Monday, September 12, 2016

Forty Four Days & Forty Four Nights: Fire Ecology Research in Nevada

Forty Four Days & Forty Four Nights: 
Fire Ecology in the Nevada Desert

I spent the summer of 2016 in the Nevada desert doing research for the geography department.   It was hot.  I was miserable.  The desert just sucked the energy completely out of me.  It hardly ever rained.  I was lucky to get a shower once a week.  The work was extremely mundane and repetitive.  You might ask, “Was it worth it?”  I myself was not sure until a few weeks after returning from the final research trip.  I then started to uncover the deeper parts of the experience beyond being miserable, and beyond science.  As time passed, I discovered that I now look at the world through a different lens.  After spending forty four days in Nevada over two and half months, I realized that I could now live less superfluously.  I began to look and think about people less advantaged than me with empathy and understanding.  My experiences in the desert changed me.  I could hear others’ stories and really listen.
            The entire adventure began sometime in February 2016.  I started thinking about where I might want to work for the summer.  One day, after my Earth Analytics course a graduate student named Adam came up to me and asked if I was interested in being his research assistant for the summer.  I asked him a little about it, and learned the details over a beer.  We were going to be traveling to north central Nevada to conduct fire ecology research.  We would take three to four two week trips over the course of the summer.  We would be camping for a few weeks at time and then traveling 1,000 miles back to Boulder for a week off between each trip.  I told him that I was interested, and the next week I applied for a summer Undergraduate Research Opportunity Grant.  I wanted to do this, because I ended up getting the grant, extra work study, and pay from the Geography department on top of it all.
            Around April, as the semester reached its’ climax, I started to prepare for the summer.  The research required Adam and I to build equipment for the summer.  On a Saturday in April, Adam and I got together to work on building a monopod to measure percent vegetation cover.  After four hours, we had pieced together a semi-workable design.  It was mostly constructed from PVC pipe.  The monopod broke down so that we could carry it along in our backpacks.  We tried it a few times, in clear weather, out front of Adam’s apartment.  It seemed to work well for the intended purpose.  However, we failed to test it in true desert conditions.  This would come back to haunt us early on. 
            The spring semester was coming to a close in Boulder, CO and I was beginning to think about the first upcoming research trip.  This was the same period that I started to move out of my apartment.  Except I was not moving in to a new apartment.  My plan was to store my belongings for the summer, and couch surf when I was back in Boulder in between trips.  I stored some belongings at a farm near Berthoud, CO and the rest in six other locations around Boulder county and Denver.  It was quite a hectic process, and it made me very nervous.  I also left some things in my car, which I parked on the street near the place I would eventually move into in August.  It was at this point at which I started think that this experience could be a tough one.  I thought, “How am I going to survive?”
            The first day of the trip was May 10th.  We packed the car up to the roof with ninety percent field gear, and ten percent personal belongings.  All I had was a sleeping bag, a change of clothes, a tent, and a small daypack.  Adam had about the same amount, other than some cooking equipment which we shared.  The rest of the white all-wheel drive Chevy Sport Utility Vehicle was full of boxes of field gear.  These included a dozen volumes of plant identification books, a break down table for soil extractions, an enormous tent for processing our samples from the field, and two enormous coolers to hold the samples in, among various other pieces of field work equipment.  Now we were set to go.  We spent the first day driving a thousand miles, and “boy was it a long day.”
We left Boulder around 7 am and finally arrived at the campsite around midnight.  We rolled out our sleeping bags in the road right in front of the truck.  It was in the 30’s, and the sky was completely clear, not a cloud in the sky.  I wore long pants, and my puffy jacket to bed.  I was unable to sleep much at all.  Immediately I began having mixed feelings about the entire trip.  I thought to myself, “This is amazing to be out here sleeping under the stars without a home.”  At the same time I thought, “What am I thinking!?  I am going to be living mostly in the desert for the next three months, melting under the hot sun in the middle of nowhere.  Thirty miles from anywhere.”
We woke up the next day and drove for an hour and half out to Bloody Run Hills, east of our basecamp.  We called CNIDC, Central Nevada Agency Dispatch Center, and let them know the general area of where we would working for the day.  We would do this every day when left for the field, and again when we returned.  Many of the areas that we were traveling to would have no phone service.  We also had a SPOT satellite messenger to send signals back to the Geography Department in Boulder and let them know we had survived each day.  In the truck we listened to a mix of science podcasts, indie folk music, and the Dirt bag Diaries.  We drove on the perfectly straight highways into the rising sun.  When we neared our destination, we took off on a dirt road headed north flying along at fifty miles an hour, churning up a football field long dust cloud behind us.  The Chevy SUV was no longer white when we finally arrived at our first plot, and the suspension of the rental vehicle was no longer brand new.
We both jumped out of the car with our field gear, and hiked a mile up a nearby hill.  We set up our fifty by fifty meter plot, and hammered in our plastic stake.  Next we assembled the PVC tripod and attached the camera to the end.  Right about then the wind started picking up, and blasting dirt and sand in our faces.  We tried to take photos for our science, to no avail.  The two meter high monopod was too shaky to give us the high quality imagery that we needed.  “Just great!” I thought, “The first day requires a major redesign of our data collection process.”  Little did I know that things would go wrong on a regular basis. 
Later in July, after three of our four fieldwork excursions were complete, we were ready to head out for our final trip.  When we arrived in Nevada, we found out that six of our plots from earlier in the summer had been burned by an enormous 122,000 acre wildfire.  It burned an entire thirty mile wide valley.  Before the fire, that valley was covered by sagebrush and invasive cheat grass.  Now it was completely black as far as the eye could see.  There were dust devils which churned up ash and it smelled like a fire had just happened.  I was awestruck.  I realized how fragile life is, and how much humanity has really messed up our planet.  It happened right there, right then.  I had plenty of time to process this feeling over the final two week trip.  I thought back on my experiences from the summer, beyond the misery, and beyond the science.  It began to change me as the next few weeks went along. 
Adam decided to do yet another redesign of his study to incorporate new samples from after the fire.  We would then have before and after soil samples, and biomass and remaining biomass samples to analyze.  We drove out to the field for the next five days and examined the remains of sagebrush and cheat grass fields.  Sometimes there would be about a half inch of material left standing because the grass fire moved so fast.  Other times there would be nothing left, even the sagebrush were piles of ash blowing away in the wind.
As the summer came to a close, on the final day of fieldwork, we were camped near Battle Mountain, NV.  We were the only two campers in the campground.  There was a stream running behind us, where we took bucket showers after returning from ten hour days in the field.  Our work shirts were black and brown.  Mine was originally a light green, and Adam’s was white.  Our legs and feet were black with ash halfway up our calves even though we wore long pants.  We sat there cooking beans and vegetables on small wood burning backpacking stove with bottles of beer in our hands.  I thought to myself, “I could actually get used to this!”  I had adjusted to the unbearable heat, the scarcity of water and food, and not being able to clean up very often.  I had realized that I could survive in the middle of the Nevada desert, with little more than a tent, sleeping bag, hat and bandana, a spare change of clothes, a decent all-wheel drive vehicle, and someone to share the experience.  And a few bottles of beer always helped. 

