 10 thousands pounds, can swim up to 45km per hour, and hunt in packs (Rogers 2019). Monsters that make even the Great White Sharks swim for their lives. That’s right, it’s killer whales.
Killer whales are excellent hunters, check out this clip of a pod working together to hunt a seal!
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Killer whales, also called orcas, are actually majestic, incredibly intelligent, and highly compassionate animals. In fact, several instances have been noted showing that killer whales have highly complex and caring social structures. In the 90’s a group of researchers in BC discover a killer whale, lovingly nicknamed “Stumpy”, as he had lost his tail and part of his fin, however despite these severe injuries that stopped him from being able to hunting, members of Stumpy’s pod continued to care for him (Sullivan, 2013).. Stumpy disappeared for a while but was spotted again in 2008 in Queensland Australia, showing just how strongly they care for one another (Sullivan, 2013).
In the Northeastern Pacific, between British Columbia, Canada and Washington, US there are several communities of killer whales. One of the most well studied is the Southern Resident Killer Whales (SRKW). Communities are made up of several pods, the familial unit, and share similar diets, dialects, and will interact to mate. SRKW is made up of three families; J-pod, K-pod, and L-pod, with 24, 17, and 33 members in each respectively (EPA, 2017). Their diet consists heavily of salmon and they can eat up to 350-400 lb/day (Alava et al., 2018).
The bad news is since killer whales are high trophic level consumers, bioaccumulation of pollutants has become a huge problem, especially for SRKW which has been stated as the most contaminated marine mammal population (Ross et al., 2000). Killer whales are important to Canada for multiple reasons. As apex predators with global distributions, killer whales play important roles in many food webs. Tourism around whale watching as well as being a large, charismatic, social, and compassionate species, gives killer whales economic, intrinsic relational, and aesthetic value. Finally to the more than twenty indigenous communities in BC, killer whales hold a strong cultural and spiritual significance. Read more about how the Canadian Government is contributing to the management and conservation of SRKW here!
Fun fact: Moose have only a few nature predators but strangely killer whales make that list. As they perform deep dives as far as 6 meters down to retrieve seaweed, killer whales have been recorded on the rare occasion to eat moose. Check out this fun comic! 
References
Rogers, P. (2019). New study: Only orcas strike fear into great white sharks. Retrieved on March 21, 2021, from https://www.thedailyworld.com/nation-world/new-study-only-orcas-strike-fear-into-great-white-sharks/
Sullivan, J. (2013). Disabled Killer Whale Survives with Help from Its Pod. Retrieved on March 21, 2021, from https://usa.oceana.org/blog/disabled-killer-whale-survives-help-its-pod
Alava, J. J., Cisneros-Montemayor, A. M., Sumaila, U. R., and Cheung, W. W. 2018. Projected amplification of food web bioaccumulation of MeHg and PCBs under climate change in the Northeastern Pacific. Scientific reports 8(1): 1-12.
EPA [United States Enviromental Protection Agency]. 2017. Southern Resident Killer Whales. https://www.epa.gov/salish-sea/southern-resident-killer-whales
Ross, P. S., Ellis, G. M., Ikonomou, M. G., Barrett-Lennard, L. G., and Addison, R. F. 2000. High PCB concentrations in free-ranging Pacific killer whales, Orcinus orca: effects of age, sex and dietary preference. Marine Pollution Bulletin 40(6): 504-515.
Fisheries and Oceans Canada. (2021). 2020 management measures to protect Southern Resident killer whales. Retrieved on March 21, 2021, from
https://www.pac.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/whales-baleines/srkw-measures-mesures-ers-eng.html
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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Present, Future, & Past
This is how I order these by importance. If we are too occupied by the past or future, we ignore what is happening now and miss the opportunity to interact and enjoy the things happening now. Setting goals, being mindful of the outcome you want, planning; all of these acts as guides to helps us in the present and are only worthwhile as such, as focusing too much on the future can create anxiety. Using history, our mistakes, our regrets, our “what-if” to change and inform our decisions about our present and future are of course important but if we become to focused on these we become stuck and/or hopeless. That being said, none of these exist or should exist without the others because each have value to helping us grow and live meaningful self-aware lives. Does you order of importance differ?
