Yesterday, while working in our country garden, we were rewarded with an inspiring sight. Riding the gusting southerly winds on fragile wings, dozens of monarch butterflies were on their way back to the US and Canada. For over an hour the exodus continued, twos and threes and tens. Some flew high, just specks in the sky. Others skimmed the treetops of our cedar hedge. A few slackers dipped down for a pull of nectar from our calendula flowers. Relentlessly they kept their course, plotted by their tiny insect on-board computers, following magnetic fields North.Monday, March 21, 2011
Monarch Flyover
Yesterday, while working in our country garden, we were rewarded with an inspiring sight. Riding the gusting southerly winds on fragile wings, dozens of monarch butterflies were on their way back to the US and Canada. For over an hour the exodus continued, twos and threes and tens. Some flew high, just specks in the sky. Others skimmed the treetops of our cedar hedge. A few slackers dipped down for a pull of nectar from our calendula flowers. Relentlessly they kept their course, plotted by their tiny insect on-board computers, following magnetic fields North.Friday, March 11, 2011
Student Work

One of the pleasures of teaching is to introduce students to the natural world and ask them to observe and draw what they see. For many children this is difficult, in part because of limited artistic skills, but also because they are still developing their ability to "see." Above are examples of two young people who "see" very well. Natalia (on the left) went deep into the Lantana camara flower to notice that it is actually composed of many tiny flowers clustered together. Naomi (on the right) noticed that the leaf of the Tecoma stans is actually divided into many smaller leaflets. Sunday, March 6, 2011
Plot Study in the Humboldt Garden
Measurement is a necessary first step in being able to detect those patterns. It is fitting that the activity takes place in the Humboldt Garden since precise documentation was central to his method. During their exploration of South America and Mexico he and his partner, Aime Bonpland, carried with them a virtual traveling laboratory with more than 30 state-of-the-art instruments to measure the physcial environment. In collecting this data the Prussian explorer hoped to better understand the "unity of nature."
The measurements we take are just a beginning. Students measure soil temperature and air temperature at the surface and at waist level. For many it will be the first time that they pay careful attention to the scale within a thermometer. This skill will be useful to them as they continue their work in science in later grades. Back in the classroom the children will make a comparison table of temperatures at different levels in different plots. When the sun begins to strike the garde, there can be large temperature differences in a small area. This simple exercise gives the student an understanding of how differences in exposure can generate different micro climates.