When I finally moved into my new apartment, in early August, I began to realize that I do not need ninety percent of what I own.  I remember the simplicity of life in Nevada, and yes I actually miss that part.  I miss waking up at 5 am and finishing work at 3 pm if everything goes according to plan.  I miss the open nothingness of northern Nevada.  I’ve noticed that when I talk to people, I tend to listen more and talk less.  I’ve chatted with a few homeless people on the street.  I love hearing other peoples’ stories and I realize how fragile, but resilient life can be.  Recently I walked into a Starbucks in Boulder and a man said hello to me.  I ordered my drink and sat down at the only available table next to him.  He started mumbling and going on about how he had this trike and solar panels that he owned.  He said that he had ridden his trike all the way through Nebraska and eventually had ended up in Boulder.  I was not sure if I should believe him.  I thought maybe he had just seen the movie the Martian and was recounting some of the main characters’ drives through the Martian desert.   Still I sat there and listened, and I wondered whether he might really have ridden his trike all that way.  Who knows?  Everyone has his or her own story to tell in life, and each one is as unique and important as the next person’s.  The difference was, that I could hear those stories from the perspective of having had some experiences and hardships of my own.  I could actually relate to this homeless man’s life just a little.  Whether or not that story happened was irrelevant, it was his own unique perspective on life.  That story belonged to him and was his to tell, and it turned out that he might not be much different than I am.  We all have our experiences in the desert, at some point in our lives.