Stick, rock, leaf: An exercise for reflecting on time
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Taken by Jacob Kannel from Unsplash. 
When you want to help your audience reflect on their experience (especially a younger audience) this was a helpful tool I discovered. Ask them to collect a stick, a rock, and a leaf and have them say one thing that will “stick” with them (future), something that “rock-ed” (present), and what they want to “leaf” behind (past). This helps them to engage with their experience in the context of time.
Engaging with the Past
“There is no peculiar merit in ancient things, but there is merit in integrity, and integrity entails the keeping together of the parts of any whole, and if these parts are scattered throughout time, then the maintenance of integrity entails a knowledge, a memory, of ancient things. …. To think, feel or act as though the past is done with, is equivalent to believing that a railway station through which our train has just passed, only existed for as long as our train was in it.”
(Edward Hyams, Chapter 7, The Gifts of Interpretation)
In this quote, Hyams is stating that while old things aren’t inherently more valuable, there is value in what they tell us.
“Those who fail to learn their history are doomed to repeat it.”
(Winston Churchill)
I am reminded of the over-quoted warning of not learning from history and as someone who is really interested in conservation, this is something I often think about when it comes to analysing conservation and management strategies. While our history is often sad, we have lost so many species due to humans impacts (overharvest, climate change, pollution, etc.), it is important to explain this to your audience with a message of hope. As I said earlier, past without present and future leaves us stuck, making it crucial to share our history to show our progress and encourage further growth.
“Yes our coral reefs are in danger but we are doing amazing things to combat this like using 3D printers to make artificial substrates to regrow coral!”(1,2). 
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1.Perry, C. T., Alvarez-Filip, L., Graham, N. A., Mumby, P. J., Wilson, S. K., Kench, P. S., ... & Macdonald, C. (2018). Loss of coral reef growth capacity to track future increases in sea level. Nature, 558(7710), 396-400.
2.The Edition. (2018) Summer Island's 3D Printed Artificial Coral Reef. Retrieved from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nc5SBCw_DJo&ab_channel=TheEdition 
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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Birds aren’t real
We all are aware that the government spies on us through our devices, laptops, webcams, phones. They track our movements, our interests, our thoughts. But there is a way they've been tracking us without our knowledge. Birds. Since the inception of the United States CIA program, the US government has been attempting to spy on all it's citizens. In 1986, the Reagan Administration, killed all the birds and replaced them with spies that are now watching us (1). More recently in a joint effort to extend their power, the CIA and RCMP are working to remove and replace all birds in Canada as well. The birds work for the bourgeois.
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Still, these spy cameras have unique and fascinating features that are worth learning about. One of the largest models in Canada is Branta canadensis, aka the Canadian Goose which can weight between 5-14lbs. Their advanced cameras can capture image in 180 degrees horizontally and vertically. They are also waterproof and able to swim within 24 hours after instillation. These models have a terrifying attack function that causes them to produce hissing and honking noises, as well as biting and wing flapping to ward off anyone noisy enough to investigate their hardware (2).  
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Taken by me in Ottawa 2017. A Canadian Goose ready to attack me
Because of this conspiracy, we have obviously seen a huge decline in the abundance of real birds in North America. Since the in the last 50 years, we have lost over 3 billion birds (3). We must protect our birds from being replaced by spy camera and work towards conservation. As citizens who care deeply about the contributions birds make to the environment (as well as reducing governmental espionage) it is our duty to contribute to conservation efforts(4). See how you can help protect real birds through through theses simple tips (5).  
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Taken By Christopher Rodger from Unsplash
Reaching the technology Generation
Paul Caputo, Deputy Director of Nation Association for Interpretation, emphasizes that one of the most important aspects for using social media for interpretations is not being boring (6). Intriguing your audience helps you build it further through shares, comments, and interaction. When trying to reach an audience with social media, we need to recognize that peoples attention span is often seconds. Being engaging (like telling people that Birds are a conspiracy theory) gets them interested long enough to capture their attention so you can help them learn and engage more deeply with an important message (like about bird conservation). As I use my blogs to practice my interpretive skills, I try to be aware of my audience, my university peers in this class. What will catch their eye, as they scroll through the blogs looking to respond and interact?  
