Feed on
Posts
Comments

We have new BFS Use Request Forms and Form Processing! Although much has changed on the computing side, what you the users see and do is nearly identical to the old forms, so the transition should go smoothly. You will notice a few new features:

  • If you click on the Calendar symbol next to the start and end dates, you can select a date from the calendar, just like when you make an airline reservation.
  • The default date is the current date, so you don’t need to scroll through a list of years to get to the here and now.
  • The map of the BFS is now clickable – you can select what areas you will use either by checking the boxes or clicking on the map.
  • You will have to do a simple (e.g., 2 + 2 = ?) math problem before you submit the form. This little problem will prevent robots from filling out the form, as happened once in the past.

Many, many thanks to Jason Smith, Pomona College Instructional Technologist, for heroic programming to make this all happen, as well as to BFS Web Intern Alan Chatham, who wrote several of the subprograms. Both Jason and Alan were supported by a Pomona College Hahn “Teaching with Technology” grant.

If you do have any problems submitting your use requests, please e-mail me at Nancy.Hamlett@Pomona.edu, and I’ll try to help you out.

Two new plants have been added to the BFS Plant List – one naughty, one nice. Milk Thistle, Silybum marianum, is a nasty invasive non-native weed. In contrast, Red Maids, Calandrinia ciliata, a petite native annual with fleshly leaves, can be used in ecological restoration and is reportedly a tasty addition to salad.

Signs of Spring

Spring has definitely arrived at the BFS! In the last week Amsinckia menziesii, Rancher’s Fireweed, has started blooming all over the East Field — a veritable sea of gold. Manager Stephen Dreher’s efforts last year to mow the non-native grasses before they went to seed seems to have really paid off in encouraging our native wildflowers.

Amsinckia menziesii in the East Field

Amsinckia menziesii in the East Field


Amsinckia menziesii

Amsinckia menziesii

Over on the HMC property, the native Southern California Toad (Anaxyrus boreas halophilus) have been busily spawning in the “Toad Pool”. This amplectant pair with strings of eggs was photographed on February 21, and now the pool is brimming with tadpoles.

Amplectant Southern California Toads

Amplectant Southern California Toads

And all around the BFS, birds are busy establishing their territories and attracting mates — the Northern Mockingbirds (Mimus polyglottos) have started singing their elaborate songs, the male Ruddy Ducks (Oxyura jamaicensis) are wagging their upright tails and beating their chests with their outrageous blue bills, and many birds, like the Bewick’s Wren (Thryomanes bewickii) shown below are more conspicuous than they are at other times of the year.

Bewick’s Wren

Bewick’s Wren

Next to the arroyo just west of the entrance road two of our less common native plants are putting on their spring growth. At first glance, neither of these perennials looks like it “belongs” in the Coast Sage Scrub plant community, but they both grow quickly during the rainy season, and above-ground parts shrivel up when the weather turns hot and dry. The petals of nodding maroon flowers of the California Peony (Paeonia californica) cup a cluster of yellow stamens. New growth appears typically in December, the flowers bloom in January–May, and the plant goes dormant by May.

Paeonia californica

Paeonia californica

Near the peonies is a stand of Giant Ryegrass (Leymus condensatus). While most of the grasses growing on California’s hillsides (and the BFS!) originated in Europe and came over with settlers, Leymus condensatus is native, and we have several stands on the BFS. In natural settings Giant Ryegrass goes dormant in the dry season, but will stay green if irrigated, and several selections are used horticulturally.

Leymus condensatus

Leymus condensatus

Along paths and open areas all over the BFS the ground is being covered by a carpet of tiny succulents — Sand Pygmy-Weed (Crassula connata) and Moss Pygmyweed (Crassula tillaea) — that turn red as they age. Among them are tiny flowers of one of the members of the Borage family — Cryptantha, Pectocarya, or Plagiobothrys. Figuring out their identity requires study of the nutlets, so we’ll have to wait for that. Would anyone like to take this on?

Tiny borage in flower

Tiny borage in flower amid the Pygmyweed

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

Winter at the BFS

Some people think that Southern California doesn’t have seasons, but they’re wrong — our seasons are just different from what folks from back east have in mind. But sometimes even here we get hints of traditional winter. A recent early-morning visit to the BFS revealed the East Field covered with rime looking very wintry indeed.

Along the drive, the Toyons (Heteromeles arbutifolia) flaunted an abundance of the red berries that reminded early settlers of holly, giving Hollywood its name. Toyon berries not only provide food for many BFS birds, including Northern Mockingbirds and Cedar Waxwings, but are also eaten by coyotes – as clearly evidenced by their scat.

And, of course, snow-capped Mt. Baldy provides a glorious backdrop to winter scenes at the BFS.

Tags: , , ,

« Newer Posts