~ Nick Whittemore 
        (11th September, 2016)

Sunday, May 1, 2016

Reflections: "Life, Travel, Adventure"

Reflections: "Life, Travel, Adventure"

Several years ago when I was eighteen years old and a senior in high school, I had a burning desire to visit the mountains.  I decided that I wanted to travel to Alaska during the summer before starting school in Purdue University's world class engineering program.  I bought travel books and made plans on how I was going to drive all the way there, all 5,500 miles of it.  I looked through travel books and thought about taking a trip with a good high school buddy up through the northern midwest across Canada and up to Alaska.  I wanted to visit exotic sounding national parks like Denali, Kenai Fjords, and Gates of the Arctic. 


Sometimes I wonder if I would have actually taken that trip, whether my first college experience might have turned out differently, but that's water over the bridge now.  I made it to Colorado, worked inside the boundaries of Rocky Mountain National Park for a 13 months over the course of four summers, and have been a resident of Colorado for 2 years now.  


There was this other trip, which was a down right crazy idea.  The same buddy and I planned this trip to Ecuador in South America.  We actually went and bought plane tickets off of the "cheap tickets" webpage, and planned on landing in Ecuador, renting a van and driving to Patagonia.  My friend spoke Spanish fluently, so that was the only non-stupid part of the idea.  Probably the worst part was that I didn't tell my parents about it.  I just read about every country in Central and South America online, and printed the encyclopedia facts, statistics, and general information pertaining to all of these exotic places.  I really just wanted to get the hell out of Indiana, away from my failures in Purdue's engineering programs and out of the country for a while.  The ideas for this trip sprung from the "Motorcycle Diaries", a great film about two Argentinian Doctors that dropped out of medical school to take a motorbike trip to the United States of America.  Except along the way they encountered people in dire medical need and one of them decided to stay and help the people.  My friend and I never went on our trip to South America and I was out eight hundred dollars for the plane tickets.  It was not a good idea, and had no real purpose.


After that, while attending a community college and getting straight A's despite living some folks who liked to sleep 5 hours a night and get hammered every other night, another friend and I decided to go visit a high school friend that had moved to Thousand Oaks, CA.  I took my mom's car and told her that I was going to check out a college in Colorado, called Colorado Mountain College, which was in Leadville up at 11,000 feet above sea level in the highest incorporated town in America.  I never mentioned a word about California.  Well my travel buddy and I "eventually" ended up going to visit this college, on the way back from California, in a snowstorm in the middle of the night, but this was not really the primary purpose of our trip.  We switched off driving every four hours and made it all the way to California with only one long stop for sleep in about 40 hours.  On the way there we visited the Grand Canyon in Arizona for an hour.  While in California we visited places like Hollywood, Laguna Beach, and Santa Barbara.  After staying there for 4 days we drove the 40 hours back halfway across the United States to Indiana and went back to school.  I ended up with 3 A's and a B that semester despite the crazy living conditions and atmosphere.  Who knows?  Sometimes just going with an idea can affect a person just enough to figure out how to succeed in life.  I think I learned some lessons on that crazy ass trip.


I hit my rebellious stage in my late teens early twenties rather than in high school like a good number of other classmates.  ...