Tell me about what makes you stop scrolling, what topics about nature interest you, or if you think Birds are not actually real!
1. Birds Aren’t Real. (2020). The History. https://birdsarentreal.com/pages/the-history 
2. IOWA Department of Natural Resources. (2020). Eight cool things you should know about Canada geese. https://www.iowadnr.gov/About-DNR/DNR-News-Releases/ArticleID/2868/8-cool-things-you-should-know-about-Canada-geese#:~:text=Historically%2C%20these%20birds%20have%20been,weigh%20slightly%20less%20than%20males.&text=In%20the%20early%201900s%2C%20giant%20Canada%20geese%20nearly%20became%20extinct.
3. Rosenberg, K.V., Dokter, A.M., Blancher, P.J.,  et al. (2019). Decline of the North American avifauna. Science. 366:120-124
4. Greenwood, J. J. (2007). Citizens, science and bird conservation. Journal of Ornithology, 148(1), 77-124.
5. Nature Canada. (2017). 8 Tips to Help Birds. https://naturecanada.ca/cats-collisions/8-tips-to-help-birds/
6. Beck, L., Cable, T. T., & Knudson, D.M. (2018). Interpreting cultural and natural heritage for a better world. Sagamore-Venture Publishing
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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So well written Howard! This is so true of art, that there is often this sense of elitism however art is very subjective. By withholding interpretations of the artist we only further exacerbate this division. I never thought about this as a form of privilege and I’m so glad to hear you reflect on it as such. As university students, we have the privilege of knowledge and learning, something other people cannot afford or have time for. It’s so important to our job as interpreter (or nature, art or whatever) to help ordinary people without a huge amount of knowledge understand and appreciate the beauty in things. I also loved your point about no verbal communication of your interpretation. I think a lot of the time we associate interpretation as speaking but it doesn't have to be. For example we can have people think about the way something makes us feel emotionally or what words, images or things does the object or scene make us think of. Having people stop to reflect on this is also really important for interpretations because it helps people to be introspective and aware of their thoughts and feelings, ultimately making this connection stronger and more meaningful.    
Interpreting Nature Through Art (Week 4)
Art is a lot more complex than meets the eye, as it is more than a simple creative piece. While there are many forms of art meant to be simple and meaningless like abstract paintings, there are many that are a creative display of an idea or problem the artist wishes to address. This can be seen through artists from the 19th century that had convinced congress to protect pieces of the wilderness for future generators by creating beautiful landscape paintings to depict its beauty. In the past, artists have been against having somebody “explain the meaning” of a piece of artwork as they thought it was important for people to interpret the artwork themselves and have their own experience. They were also against it because they did not want somebody else explaining the message behind their art piece as the interpretation may not have been accurate. This allows anybody to have the opportunity to interpret nature through art and connect the artwork to their own personal experiences. This is very important because as I spoke about in my previous blog post, privilege can easily get in the way of one’s ability to access nature interpretation.
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Photo taken by Amy Chudley, retrieved from: tinyurl.com/io6wbuqk
The three main reasons that more minorities are not participating in nature interpretation according to the textbook “Interpreting cultural and natural heritage: For a better world written by Beck,L and Cale,T.T:
1. Economic barriers
2. Cultural Barriers
3. Communication barriers
These 3 reasons are very important across the spectrum of nature interpretation, but are especially interesting in relation to interpreting nature through art. This is because accessing art to interpret nature does not pose as strong of an economic, cultural and communication barrier. The reason is that there is a vast collection of artworks that can be viewed online which removes the economic barrier of taking time off work or travelling to the required destination. Cultural barriers are removed because all cultures have an art component, so there would be no reason as to why viewing a piece of artwork relating to nature would be out of the norm. Lastly, the communication barrier would be removed because interpreting artwork by yourself does not require any external verbal communication. The only negative about art interpretation is that because of artists not wanting others to interpret their artwork and explain it to others, information about the artwork is withheld by museum curators. This creates a sense of elitism between the patrons that are knowledgeable, and the ones that are not.
