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Showing posts from December, 2012

Our natural capital

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When people travel to Washington, DC, one of the first things they will likely do is visit the museums, monuments, and restaurant-filled neighborhoods.   As a naturalist, my first instinct is to visit the parks and natural areas in any region I travel to.  Yet why would I try and go on a safari in the middle of Washington, DC? Perhaps it may be surprising to know that our capital has a lot of natural capitol.   Natural capitol  is any sort of natural resources that has some positive value.  For example, wetlands are usually abundant in natural capitol because the provide us with water filtration, are biologically diverse, act as a flood control mechanism, and they provide us with a source of recreation.  In Washington, DC, tidal wetlands with fresh water along the Potomac River provide a refuge for a diverse array of wildlife in a densely urban area (see photo A).  The Washington metro area is dotted with parks, trails, greenways (photo B), and freeway berms are often planted with a

Envisioning a climate-change ready and ecofriendly waterside vacation home complex

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The following map shows my vision for what a vacation  town-home  complex in Norfolk, Virginia could look like.  Norfolk lies within the lower watershed of the Chesapeake Bay , America's largest  estuary.  Home to vast marine resources- and a vast human population, people who settle in this region should do everything they can to  minimize  impacts to this  sensitive  coastal ecosystem.    Some of the content in this map will no doubt be  controversial.   But we must be willing to make changes such as those presented in this map if we are to live  sustainability  - and happily - in a low elevation coastline.   Please note:  this map is not meant to be an engineering plan for this site.  It is merely a visual concept model of what would take place here.   Please click on map to enlarge.  

Find me on Linkedin!

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Are you a prospective employer in the environmental conservation field?  Then please follow me on my new LinkedIn Page: www.linkedin.com/pub/alex-palmer/5b/913/74b/

Keeping connected: My reflections on the NAI National Workshop

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This blog post is a draft of an article of the Mid-Atlantic region newsletter  of the National Association for Interpretation .  The opinions and commentary, though, are my own.   The other day I went for a hike at First Landing State Park in Virginia Beach, Virginia.  The weather was oddly warm for early December, and I regrettably had to carry my coat and sweater during my afternoon excursion.  Even the skinks (small lizards) were perplexed, with many of them cautiously peeking their heads up from underneath the leaf litter of a maturing maritime forest.  A metallic sounding wind rushed through the barren sweetgum trees, though, sending fourth a reminder that winter will indeed be back soon. I stopped and examined some swamp bay bushes growing along the trail, and I remember learning about them on my field trip during the recent NAI National Workshop.  The swamp bay ( Persea palustris ) is a small evergreen tree in the laurel family native to the Southeast, and its fragrant leave