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Several years later after graduating from college I was working with my sister out in Estes Park, CO for the summer and the flood came on September 12th, 2013.  We lost power, they closed Rocky Mountain National Park, the entire downtown was severely flooded, and eventually the town told all of the seasonal employees to "get out" because the infrastructure was damaged, and the sewer systems couldn't handle all the people.  Our friend Gardner from Tiawan and my sister's friend Anna didn't have anyplace to go right away.  The only way out was to drive west through the closed Rocky Mountain National Park.  So of course, what the hell, we decided to go on a 6,000 mile, 17 day road trip across eleven different states, to five major cities, five national parks, and two national monuments.  So was born, "Road Trip! Road Trip! Road Trip!", as our friend Gardner called it out.  That trip is a story in and of itself, and it deserves it's own blog story, so we'll leave those seventeen days for another time.  Certainly though, again it was an eyeopener, a life changer, a soul changer.  When I saw the damage in Yosemite National Park from the fires that had raged, and that no water was coming over Yosemite Falls, it made an impression on me that changed my future path(s) in life.  

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Not too long after that trip, as I said a story in and of itself, I found myself packing up my Subaru Outback and strapping a kayak to the top of it, covered with a cockpit tarp, jammed full of hiking and backpacking gear and all the cloths that I owned, and I started my seven day off-the-beaten-path road trip back to Estes Park, CO.  I made a few "detours" along the way and ended up 300 miles south of my Estes Park destination in Alamosa, CO.  One of the first things I did in Alamosa was hike to the top of the highest sand dune in the park.  8,700ish feet above sea level.  This is Colorado.  God doesn't fool around with sand dunes.  The base of the dunes was around 8,000ish feet so the tallest sand dune was almost 700 vertical feet above that!  Ever try to hike up a seven hundred foot sand dune in the wind!?  Not so easy.  Everybody else in the park turned around, but I knew that this might be my only shot at seeing what was up there so I kept going.  I made it to what seemed like the top, and was nearly blinded by the baking sun and howling winds.  There wasn't really much special about the top of that pile of sand, but "what the hell! why not?", so I did, "Because it's there." --> (George Mallory).  After that I remember going to San Luis Brewery in Alamosa, CO and having my first beer as a planned resident of Colorado.  It was a damn good beer, I'll tell you.  The waitress was certainly something to look at. ;)  She was a student at the university there in Alamosa called Adams State University.  And so gradually entered the idea of returning to college at some point while in Colorado...  And that's another story for another day too.  I'd like to expand this story and some point to include the tale of sleeping in half constructed tent in the western portion of Iowa with Grass Roaches (a cousin of the cockroach) crawling all over me all night long... but yeah that'll be an expanded story for another day.


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The whole point is, I learned something from each of these trips or "failed trips".  I learned something about myself.  I learned something about the world.  I learned something about the natural world around me.  And I learned stuff that I didn't think that I would learn.  And I saw stuff that I didn't think that I would see.  And shit went wrong that I wasn't even on my radar.  


All these experiences helped shape my future destiny and my future life aspirations.  So yeah it was all worth it in the end.  "That's life.  That's travel.  That's adventure."  And the story goes on..


~ Nick Whittemore (30th of April, 2016)

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"I am a rebel, one who has not listened. We all are rebels. In this way we are all the same" - Nick Whittemore in the post "In Rebellion to a Rebel" (Feb. 2012)


"My mind is in a state of constant rebellion.  I believe that will always be so." - George Mallory (1920's Everest Pioneer, Everest Expeditions)


"All good things are wild and free." - Henry David Thoreau


"A but hell I'm just a blind man on the plains, I drink my water when it rains, and live by chance among the lightning strikes." - The Tallest Man on Earth (Musician) from the album "The Wild Hunt, 2010"


Tuesday, April 19, 2016

Higher Mountains II: “Adventure with Purpose”

Higher Mountains II: “Adventure with Purpose”

It’s been about a year since I ran my first half marathon that I didn’t really think that I could finish until I did.  In that year I’ve also moved to Boulder, had two different jobs, run, biked, hiked, kayaked, trail run, and walked about 1,000 miles.  I’ve finished two semesters successfully at the University of Colorado at Boulder, plus five short online classes.  I’ve been a part of Earth Lab’s Project Risk, Engineers without Borders Nepal Design Team, and will be a Field Research Assistant with “Fire Works Lab” this summer in northern Nevada.  I’ve also been an active member and volunteer with the Wesley Chapel.  I’ve overcome my fear of bike riding, I broke my leg when I when in the second grade, and explored the majority of Boulder’s multiuse bike paths.  I’ve jumped at every new opportunity to explore events on campus from music, to science conferences, to environmental clubs, to geography colloquiums, to the conference on world affairs, and much more.  The things I will remember the most though are the people I’ve met through the Wesley Chapel, through the Engineers without Borders Nepal Team, the two short term jobs I’ve had, and of course my classmates, TA’s, and professors in the Geography department.