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Photo taken by Max Mendonca, retrieved from: tinyurl.com/2e9a3jjq
There is a real sense of beauty interpreting nature from art. This is because the artwork was created by someone with the intention to invoke a certain feeling in their audience, essentially giving the audience a glimpse of the artists “highlight reel” of nature experiences. This is known as “The Gift of Beauty, in that the interpretation should give the audience the desire to seek beauty within their surroundings and appreciate and preserve their local greenery so it can continue to be enjoyed.
Thank you for reading!
Howard Dodick
References
Beck, L., Cable, T. T., & Knudson, D.M. (2018). Interpreting cultural and natural heritage for a better world. Sagamore-Venture Publishing
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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Art & Nature. The Good & the Bad
Who am I to interpret _____? This is often a question asked in the art world, "who are you to judge what is good or bad art?" and the answer is infuriatingly simple. I am someone with an opinion. Art and nature are subjective, what is beautiful to one person may seem utterly worthless to another. But some opinions do matter more than other. If an art student walked through an exhibit and were to look at a piece, with all the education and understanding about the historical and cultural context, the intentions behind the piece, well their opinion matters more than the passive viewer who knows nothing and thinks it's something a child could do. Both may pass judgement on the piece, both may like it or hate it but knowledge and understanding about it will change the way you see it.
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Photo by Ibrahim Rifath on Unsplash
As a nature interpreter, we want to change the way people look at nature. For good or bad, we want to engage people, help them  form meaningful opinions, and recognize things they may not have seen or understood on their own. The modern trend of society seems to pull us farther away from nature. This is dangerous in a world that is deteriorating due to climate change, when the people in charge of policies, companies, and corporations have no opinion or connection to the environment they are effecting. If we as nature interpreters can bring a sense of understanding, connection, and knowledge, we can help people make more meaningful and better choices. this doesn't always mean they will make good choices for the environment, merely that they truly understand the weight of their action. 
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Photo by Sutirta Budiman on Unsplash
In the same way we cannot get everyone to love the same hobbies and things we love, we will not be able to convince everyone to love nature as we do. But through engaging people on a personal level, we can try to evoke emotional, spiritual, physical responses to the thing we love and at least leave people understanding why we feel the way we do even if they do not.  
Nature is beautiful. It is chaotic. Raw. Intense. Painful. It is also gentle. Empathetic. Nurturing. Orderly. By showing people all aspects, the good and the bad, we generate respect and awe for the wonderful world we live in. 
Describe your favourite part of nature; the good and the bad.    
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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Making green unicorns fly
Thoughts of Nature Interpretation & Privilege
I have worked at MuskokaWoods** for several seasons (almost 10 months over the course of two years). My role there was a nature interpreter of sorts. My job allowed me to give kids an appreciation for nature in a very unique way, form the angle of 60 feet in the air through high rope, climbing, and ziplining in the Muskoka forests.  
**I don’t speak for the brand or the company
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Taken by me, the MuskokaWoods High Ropes Course & Zipline
My favourite moments though we when we would get a group that had a kid(s) with a disability (mental or physical). Thanks to a special rigging system we were able to hoist kids up that couldn’t climb. Getting to help kids experience the world from this perspective always brings me so much joy but helping the kids with specials needs experience it is on a whole new level. On one such occasion, a boy with downs syndrome was getting ready to go up the zipline but was also very concerned that “Is it safe? people can’t fly.”. My answer was, “Well, how about you pretend to be something that does fly?” to which he said very seriously, “A green unicorn.” which is what his classmates chanted for him as he made to the top. 
In reflection, I am uncomfortably aware of my own privilege, being able-bodied and neurotypical. This is good though. When we recognize this discomfort we can shift our mindset to see other perspectives and to help drive us, as individuals and as a society, to be more inclusive. Nature interpretations is about giving people an experience beyond what they could have by themselves, something that everyone should have access to. I am incredibly grateful for the learn opportunity I’ve had through working at MuskokaWoods that has taught me to think creatively about where we fail to make things accessible and how we can change that.  
Think about a situation where an interpreters job may not be accessible to someone; a guided tour through woods may not allow for wheelchair access, an interpreter may be not annunciate clearly or block their mouth restricting lip reading for deaf/hard of hearing people, we are not always educated on the way our words or action may come across to minority groups. An important part of an interpreters work is creating a bond with the audience and we will never do this perfectly (we are all human) so long as we use our mistakes to push us forward rather than letting them hold us back.      
I’d love to hear your thoughts on privilege and how you are (or are not) affected by it. 
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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Rationalizing your fear of clowns
From an evolutionary perspective, there may be a very good reason we find clowns terrifying. The bright colors, the eccentric behavior, the psychotic look in their eye that says they see more what is on this mortal plane. Our fish brain is reminded of our evolutionary past hiding from the Pennywise of the Ocean, the mantis shrimp. 
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Photo by Dorothea OLDANI from Unsplash
In their (relatively) short lives, 3-6 years, these aquatic Jeffery Dahmer's grow between 10-20 cm long and have a diverse diet of fish, crabs, worms, and shrimp. They come in a vibrant array of rainbow colors, however they are able to instantly kill their prey by punching them with club like appendages that move at the speed of a .22 caliber bullet. This punch is so rapid, it creates cavitation bubbles, which push water out of the way to create a vacuum and for a moment generates temperatures of over 4000*C (close to the temperature of the sun). As if that wasn’t enough, these oceanic Ted Bundy’s are believed to have the most advanced eyes in the animal kingdom, with 12-16 different color photoreceptors, which is three times more than humans (which feels very unfair if you ask me). 
Tell me about;
Your stories about why you also hate clowns
Your favourite weird animals
How you also know that birds aren’t real
How I can reach my audience (YOU) better! 
Stay weird platypuses (and stay away from Mantis Shrimp!)    
Fact Animal. (2021). Mantis Shrimp Facts. Available at; https://factanimal.com/mantis-shrimp/ Last accessed 26 January, 2021. 
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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Wow! I love this idea! Enjoying and appreciating nature should be accessible to everyone but I think too often we are unaware or forget about our able-bodied privileges. We definitely need more people who are bringing awareness and inclusive programing, not just in nature interpretation but in all professions. I’ve never noticed before but at my local sugar bush (where I walk my fur baby, Java) there are specific things they’ve incorporated to make it more accessible; specifically large signage with braille, paths through the forest that are maintained with snowplows, and hand rails at slippery spots. I think there’s obviously a lot more that we as a society can do to make things more inclusive and I love that your using your skills to reach this audience. I’d love to hear more in future posts about what kinds of tools/teach methods/accessible programming you would want to do! 
Wanna go to the Park?
Wigglebutts everywhere are perking up their ears and doing crazy circles in preparation to go. Going to the dog park is a major adventure for them! They meet new friends, play in the grass, get a sense of the news from all the sniffing around, and they get to play with other animals and humans. A trip to the dog park provides our furry friends with an outing to interpret the natural world around them and it provides us with some much needed outdoor activity.
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Photograph from https://www.cobourg.ca/en/my-cobourg/Leash-Free-Dog-Park.aspx
However, there are those who cannot go to a dog park, or even have an outing in a nature setting. These persons have disabilities, some require guide dogs and support animals, some cannot see or hear, or have other issues that prevent them from enjoying nature. As an interpreter, my ideal job would be to tailor specialized programs for persons with special needs or disabilities. Persons with special needs or disabilities sometimes require more than just their service animal, and when it comes to learning, they sometimes need a different approach to get the most from it. By tailoring programs to specific needs, these people and their animals can go out and learn about the natural world in a safe environment.
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Photograph from http://www.naturefortheblind.com/what-is-a-braille-trail
This idea came to me while we were on a trip to our local off leash dog park. A sign on the entrance advised that the park was booked on the first Tuesday of every month specifically for the use of the Canadian National Institute for the Blind (CNIB) clients and their service dogs. I found this to be a nice idea, and I didn’t think anymore of this sign until I saw a Facebook post from a user. She thanked the dog park organizers and patrons for the ability to get out to the park and let her service dog play in a safe environment without any fear that her dog might get hurt. I didn’t realize it until then, but if a service animal gets hurt, there is no “substitute animal” you can use for the day. If the animal is hurt, the human is limited in their activities.