In my spare time, I’ve fixed up that $50 bike into my primary mode of transportation, helped fix up my current apartment into a more livable space, visited many of the famous Nepalese restaurants around Boulder, played a little guitar and trumpet here and there, cooked some good food, and drank some world class beer at some of Boulder’s best microbreweries.  I’ve also heard my two favorite solo musicians play, “The Tallest Man on Earth” at the Ogden in Denver, and “Jake Shimabukuro” here at Boulder Theatre.  I’ve managed to make it up to Estes Park a few times to hike and visit friends, and when I haven’t I’ve let friends crash on my roommates couch for a week or more at a time.  I’ve helped out a graduate student without an apartment for three weeks, been friends with a great guy majoring in theater here at CU that needs a little encouragement every once in a while.  I’ve watched a lot of comedy, and had a lot of good laughs over beer and pizza at Ferment at Backcountry Tap house.

Next year, I’ve got big plans to finish my second bachelor’s degree with emphasis in GIS, have a successful summer researching the effects of climate change on desert ecology in Nevada, move into a nice townhouse with a graduate student across from the CU Research park, do an independent study over Christmas break in Nepal, investigate ways to provide better living conditions for the homeless of Boulder, run a trail race of at least eight miles, continue as a lab research assistant on campus, or find an off campus government internship.  I’ve even considered doing my own thesis and graduating with honors in college of arts and science, however I think it more beneficial to have the time to continue with EWB Nepal, and the Wesley Chapel both of which I have come to love. 

In the future I hope to work with the National Park Service, or for Local, State or National Government, or in the Denver area with a National Government Agency.  In the future, I would consider graduate school in Applied Geography, or a combination of Landscape Architecture and Environmental Planning.  I would like to pursue internships in local government planning offices, parks and recreation, and longer term field research assistantships in the Denver/Boulder area, and possibly take my GIS skills abroad to another continent.  I want to combine Geography and Environmental planning to help humanity adapt to climate change and natural disasters.

So yes, I have become a rather ambitious person.  But really I just want to do something meaningful with life and make a difference through my career and life while still being myself.  To create my purpose in life.  I want to take part in helping humanity prepare and adapt for an uncertain future.  And yes I want to be "an adventurer with purpose" and climb those mountains, and brave those deserts, for a purpose greater than myself.

And last but not least, I want to find an equally or more adventurous, ambitious, intelligent, attractive, young woman, to journey through life with who will help me learn more about love and partnership, and who will push me to be the absolute best man that I can be. To lie next to at night, and dream about while I am away.  To share stories with, and love and laugh together.  To take risks together to better both ourselves and the world.

Charles N. Whittemore (18th April, 2016)


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"The day will come when, after harnessing space, the winds, the tides and gravitation, we shall harness for God the energies of love. And on that day, for the second time in the history of the world, we shall have discovered fire." - Pierre Teilhard de Chardin, (French Paleontologist and Philosopher)

"People travel to wonder at the height of the mountains, at the huge waves of the seas, at the long course of the rivers, at the vast compass of the ocean, at the circular motion of the stars, and yes they pass by themselves without wondering." - St. Augustine, (354-430) (Early Christian Priest, Author)

"Love the earth and sun and animals, 
Despise riches, give alms to everyone that asks,
Stand up for the stupid and crazy,
Devote your income and labor to others...
And your very flesh shall be a great poem."  -- Walt Whitman (American Poet)

"I would rather be ashes than dust! I would rather that my spark should burn out in a brilliant blaze than it should be stifled by dry rot. I would rather be a superb meteor, every atom of my in magnificent glow, than a sleepy and permanent planet. The proper function of man is to live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days in trying to prolong them. I shall use my time." -- Jack London (American Author)