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Photograph from https://cnib.ca/en/programs-and-services/live/cnib-guide-dogs?region=sk
By looking at the challenges the humans at the other end of the leash face from a different perspective, I see an opportunity for our National and Provincial Parks. Specialized programs for special needs persons would allow everyone to get out and enjoy nature. “The more we can employ the use of all senses the more likely we will enhance learning” (Beck, Cable & Knudson, 2018). This can be promoted in the use of signage, sensory gardens and nature walks.
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Photograph from https://gharpedia.com/blog/sensory-gardens-for-disabled-people/
I believe that it would be important to not only know the history and natural descriptions of the area, but it would take a knowledge of different special needs requirements. “Access to the outdoors and nature is important to the health and education of all individuals regardless of age, location, or physical capabilities” (http://www.naturefortheblind.com/importance-of-accessible-nature-trails). In order to build the proper programs for everyone I would see it as essential to work with the companies (such as the CNIB) who provide programming suited to each individual’s needs.
A question for you:
Have you noticed any accessible trails on your travels? What did you think of the presentation of these trails?
Sources used:
Beck, L., Cable, T.T., & Knudson, D.M. (2018). Interpreting cultural and natural heritage for a better world. Sagamore Venture Publishing LLC.
Cobourg Off Leash Dog Park Photograph (2017-2019). Town of Cobourg. Retrieved January 24, 2021, from https://www.cobourg.ca/en/my-cobourg/Leash-Free-Dog-Park.aspx
Information for Guide Dog Handlers (1996-2019). CNIB Foundation. Retrieved January 24, 2021 from https://cnib.ca/en/programs-and-services/live/cnib-guide-dogs/information-guide-dog-handlers?region=sk
Sensory Gardens for Disabled or Divyang or Physically Challenged People! (2020, April 18). GharPedia. Retrieved January 24, 2021 from https://gharpedia.com/blog/sensory-gardens-for-disabled-people/
What is a Braille Trail? (n.d.). Nature for All. Retrieved January 24, 2021 from http://www.naturefortheblind.com/what-is-a-braille-trail
Why Accessible Nature Matters. (n.d.) Nature for All. Retrieved January 24, 2021 from http://www.naturefortheblind.com/importance-of-accessible-nature-trails
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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Birds aren’t real, but mermaids are!
In May of the year that shall not be named (2020), I discovered my ultimate dream job. As I said in other posts, I love animals and teaching about them, and I knew I would love to be a public educator on marine conservation, helping engage my audience with amazing marine wildlife. The job I discovered however, allowed me to transform into said marine wildlife. I could be a professional mermaid. 
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Photo taken of me by my mum
Not even joking, this is a real job. It is extremely common for professional mermaids to include advocacy for marine conservation and provide marine education (Check out Lila Jones, the real life mermaid(1)). When I discovered this was a 'thing' I immediately bought the cheapest (while still safe) tail I could find. I spent the next three and a half months swimming at local pond, teaching myself tricks, performing for the people that swam, and even helping out with a kids party! It was magical, getting to be this ethereal, mythical being come to life. I have too many stories to share in one post about funny things kids would ask me or the too kind words of parents telling me how I inspired their kids to get better at swimming. I'm grateful that in the stressful time of the pandemic, I was able to bring some joy to the people in my community. 
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Photo taken by my mum of me entertaining as a birthday surprise for family friends 
As I prepare to graduate, I've begun to look more and more earnestly into what being a professional mermaid & marine educator entails (no pun intended). Aside from learning how to act underwater (breath holding, learning tricks, swimming technique, etc.) as a educator an important skill is being articulate and good at public speaking. Surprisingly, this is not a niche profession. There are mermaid schools all over the world opening the possibility of where I could work (2).     
Being more of a tactile learner myself, I would really love to included some kind of interactive experience where people can get up close and personal with wildlife (Like a touch tank at an aquarium). These can be super useful tools for education because it creates the experience of being in the ocean without being in the ocean. Interpreters oversee these interactions to protect the animals (and the audience) and teach specifically about what interests the audience. It also incorporates several learning styles (tactile, auditory, visual). It also plays into the stages of flow learn proposed by Cornell, 1998. Starting with awakening enthusiasm, touching and being up close with the animals engages playfulness and alertness. Stage 2 is focus attention which promoted receptivity to the rest of the program, this may include the interpreter directing group to focus on an animals behavior, specific texture, or physical feature. Following this is direct experience, which may look like allowing the audience to call out their own questions or observations about the animals. Finally sharing inspiration helps debrief the group and allowing them to reflect on and share their experience.  
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Photo by David Clode on Unsplash
1. Farnham, M. (2018) Lila Jones, The Real Life Mermaid. Women in Ocean Science. Available at: https://www.womeninoceanscience.com/blog/2018/11/6/lila-jones-the-real-life-mermaid. Last accessed 22 January 2021. 
2. Everything Mermaid (2018). Top International Mermaid Classes. Available at: https://everythingmermaid.com/top-international-mermaid-classes/. Last accessed 22 January 2021. 
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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I love that you compare your relationship with nature to a romantic relationship. As a hopeless romantic myself, this resonates with the way I think about nature too. It can be really easy to think about nature in terms of science and facts but reflecting on the way nature makes you feel is so crucial to helping an audience experience a 'sense of place'. You've done that very well. Your writing style helped painted mental images for me, which is so important for communicating when you can't physical show people something. 
Anxiety is something I struggle with too and it's really interesting that nature has this calming effect that allows you just be present in the moment, leaving behind the stress of everything else. It's as if our bodies hold onto our evolutionary past and yearns to return to living and surviving in the wild. I imagine (like me) this love for nature and the forest is what ignited your passion for wildlife biology & conservation. When I hear other speak about nature in this way, it gives me hope that our generation will be able to make real and meaningful change to help our climate situation.  
I'm really looking forward to seeing photos from your forest and from your nature adventures! 
My first love was never a person, but a place.
Describe your current relationship with nature. How has this developed/evolved? Who offered you “a sense of place,” as described in our textbook?
Nature is my saving grace most days. It the one consistent love that I always find myself running back to. The rumblings of everyday life make the waves of anxiety so loud it pushes and shoves your mind to the inner depths. 
My first love was never a person, but a place. My first love was the forest behind my house. The same forest that my father warned me countless times never to wander alone, or stray from the path. The forest where we picked fiddle heads in spring and found raccoon tracks in summer. The same place we buried our first dog, and the same place I ran to after my first breakup. My relationship with nature started with a forest I called my home.  
But as time went on my life had grown away from this safe space. I found the coldest parts of the world are sometimes created by people, not nature. A cold heart can freeze even the warmest room, and a warm one can melt glacier. I also found that mixing those two people can create a storm. A violent storm that rips trees from the ground and knocks nests off their perch. One that led me away from a forest I called home.
My new forest was a seaside promenade. I learned to love the sound of water rippling and paddles splashing. I adapted and tried to learn to flow with the water instead of against it. I found new hope in the islands I could explore and the sunsets I could paint. Home had changed, and I did too. I learned that coping could mean a walk along the water or hiding in the garden. I was still allowed to visit the forest, but it was difficult. It’s funny though, nothing really replaces your first love.
That forest gave me a sense of belonging, a sense of safety, and a sense of freedom. I felt love when I thought of those memories, something I had been missing for a really long time. I missed the smell of the earth, the sounds of the wind, and the view of an overgrown path. I genuinely found that nature gave me the solitude and comfort that I needed most growing up.
As an adult my first major purchase was a tent. I got to make my own home when I needed to escape reality for awhile. When I was on the verge of loosing everything, I went back to the forest. I stayed there for days thinking over my life and what I wanted from it. I got to wake up each morning and look at the dew on the ground. I found tracks from the animals moving under cover of the night. I picked fiddle heads until my stomach hurt. I had no schedule but knew the steps to survive. I felt loved in the forest.
*this is a romanticized view of nature from a personal reflection that I hope you found interesting. I will post a photo of home following this post.*
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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A Platypus? PERRY THE PLATYPUS!?!?
**I would like to thank Dan Povenmire and Jeff Marsh for creating arguably the best character ever, Perry the Platypus (from Phineas & Ferb).
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Photo taken by Meg Jerrard from Unsplash
This animal is one of the weirdest animals in Australia (which is saying a lot). As we all know birds aren’t real (I will elaborate in later posts for those unaware of whom they work for), however the platypus legitimately shouldn’t be real. It’s a mammal in the way a coconut is a mammal, by arbitrary taxonomic definition. It has fur and it produces milk (the two criteria for a mammal), it also lays eggs (what the heck), it has a bill, beaver-like tail, webbed feet, and to top it off it has venomous feet glands and is carnivorous (which is terrifying). Additionally it’s skeleton is very similar to a reptile.
While it resides in the category ‘least concern’ on the ICUN endangered red list, it is most concerning in my book. But like the platypus, I too am very strange sometimes. Be like the platypus and be everything you want to be. It’s okay to not fit into societies arbitrary categories of taxonomy. 
Have a wonderfully weird day, my fellow platy-people :) 
Reference; Bradford, A. (2014) Platypus Facts. LiveScience. Available at: www.livescience.com/27572-platypus.html. Last accessed 19 January 2021.
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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Head first into the Void
Your are on a small boat. A midday sun, not a cloud in sight, the tropical heat isn't unbearable with the ocean breeze. The water is so clear you can see twenty meters down; coral reefs, schools of fish, a whole world below you. Someone hands you your scuba gear; a mask, a tank, a wet suit, flippers. As you sit on the edge of the boat, you listen to your guide count down; 3...2...1... And you slip backwards into the cool blue, bubbles filling your vision. Orienting yourself, you swim down, following your guide. Passing stunning coral, unique wildlife, you are meet suddenly with the void. The end of the reef. The drop off. Nothing in sight ahead but the gradient of blue that fades into a seemingly bottomless ocean.
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**Photo by Farhan Sharief on Unsplash
This is were I stand now, on the cusp of graduation. I have had an incredible four year journey, learning about a passion I've had since eighth grade, animals. But with the end in sight, I stare at the void that represents my future and wonder what am I going to do with my education? Like the end of the reef, there is so much life and possibility beyond my university experience for me to explore. However, as anyone who has experienced it can tell you, swimming on this edge is both terrifying and exciting as you lose the comfort and familiarity of the reef. I feel all of theses emotions as I prepare to graduate and pursue my professional career.  
Until taking this course, I had never heard of "nature interpretations" or a "nature interpreter" but since I was 12 I knew I wanted to make a career out of public education about science, conservation, nature, and practically animals. I love animal shows where handlers help other give first hand experience with wildlife in a safe, fun, and educational way. This is a version of the job of a nature interpreter. They help an audience turn an experience into an adventure. They encourage insightfulness, understanding, and appreciation about an activity, place, or thing. In a brand new location, they give their audience a sense of familiarity, connection, belonging, a 'sense of place'. 
I experienced this when I was in 11th grade, attending an international school. My biology teacher spent a semester teaching us about marine biology, having us learn over 100 different species of fish, and for the end of the year trip we went on a 3 day snorkeling trip to Karimunjawa, Indonesia. We helped identify and count fish for a conservation survey, learned about sea turtles, and help with local projects to rebuild coral reefs. The combination of education, engagement, and responsibility I felt on this trip pushed me towards choosing my university major and continues to inspire me to pursue my dream career.
Join me as I prepare to dive head first into the void. 
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**Photo taken of me by my Biology Teacher
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asenvs3000 · 4 years ago
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**Disclaimer**
This blog was created for ENVS 3000, University of Guelph. The opinions expressed here represent my own and not those of the University of Guelph. The University of Guelph is not responsible for the accuracy of any of the information supplied by this blog.
If random rants about animals and cool animal facts (with a bit of introspection about interpreting nature thrown in there) is not your cup of coffee, this blog may not be for you. Side effects may include; boredom, not wanting to read 500 word posts, headaches, mid annoyance. The University of Guelph is also not responsible for these symptoms. Should these symptoms persist, I’m not sure why you are still following my blog (unless your in my course).
Stay weird, platypuses!  
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